"I said, 'I think female.' She said, 'I don't think it's a female.' I went down to the bottom of the image, which was almost cut off, and the testes were brightly lit up. And the signal in the penis was off the radar," Hope said.
The paper was based on findings in just three monkeys, but the findings were consistent, Hope said. The study has not yet been peer reviewed for publication in a journal, and was posted Monday on the site bioRxiv.
The work was carried out at the Tulane National Primate Research Center in Louisiana. The researchers do not know whether the monkeys had symptoms corresponding to the viral infection of the male genital tract, such as low testosterone levels, low sperm counts, pain or sexual dysfunction, Hope said.
About 10 per cent to 20 per cent of men infected with the coronavirus have symptoms linked to male genital tract dysfunction, studies have reported.
Men infected with the virus are three to six times as likely as others to develop erectile dysfunction, believed to be an indicator of long Covid-19.
Patients have also reported symptoms such as testicular pain, reduced sperm counts and reduced sperm quality, decreased fertility and hypogonadism, a condition in which the testes produce insufficient amounts of testosterone, leading to low sex drive, sexual dysfunction and reduced fertility.
Other viruses are known to take a toll on fertility, Hope noted. "Mumps is most famous historically, for causing sterility," he said. "The Zika virus goes to the testes and infects the testes, and Ebola can also do that."
Even if a small fraction of men experience such complications after a coronavirus infection, millions may suffer from impaired sexual and reproductive health in the aftermath of the pandemic, simply because the virus has infected so many people around the world, Hope warned.
He urged men to get vaccinated and to seek a medical evaluation if they are concerned about their sexual or reproductive health.
The positron emission tomography technology that was used in the new study was designed to identify the sites of coronavirus infection in a living animal. The technology makes it possible to do repeated, sequential scanning of an animal, tracking how the virus works its way through the body and how it is cleared.
Hope next plans to determine whether the testicles are a reservoir for the coronavirus, as has been hypothesised by some scientists. He will also look at whether the virus infects tissue in the female reproductive system.
The hope is to use the information to develop treatments that will mitigate the pandemic's effect on fertility. The scans could also potentially detect the location of the virus in patients and to tailor treatments appropriately.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
Written by: Roni Caryn Rabin
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