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Infertility In Women

Description

An in-depth report on the causes, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of female infertility.

Alternative Names

Pelvic Inflammatory Disease; Polycystic Ovaries

Treatment

Some authorities recommend that if a couple fails to conceive after one to two years during which unprotected sex has been sufficiently frequent, then they should consult a fertility expert. Women who are 35 or older, however, may want to begin exploring their options if they do not become pregnant within six months to a year.

Fertility Treatment Approaches

There are a number of approaches available for treating infertility, depending on the cause of the fertility:

  • Lifestyle measures (healthy life style, planning sexual activity with ovulation cycle, managing stress and emotions).
  • Treatments for endometriosis, fibroids, or menstrual disorders. [For other details see the Well-Connected Reports #100, Menstrual Disorders: Cramps (Dysmenorrhea), #101, Menstrual Disorders: Absence of Periods (Amenorrhea), #80, Menstrual Disorders: Heavy Periods (Menorrhagia), #73, Fibroids: Uterine, or #74, Endometriosis.]
  • Use of anti-estrogen agents, such as clomiphene, to induce ovulation in women with ovarian dysfunction.
  • Surgery (standard or laparoscopic) to unblock fallopian tubes.
  • Use of hormone treatments (clomiphene or progestins) for luteal phase defect.
  • Assisted procedures, which are generally known as artificial insemination or assisted reproductive technologies (ART, with or without superovulation agents). Treating the male partner for infertility, including artificial or intrauterine semination with donor or partner sperm. [For more information, seeWell-Connected Report #67, Infertility in Men.]

Choosing a Fertility Clinic

Choosing a good fertility clinic is important. Those offering assisted reproductive techniques are not always regulated by the government, and abuses have been reported, including lack of informed consent, unauthorized use of embryos, and failure to routinely screen donors for disease.

The clinic should always provide the following information:

  • The live-birth rate (not just pregnancy success rate) for other couples with similar infertility problems. (Multiple births, such as twins or triplets, are counted as one live birth.)
  • Such statistics should include high-risk women, such as those who are older or fail to produce eggs. (Some disreputable clinics give success percentages that exclude high-risk women from their total, thereby making the percentage of success much higher.)

Advanced fertility procedures and medications are extremely expensive and often not covered by insurance. Warning: Couples should be cautious about offers of rebates in the event of failure; the clinics offering them are often significantly more expensive than those that don't. [For more information, seeWell-Connected Report #67, Infertility in Men.]

Treatments by Causes of Infertility

Causes of Infertility

Treatments

Endometriosis

Conservative surgery (typically laparoscopy) is the appropriate approach for restoring fertility.

GnRH agonists or progestins, used to treat endometriosis itself, have no effect on fertility. Possible exceptions are GnRH agonists used after surgery. In one study, this treatment helped improve conception rates in women who subsequently underwent assisted reproductive techniques.

Assisted reproductive technologies (ART). (Fertility drugs alone have no effect.) ART may be helpful for women with late-stage endometriosis. A 2002 study suggested that, of the ART procedures, in vitro fertilization may be more effective than artificial insemination in this population, but questions remain.

It is not clear, in any case, whether either laparoscopy for removing endometrial implants or ART has additional advantages in many of these women compared to simply trying to become pregnant through non-aggressive means. [For more information, seeWell-Connected Report #74 Endometriosis.]

Hyperprolactinemia

Dopamine agonists, including bromocriptine (Parlodel) or cabergoline (Dostinex).

Surgery in some cases.

Luteal phase defect

Clomiphene or superovulation agents (FSH agents or hMG).

Hyperprolactinemia (elevated prolactin)

Bromocriptine, cabergoline to shrink tumors that result in over secretion of prolactin. Cabergoline is more effective but bromocriptine has been used longer. Once ovulation starts, women who want to become pregnant should stop cabergoline one month before attempting conception.

Surgery may be needed for women who do not respond to medications or who have large tumors.

Hypogonadotropic Hypogonadism

Fertility drugs (hMG preferable to FSH alone) with or without assisted reproductive technologies.

Pelvic Inflammatory Disease

Screening high-risk women for the presence of Chlamydia trachomatis and treating the organism before it causes symptoms could reduce the risk of PID by almost 60%. If any sexually transmitted infection is detected, both partners should receive antibiotics, even if there are no symptoms. If PID symptoms develop, particularly lower abdominal pain, fertility can be preserved if women receive antibiotics within two days. A delay significantly increases the risk for scarring.

Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome

Lifestyle changes (e.g., weight loss and exercise in women who are overweight.)

Metformin (Glucophage), a diabetes agents used to restore insulin response. This agent and similar ones used in diabetes are showing great promise in reversing symptoms, reducing male hormones, and restoring regular menstrual cycles and ovulation in some women with PCOS. Studies suggest metformin might even improve fertility in nonobese women and in those who are not insulin resistant. Metformin also may improve outcome in women undergoing IVF.

Clomiphene or superovulation agents (FSH agents or hMG) with or without assisted reproductive technologies (ART).

Ovarian surgery. A procedure called ovarian drilling, in which the surgeon opens six to 12 small holes in the ovary, is showing promise and reduces the risk for multiple pregnancies compared to fertility treatments.

Premature Ovarian Failure

Assisted reproductive technologies with donor eggs.

Preserving fertility after cancer treatments

Removal and freezing (called cryopreservation) of ovarian tissue containing embryos or freezing immature and unfertilized eggs to use for later reimplantation. (Freezing before cancer treatment appears to offer the best chance.) Under investigation: Ovarian transplantation procedures and gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogues, which put women in a temporary pre-pubescent state during chemotherapy and may preserve fertility.

Fallopian tubal blockage

Surgical procedures (laparoscopy or salpingostomy) to clear the tubes. (Average pregnancy rate after salpingostomy is about 30% but they can vary widely.)

Flushing the tubes with an oil-based medium (e.g., lipiodol) during hysterosalpingography (investigative). In a 2002 study, this procedure improved pregnancy rates in women with infertility of unknown causes.

Assisted reproductive technologies.

Unexplained infertility

Lifestyle measures. Fertility drugs. Assisted reproductive technologies.

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