Barriers to Pregnancy

Why this resource is helpful:

Quoted From: https://fertilitynw.com/barriers-to-pregnancy-2/

"There are many reasons why a woman can"t get pregnant, and not all of them are medical. Stress and emotional health can impact fertility. For others, there are financial hurdles that keep a couple from seeking help.
The causes for infertility can usually be identified in one or several of Seven Barriers to Pregnancy.
Sperm survival
Even with normal count, poor survival in the women"s cervical mucous may prevent pregnancy.
Sperm factors
Low count, lazy swimmers, poor shape and immune ("allergy") problems will decrease pregnancy success rates.
Tubal blockage
Full blockage of the Fallopian tubes may be from previous infections, ectopic pregnancy, or tubal ligations. Less severe problems can be from adhesions (scar tissue) around the ovaries or tubes.
Ovulation problems
Many women are not good ovulators for various reasons. Some never ovulate; others ovulate, then have low hormones levels making the implantation site inadequate for pregnancy and this may lead to frequent miscarriages.
Endometriosis
This is where tissues from inside the uterus are implanted outside the uterus on the pelvic surfaces and ovaries. This leads to inflammation, and the sperm cannot fertilize the egg. This problem is quite common but very often overlooked or not regarded as a "real" cause of infertility. Even when surgery is performed, most physicians who are not specialists in endometriosis will only get a partial cure and pregnancy still does not occur.
Read More about Endometriosis
Age-related issues
The single best predictor of fertility success is the women"s age. Natural pregnancy rates and treatment success rates clearly correlate with age, declining from the early 30"s on, worse from 35-40, and very poor thereafter. Any fertility treatment game plan must be tailored to female age. Contrary to common opinion, the "biological clock" does not care about general health or how good of shape you are in, your nutrition, or your previous pregnancies.
Unusual factors
Uterine fibroids or polyps, female or male serious health problems, impotency or ejaculation problems are examples of what we call unusual factors. Also, work and travel that often separates the couple will clearly slow them down.
When we have sorted out these factors, we can set up a logical treatment plan. Other factors such as finances/social/ emotional/ethical issues and the sense of urgency will impact how fast the couple proceeds. As stated before, the woman"s age is critical and delay may not be wise if she is older. There is almost always a way to parenthood for every situation, but not every couple will choose to pursue these options. We fully respect their choice at every step."

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