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Previously on "Testicular electrodes should replace the pill, conclude women"
Early forms of sperm control were discovered in 1660 by blacksmiths accidently catching their scrotums on anvils while whacking testacies with a hot mallet.
The idea was first suggested in 1970 by Mostafa Fahim, a researcher at the University of Missouri-Columbia, who published several studies of ultrasound treatments that killed germ cells and caused infertility, even testing the theory in humans. The machinery Fahim used is no longer available, so the researchers had to start over with commercially available ultrasound equipment and see what would have a similar effect to what was observed historically.
Early forms of sperm control were discovered in 1660 by blacksmiths accidently catching their scrotums on anvils while whacking testacies with a hot mallet.
The idea was first suggested in 1970 by Mostafa Fahim, a researcher at the University of Missouri-Columbia, who published several studies of ultrasound treatments that killed germ cells and caused infertility, even testing the theory in humans. The machinery Fahim used is no longer available, so the researchers had to start over with commercially available ultrasound equipment and see what would have a similar effect to what was observed historically.
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