Title of article :
Effects of Bariatric Surgeries on Male and Female Fertility: A Systematic Review
Author/Authors :
Moxthe, Luz Cilis Department of Psychology - College of Arts and Sciences - University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, USA , Sauls, Rachel Department of Psychology - College of Arts and Sciences - University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, USA , Ruiz, Michelle Department of Psychology - College of Arts and Sciences - University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, USA , Stern, Marilyn Department of Child and Family Studies - College of Behavioral and Community Sciences - University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, USA , Gonzalvo, John Advent Health Medical Group, Bariatrics at Tampa, Tampa, Florida, USA , Gray, Heewon L. College of Public Health - University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, USA
Abstract :
Background: Morbid obesity has been known to decrease fertility in both men and
women. This review aimed to examine current evidence of the effects of bariatric
surgeries on fertility parameters including sex hormones in both men and women,
seminal outcomes in men, menstrual cycle, PCOS symptoms, and pregnancy in
women, and sexual function in both men and women.
Methods: Three databases (PubMed, Web of Science, and Academic Search Premier)
were used with key terms of bariatric surgery, bariatric surgical procedures, infertility,
reproductive health, pregnancy, and fertility. Studies with male and/or female
patients were included. Study types included retrospective chart reviews, observational,
qualitative, cross-sectional, cohort, and longitudinal studies published in
January 2008–June 2018. The search was performed on June 21-26, 2018. Quality
assessment and data synthesis were conducted.
Results: A total of 18 articles were included in the final review. Seven studies included
only men, ten included only women, and one included both men and women.
Bariatric surgery significantly improved hormonal balance and sexual functions in
both males and females, sperm count in males, and pregnancy in females. The
strongest evidence was found on bariatric surgery’s effects on sex hormones. No
study with males asked whether the participants actually conceived a child with their
partners after the bariatric surgery. Most weaknesses in all articles reviewed were
lack of discussion on confounding variables and many did not differentiate surgical
types.
Conclusion: Bariatric surgery most effectively improved sex hormones. Further research
is needed on direct pregnancy outcomes for both men and women
Keywords :
Bariatric surgery , Fertility , Infertility , Obesity , Reproductive health , Systematic review
Journal title :
Journal of Reproduction and Infertility (JRI)