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Trying To Conceive
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How do you figure out when you're fertile
and when you're not? Wondering if you or your partner is infertile? Read
on to boost your chances of conception and get help for fertility problems...
The Menstrual Cycle
Being aware of your menstrual cycle and the changes
in your body that happen during this time can be key to helping you plan
a pregnancy, or avoid pregnancy. During the menstrual cycle (a total
average of 28 days), there are two parts: before ovulation and
after ovulation.
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Day 1 starts with the first day of
your period.
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Usually by Day 7, a woman's eggs start
to prepare to be fertilized by sperm.
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Between Day 7 and 11, the lining of
the uterus (womb)
starts to thicken, waiting for a fertilized egg to implant there.
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Around Day 14 (in a 28-day cycle), hormones cause
the egg that is most ripe to be released, a process called ovulation.
The egg travels down the fallopian
tube towards the uterus. If a sperm unites with the egg here,
the egg will attach to the lining of the uterus, and pregnancy occurs.
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If the egg is not fertilized, it will break apart.
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Around Day 25 when hormone levels
drop, it will be shed from the body with the lining of the uterus
as a menstrual period.
The first part of the menstrual cycle is different in
every woman, and even can be different from month-to-month in the same
woman, varying from 13 to 20 days long. This is the most important part
of the cycle to learn about, since this is when ovulation and pregnancy
can occur. After ovulation, every woman (unless she has a health problem
that affects her periods) will have a period within 14 to 16 days.
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Charting Your Fertility Pattern
Knowing when you're most fertile will help you plan
or prevent pregnancy. There are three ways you can keep track of your
fertile times. They are:
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Basal body temperature method - Basal body temperature
is your temperature at rest as soon as you awake in the morning.
A woman's basal body temperature rises slightly with ovulation. So
by recording this temperature daily for several months you'll be
able to predict your most fertile days.
Basal body temperature differs slightly from woman to woman. Anywhere
from 96 to 98 degrees orally is average before ovulation. After ovulation
most women have an oral temperature between 97 and 99 degrees. The
rise in temperature can be a sudden jump or a gradual climb over
a few days.
Usually a woman's basal body temperature rises by only 0.4 to 0.8
degrees Fahrenheit. To detect this tiny change, women must use a
basal body thermometer. These thermometers are very sensitive. Most
pharmacies sell them for around $10. You then record your temperature
on a special chart.
The rise in temperature doesn't show exactly when the egg is released.
But almost all women have ovulated within three days after their
temperatures spike. Body temperature stays at the higher level until
your period starts.
You are most fertile and most likely to get pregnant:
- two to three days before your temperature hits the highest point
(ovulation), and
- 12 to 24 hours after ovulation.
A man's sperm can live for up to three days in a woman's body.
The sperm can fertilize an egg at any point during that time. So
if you have unprotected sex a few days before ovulation there is
a chance of becoming pregnant.
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Many things can affect basal body temperature. To get the most
useful chart you should take your temperature every morning at about
the same time. Things that can alter your temperature include:
- drinking alcohol the night before
- smoking cigarettes the night before
- getting a poor night's sleep
- having a fever
- doing anything in the morning before you take your temperature
-- including going to the bathroom and talking on the phone
- Calendar method - This involves keeping a written
record of each menstrual cycle on a calendar. The first day of your
period is Day 1. Circle Day 1 on the calendar. Do this for eight to
12 months so you know how many days are in your cycle. The length of
your cycle may vary from month to month. So write down the total number
of days it lasts each time. To find out the first day when you
are most fertile, check your list for the cycle with the fewest
days. Then subtract 18 from that number. Take this new number and count
ahead that many days on the calendar. Draw an X through this date.
The X marks the first day you're likely to be fertile. To find out
the last day when you are fertile, subtract 11 days from your longest
cycle and draw an X through this date. This method always should be
used with other fertility awareness methods, especially if your cycles
are not always the same lengths.
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- Cervical mucus method (also known as the ovulation
method) - This involves being aware of the changes in your cervical
mucus throughout the month. The hormones that control the menstrual
cycle also change the kind and amount of mucus you have before and
during ovulation. Right after your period, there are usually few days
when there is no mucus present or "dry days." As the egg
starts to mature, mucus increases in the vagina,
appears at the vaginal opening, and is white or yellow and cloudy and
sticky. The greatest amount of mucus appears just before ovulation.
During these "wet days" it becomes clear and slippery, like
raw egg whites. Sometimes it can be stretched apart. This is when you
are most fertile. About four days after the wet days begin the mucus
changes again. There will be much less and it becomes sticky and cloudy.
You might have a few more dry days before your period returns. Describe
changes in your mucus on a calendar. Label the days, "Sticky," "Dry," or "Wet." You
are most fertile at the first sign of wetness after your period or
a day or two before wetness begins. This method is less reliable for
some women. Women who are breastfeeding, taking hormonal contraceptives
(like the pill) using feminine hygiene products, have vaginitis or sexually
transmitted diseases (STDs), or have had surgery on the cervix
should not rely on this method.
To most accurately track your fertility, use a combination
of all three methods. This is called the symptothermal
method.
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Infertility
It is not uncommon to have trouble becoming pregnant
or to experience infertility.
Infertility is defined as not being able to become pregnant, despite
trying for one year, in women under age 35, or after six months in women
35 and over. Pregnancy is the result of a chain of events. A woman must
release an egg from one of her ovaries (ovulation). The egg must travel
through a fallopian tube toward her uterus. A man's sperm must join with
(fertilize) the egg along the way. The fertilized egg must then become
attached to the inside of the uterus. While this may seem simple, in
fact many things can happen to prevent pregnancy.
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Age
There are many different reasons why a couple might
have infertility. One is age-related. Women today are often delaying
having children until later in life, when they are in their 30s and 40s.
A couple of things add to this trend. Birth control is easy to obtain
and use, more women are in the work force, women are marrying at an older
age, the divorce rate remains high, and married couples are delaying
pregnancy until they are more financially secure. But the older you are,
the harder it is to
become pregnant. Women generally have some decrease in fertility starting
in their early 30s. And while many women in
their 30s and 40s have no problems getting pregnant, fertility especially
declines after age 35.
As a woman ages, there are normal changes that
occur in her ovaries and eggs. All women are born with over a million
eggs in their ovaries (all the eggs that they will ever have), but
only have about 300,000 left by puberty.
Then of these, only about 300 eggs will be ovulated during the reproductive
years. Even though menstrual cycles continue to be regular in a woman's
30s and 40s, the eggs that ovulate each month are of poorer quality
than those from her 20s. It is harder to get pregnant when the eggs
are poorer in quality.
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Ovarian reserve is the number and quality of eggs in your ovaries
and how well the ovarian follicles respond
to hormones in your body. As you approach menopause,
your ovaries don't respond as well to your hormones, and in time they
may not release an egg each month. A reduced ovarian reserve is natural
as a woman ages, but young women might have reduced ovarian reserves
due to smoking, a prior surgery on their ovaries, or a family history
of early menopause. Also, as a woman and her eggs age, if she becomes
pregnant, there is a greater chance of having genetic problems, such
as having a baby with Down
Syndrome. Embryos formed
from eggs in older women also are less likely to fully develop, a main
reason for miscarriage (early pregnancy loss).
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Health Problems
Couples also can have fertility problems because of
health problems, in either the woman or the man. Common problems with
a woman's reproductive organs, like uterine
fibroids, endometriosis,
and pelvic
inflammatory disease can worsen with age and also affect fertility.
These conditions might cause the fallopian
tubes to be blocked, so the egg can't travel through the tubes into
the uterus.
Some people also have diseases or conditions that affect
their hormone levels, which can cause infertility in women and impotence
and infertility in men. Polycystic Ovarian syndrome (PCOS) is one such
hormonal condition that affects many women, and is the most common cause
of anovulation,
or when a woman rarely or never ovulates. Another hormonal condition
that is a common cause of infertility is when a woman has a luteal
phase defect (LPD). A luteal phase is the time in the menstrual cycle
between ovulation and the start of the next menstrual period. LPD is
a failure of the uterine lining to be fully prepared for a fertilized
egg to implant there. This happens either because a woman's body is not
producing enough progesterone, or the uterine lining isn't responding
to progesterone levels at some point in the menstrual cycle. Since pregnancy
depends on a fertilized egg implanting in the uterine lining, LPD can
interfere with a woman getting pregnant and with carrying a pregnancy
successfully.
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Certain lifestyle choices also can have a negative effect
on a woman's fertility, such as smoking, alcohol use, weighing much more
or much less than an ideal body weight, a lot of strenuous exercise,
and having an eating
disorder.
Unlike women, some men remain fertile into their
60s and 70s. But as men age, they might begin to have problems with
the shape and movement of their sperm, and have a slightly higher risk
of sperm gene defects. They also might produce no sperm, or too few
sperm. Lifestyle choices also can affect the number and quality of
a man's sperm. Alcohol and drugs can temporarily reduce sperm quality.
And researchers are looking at whether environmental toxins, such as pesticides and lead,
also may be to blame for some cases of infertility. Men also can have
health problems that affect their sexual and reproductive function.
These can include sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), diabetes,
surgery on the prostate
gland, or a severe testicle injury
or problem.
If you or your partner has a problem with sexual function or libido,
don't delay seeing your doctor for help.
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You should talk to your doctor about your fertility
if you:
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are under age 35 and, after a year of frequent sex
without birth control, you are having problems getting pregnant,
or
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are age 35 or over and, after six months of frequent
sex without birth control, you are having problems getting pregnant,
or
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believe you or your partner might have fertility problems
in the future (even before you begin trying to get pregnant).
Your doctor can refer you to a fertility specialist,
a doctor who focuses in treating infertility. This doctor can recommend
treatments such as drugs, surgery, or assisted
reproductive technology. Don't delay seeing your doctor because
age also affects the success rates of these treatments.
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There are many ways to treat infertility. They include:
Tests
The first step to treat infertility is to see a doctor
for a fertility evaluation. He or she will test both the woman and the
man, to find out where the problem is. Testing on the man focuses on
the number and health of his sperm. The lab will look at a sample of
his sperm under a microscope to check sperm number, shape, and movement.
Blood tests also can be done to check hormone levels. More tests might
be needed to look for infection, or problems with hormones. These tests
can include:
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an x-ray (to look at his reproductive organs)
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a mucus penetrance test (to see if sperm can swim through
mucus)
-
a hamster-egg penetrance assay (to see if sperm can
go through hamster egg cells, somewhat showing their power to fertilize
human eggs)
Testing for the woman first looks at whether she is
ovulating each month. This can be done by having her chart changes in
her morning body temperature, by using
an FDA-approved home ovulation test kit (which she can buy at a drug
store), or by looking at her cervical mucus, which changes throughout
her menstrual cycle. Ovulation also can be checked in her doctor's office
with an ultrasound test
of the ovaries, or simple blood tests that check hormone levels, like
the follicle-stimulating
hormone (FSH) test. FSH is produced by the pituitary
gland. In women, it helps control the menstrual cycle and the production
of eggs by the ovaries. The amount of FSH varies throughout the menstrual
cycle and is highest just before an egg is released. The amounts of FSH
and other hormones (luteinizing
hormone, estrogen,
and progesterone)
are measured in both a man and a woman to determine why the couple cannot
achieve pregnancy. If the woman is ovulating, more testing will need
to be done. These tests can include:
-
an hysterosalpingogram (an x-ray to check if the fallopian
tubes are open and to show the shape of the uterus)
-
a laparoscopy (an exam of the tubes and other female
organs for disease)
-
an endometrial biopsy (an exam of a small shred of
the uterine lining to see if monthly changes in it are normal)
Other tests can be done to show whether the sperm and
mucus are interacting in the right way, or if the man or woman is forming antibodies that
are attacking the sperm and stopping them from getting to the egg.
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Drugs and Surgery
Different treatments for infertility are recommended
depending on what the problem is. About 90 percent of cases are treated
with drugs or surgery. Various fertility drugs may be used for women
with ovulation problems. It is important to talk with your doctor about
the drug to be used. You should understand the drug's benefits and side
effects. Depending on the type of fertility drug and the dosage of the
drug used, multiple births (such as twins) can occur in some women. If
needed, surgery can be done to repair damage to a woman's ovaries, fallopian
tubes, or uterus. Sometimes a man has an infertility problem that can
be corrected by surgery.
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Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART)
Assisted reproductive technology (ART) uses special
methods to help infertile couples, and involves handling both the woman's
eggs and the man's sperm. Success rates vary and depend on many factors.
But ART has made it possible for many couples to have children that otherwise
would not have been conceived. ART can be expensive and time-consuming.
Many health insurance companies do not provide coverage for infertility
or provide only limited coverage. Check your health insurance contract
carefully to learn about what is covered. Also, some states have laws
for infertility insurance coverage. Some of these include Arkansas, California,
Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Rhode Island,
Texas, and West Virginia.
In vitro fertilization (IVF) is a type of ART
that is often used when a woman's fallopian tubes are blocked or when
a man has low sperm counts. A drug is used to stimulate the ovaries to
produce multiple eggs. Once mature, the eggs are removed and placed in
a culture dish with the man's sperm for fertilization. After about 40
hours, the eggs are examined to see if they have become fertilized by
the sperm and are dividing into cells. These fertilized eggs (embryos)
are then placed in the woman's uterus, thus bypassing the fallopian tubes. Gamete
intrafallopian transfer (GIFT) is similar to IVF, but used when
the woman has at least one normal fallopian tube. Three to five eggs
are placed in the fallopian tube, along with the man's sperm, for fertilization
inside the woman's body. Zygote intrafallopian transfer (ZIFT),
also called tubal embryo transfer, combines IVF and GIFT. The eggs retrieved
from the woman's ovaries are fertilized in the lab and placed in the
fallopian tubes rather than the uterus.
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ART sometimes involves the use of donor eggs (eggs from
another woman) or previously frozen embryos. Donor eggs may be used if
a woman has impaired ovaries or has a genetic disease that could be passed
on to her baby. And if a woman does not have any eggs, or her eggs are
not of a good enough quality to produce a pregnancy, she and her partner
might want to consider surrogacy. A surrogate is a woman who
agrees to become pregnant using the man's sperm and her own egg. The
child will be genetically related to the surrogate and the male partner,
but the surrogate will give the baby to the couple at birth.
A gestational carrier might be an option for
women who do not have a uterus, from having had a hysterectomy, but still
have their ovaries, or for women who shouldn't become pregnant because
of a serious health problem. In this case, the woman's eggs are fertilized
by the man's sperm and the embryo is placed inside the carrier's uterus.
In this case, the carrier will not be related to the baby, and will give
the baby to the parents at birth.
Counseling and Support Groups
If you've been having problems getting pregnant, you
know how frustrating it can feel. Not being able to get pregnant can
be one of the most stressful experiences a couple has. Both counseling
and support groups can help you and your partner talk about your feelings,
and to help you meet other couples like you in the same situation. You
will learn that anger, grief, blame, guilt, and depression are all normal.
Couples do survive infertility, and can become closer and stronger in
the process. Ask your doctor for the names of counselors or therapists
with an interest in fertility.
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Information
provided by the United States Office on Women's Health in the Department
of Health and Human Services. This information is provided for educational
purposes only and is not intended to be used
as a substitute for diagnosis and treatment by a medical doctor. Central
Carolina Obstetrics & Gynecology does not endorse and has no responsibility
for the content of any other sites listed on ccobgyn.com, and provides
links, references, and educational material merely as a convenience
to its users. Seek immediate medical attention if your condition is
urgent..
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