Male contraceptive pills

Authors

Aniruddha S. Shejwal, Research Scholar,
Sandip Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Nashik, Maharashtra, India.
Anjali B. Rawat, Research Scholar,
GES’s Sir. Dr. M. S. Gosavi College of Pharmaceutical Education and Research, Nashik, Maharashtra, India.
Dr . Swati. G. Talele, HOD, Corresponding author
Department of Pharmaceutics, Sandip Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Nashik, Maharashtra, India.
Dr.Laxmikant B.Borse, Principal,
Sandip Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Nashik, Maharashtra, India.

Abstract

The benefits and drawbacks of vasectomies and condoms will be covered in this study on male contraceptive tablets before a discussion of the research on new male contraceptive techniques. A novel male contraceptive could work in one of the following three ways: 1. By employing a physical barrier, such as a condom, to block the flow of sperm to the egg, or by surgically occluding the vas deferens or utilising another vas occlusion technique. 2. By totally stopping sperm production. 3. By killing the sperm or inhibiting an essential sperm function (e.g., sperm motility) either before ejaculation or inside the female reproductive tract. No androgenic contraceptive has been described that induces azoospermia in all men. Oral testosterone is rapidly broken down in the liver, so oral administration of testosterone is ineffective. Consequently, long-acting testosterone esters like those found in most androgenic contraceptive regimens: B. Testosterone enanthate administered weekly by intramuscular injection.Recent male contraceptive research has combined progestin and testosterone. Progestin also suppresses her LH and FSH secretion from the pituitary gland. However, the contraceptive efficacy reported in this study was low, with several couples becoming pregnant during treatment.