Fast food packaging, non-stick frying pan maybe the cause why man now have smaller joysticks
non-stick frying are designed to make cooking easier, but it seems that, this may have a bizarre effect on manhood.
A new study has found that chemicals found in non-stick frying pans and packaging materials are making men’s manhood smaller.
The chemicals, called perfluoroalkyl compounds (PFCs), are found in a number of everyday items, including nonstick coat on cookware, and fast food packaging.
However, researchers from the University of Padua have found that PFCs may harm hormone signalling, leading to ‘significantly’ smaller penises and less mobile sperm.
In the study, the researchers analysed young men living in Padua in Italy - one of four locations in the world where water is known to be heavily polluted with PFCs.
They found that men who grew up in the area had significantly smaller Joysticks.
In the study, published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, the researchers, led by Andrea Di Nisio, wrote: “This study documents that PFCs have a substantial impact on human male health as they directly interfere with hormonal pathways potentially leading to male infertility.
“We found that increased levels of PFCs in plasma and seminal fluid positively correlate with circulating testosterone and with a reduction of semen quality, testicular volume, penile length, and AGD [anogenital distance].”
Worryingly, the researchers found the problem has affected young men from 1978 onwards - and the PFCs aren’t going anywhere anytime soon.
Instead, they suggest that the next move may be working out a way to remove PFCs from the blood.
non-stick frying are designed to make cooking easier, but it seems that, this may have a bizarre effect on manhood.
A new study has found that chemicals found in non-stick frying pans and packaging materials are making men’s manhood smaller.
The chemicals, called perfluoroalkyl compounds (PFCs), are found in a number of everyday items, including nonstick coat on cookware, and fast food packaging.
In the study, the researchers analysed young men living in Padua in Italy - one of four locations in the world where water is known to be heavily polluted with PFCs.
They found that men who grew up in the area had significantly smaller Joysticks.
In the study, published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, the researchers, led by Andrea Di Nisio, wrote: “This study documents that PFCs have a substantial impact on human male health as they directly interfere with hormonal pathways potentially leading to male infertility.
Worryingly, the researchers found the problem has affected young men from 1978 onwards - and the PFCs aren’t going anywhere anytime soon.
Instead, they suggest that the next move may be working out a way to remove PFCs from the blood.
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