Science Has Resolved the Question of Boxers vs. Briefs
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| Male Attrective Boxer |
In response, fertility experts explored the possibilities of “testicular cooling.” In “Scrotal Hypothermia and the Infertile Man,” a paper published in The Journal of Urology, in 1984, scientists tested the efficacy of “ice packs applied to the scrotum at night and held in place with jockey shorts.” (Sixty-five per cent of the subjects saw a twofold increase in sperm concentrations.) That same year, a separate team of researchers experimented with a “testicular hypothermia device (THD)”—a jockstrap with tubes that pumped a cool liquid around the genitals. (“Improvements in semen have occurred in as little as six weeks of wearing, but it is more common that periods exceeding twelve weeks are needed,” the authors noted.) A more recent invention, described in the International Journal of Andrology, used cool air instead of liquid.
By the nineteen-nineties, researchers began to fret about underwear. A study from 1990 followed two groups of men for several months: one group wore tight underwear and then, partway through the study period, switched to boxers; the other started out in boxers and later switched to briefs. All saw their semen parameters drop off in tight conditions. A similar study, conducted several years later, by different researchers, reached the same conclusion. But the results weren’t uniformly damning. A study from 1998 in The Journal of Urology, “Are Boxer Shorts Really Better? A Critical Analysis of the Role of Underwear Type in Male Subfertility,” concluded that “the hyperthermic effect of brief-style underwear has been exaggerated.”
For the latest study, which appeared in Human Reproduction, researchers drew on data collected from more than six hundred and fifty men who sought treatment for infertility at the Massachusetts General Hospital at some point between 2000 and 2017. The men, who ranged in age from eighteen to fifty-six, provided semen samples that were analyzed for sperm count, concentration, motility, and well-being—“whether the sperm had one head or two, one tail or two, that sort of thing,” Chavarro said. Blood tests measured the levels of hormones involved in the production of sperm. And each man filled out a questionnaire that asked, among other things, what kind of underwear he typically wore. Slightly more than half the men wore boxers; the rest wore briefs, boxer briefs, bikinis, or other tight-fitting underwear.
Chavarro and his colleagues found that men who mostly wore boxers had seventeen per cent more sperm and a twenty-five-per-cent higher concentration of them than men who preferred tight underwear. The two cohorts showed little difference in the activity, morphology, or genetic integrity of their sperm. But, tellingly, men who wore tight underwear had higher levels of follicle-stimulating hormone, which is released by the pituitary gland to boost sperm production. “It’s an indication that the system is trying to compensate,” Chavarro said. “So something’s definitely going on with sperm production.”
The findings took into account numerous factors, including an individual’s age, his body-mass index, whether he smokes, and the fact that underwear trends shifted during the seventeen years of data collection. And, the authors were careful to note, other unreported factors could have come into play, such as the types of pants the men wore or the truthfulness of their responses. Chavarro said that, although tight-fitting underwear clearly reduces sperm production, it probably doesn’t reduce the over-all fertility of the average tight-underwear wearer. Even the reduced semen measurements were well within the normal range. Where the difference might matter is among men whose sperm numbers are low to begin with; wearing briefs might push them below the range of viability. Wearing boxers “probably isn’t helping most men, but it probably is helping some men,” Chavarro said. “And since most men have no idea what their sperm count is, if you’re trying for a baby, it’s not such a bad idea.”
Chavarro did not specify what kind of underwear he himself wears, except by omission. “I don’t like boxers,” he said. “But I’m done having babies. If I’d done this research twelve or thirteen years ago, when my wife and I were trying, I might have decided to wear boxers. But I’m out of that business.”
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