Laser light-scattering study of the effect of progesterone on sperm motility.

It is known that progestins can induce in the secretory cells of the cervix the excretion of a mucus that is highly viscuos, scanty, and impenetrable to spermatozoa. Mucus of this type is similar to that excreted during the luteal phase of the normal human menstrual cycle and the cow estrous cycle. It is a natural sequence to ask the question, do progestins also have a direct effect on sperm motility? With dynamic laser light-scattering we measured the motility of freshly washed human spermatozoa and of spermatozoa in the presence of a progesterone, both in terms of their swimming speed distribution as expressed in the spectrum of scattered light. The swimming speed was significantly reduced when the concentration of progesterone was three orders of magnitude greater than that of the physiologic level. This finding confirms the finding in earlier biochemical studies that progesterone has a distinct spermiostatic effect. We suggest this answer to the above question: progestin-releasing contraceptive devices may act on spermatozoa directly as well as in the secretory cells of the cervix.