“…Male infertility some time underestimated because of socioeconomic dilemmas, in addition to inaccurate sampling and analysis, it can potentiate the male anxiety about hegemonic masculinity, and can be associated with psychological rather than marital tension, risk of cancer development, decrease in quality of health and life [9]. The most acceptable diagnostic method for male infertility is quality of sperm, concentration and motility, though; there are some limitations, like ambiguous threshold value affecting the accuracy of sperm analysis [7]. The abnormal spermatozoal differentiation that contributed to male infertility includes total sperm absence or Azoospermia, low sperm count or oligospermia, abnormal sperm shape or teratozoospermia, abnormal sperm motility or asthenozoospermia [10].…”