Pregnancy Myth #5: Can sperm travel through clothing or material? If the clothing was completely saturated with semen and was in direct contact with a woman's vagina, there is a very slight chance the sperm could enter the vagina, but this is highly unlikely.
For most fabrics, washing immediately with a biological detergent will be enough to remove the semen and prevent staining. Alternatively, fresh stains are usually removed easily by rinsing with cold water.
Similar to other bodily fluids, dried semen stains can be permanent on clothes and fabric if washed with anything other than cold water. Higher temperatures are likely to coagulate protein found in semen, which leads to the stain setting into the fabric and potentially causing a permanent stain.
When sperm are inside women's body, they can live for up to 5 days. If you're a man and you have sex even a few days before your partner ovulates, there's chance they may get pregnant.
They die as they dry out, so it depends on how quickly they dry. They also are killed by fresh(tap) water due to osmotic shock(they "explode"). Soap and detergents such as those used for laundering and hand washing also kill them, as these substances strip off the cell membrane("skin") of the sperm.
Dried sperm stains look gray, light yellow, or off-white.
These stains often look shiny and feel stiff to the touch, too. If the sperm is fresh, it might look pale gray, white, or off-white.
On skin or other surfaces, sperm can live between 15 and 30 minutes. In hot tubs or bath water, this lifespan decreases to a few seconds or minutes.
The risk of getting pregnant in this way is very low because sperm can only live for a short time outside the body. However, if you're not planning a pregnancy, it's important to know that it's possible to get pregnant in this way.
How much sperm does it take? In theory, a single sperm is all it takes to get pregnant. But even in a large amount of semen — such as the quantity in one ejaculation — only a fraction of the sperm are healthy, moving, and sufficiently well-formed to cause a pregnancy.
Most couples will get pregnant within a year if they have regular sex and don't use contraception. But women become less fertile as they get older.
If you're under 35 and in good health, it's perfectly natural for it to take up to a year. It can take longer if you are older, however; for women aged 38, 67% who have regular unprotected sexual intercourse will only get pregnant after two years of trying2.
It Takes Time
About 80 percent of couples get pregnant after six months of trying; roughly 90 percent of couples will conceive after a full year of trying. There is no set-in-stone timeline for getting pregnant. It's important to try regularly for at least a year before you get help from a fertility specialist.
The sperm enters the egg in the fallopian tube. It can happen even 3-5 days after ejaculation. There is no way for either of the partners to know if the sperm entered the egg. The only way to know for sure if the sperm did enter the egg is after a positive pregnancy test.
“And, at your fertile time, the mucus is quite receptive to sperm right there.” The fastest and healthiest sperm go right into your cervical mucus “instantaneously,” she says, making pretty much zero difference whether you lie there for a while after sex or get up and move.
No it is not possible at all.So donot worry.
Some studies suggest that moderate ejaculation (2–4 times per week) is associated with a lower prostate cancer risk. However, ejaculating more often doesn't mean your cancer risk drops even more.
In specimens of semen kept at 37 degrees C sperm lose their motility and viability. If kept at 4 degrees C they retain their viability but lose their motility from so-called thermal shock. The best temperature to keep semen in order to preserve sperm motility is 20 degrees C.
The concentration of sperm is what makes the semen cloudy and thick, so if your ejaculate is watery it is possible that you have a low sperm count. This doesn't mean you're infertile (so precautions to prevent pregnancy still need to be taken for couples that don't want to get pregnant).
Sweet Smell: Normal semen can have a slightly sweet smell because of the fructose it contains. But semen that smells particularly sweet could be an early warning sign of diabetes. Fishy smell: A fishy smell is an unusual smell. Semen that has a fishy odor can be a sign of a sexually transmitted disease.
While there is no definite age at which male ejaculation ceases, it has been suggested that it may happen when a man reaches his late 40s or early 50s. It is important to note, however, that this is not a universal rule and some men may continue to ejaculate at a later age.
You're most fertile at the time of ovulation (when an egg is released from your ovaries), which usually occurs 12 to 14 days before your next period starts. This is the time of the month when you're most likely to get pregnant. It's unlikely that you'll get pregnant just after your period, although it can happen.
Common causes of infertility in women include: Fallopian tube obstruction. Blocked or scarred fallopian tubes that prevent sperm from reaching the egg are a frequent cause of infertility. A history of pelvic infections, sexually transmitted diseases or endometriosis increases your risk for fallopian tube obstruction.