How Infertility is Treated
How Infertility is Treated
How Infertility is Treated
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The treatments of infertility [see Pregnancy Miracle Book] range from the obvious to the esoteric.
(i) A simple solution that is effective if the male's production of sperm is low is for the couple to limit the frequency of intercourse and time their intercourse for periods of the female's maximum fertility (i.e., when she is ovulating).
(ii) A physical blockage of the pathways by which the sperm must travel, in either the male or female partner, can in many cases be eliminated by surgery to eliminate adhesions that have closed the tubal pathways or to remove obstructive growths such as cysts that may be present.
(iii) Several drugs, notably clomiphene citrate, bromocriptine, and human menopausal gonadotropin, have been very successful in correcting the hormonal imbalances which cause a female's ovulation, or egg production, to be erratic or absent. These "fertility drugs" do, however, increase a woman's chances of having multiple births owing to the release of more than one egg at ovulation under the influence of the drug.
In addition to physical problems that may impede fertilization, emotional factors may also contribute to a couple's infertility. Normal fertility may return simply after counseling directed at relieving a couple's emotional difficulties.
If more conventional therapies fail, it may be possible for the infertile couple to have a child through artificial insemination, in vitro fertilization, or surrogate parenting.
(i) Artificial insemination has become a popular alternative method of ensuring fertility. If the male partner is normally fertile but for some reason is not transmitting sufficient sperm to produce pregnancy, he may donate semen whose sperm cells can be concentrated and then introduced into the woman's uterus artificially.
(ii) Another alternative is in vitro fertilization (q.v.), in which ova are removed from the female's body, fertilized by sperm in the laboratory, and returned to the uterus for normal gestation. The first successful in vitro fertilization was carried out in England in 1978. In another procedure, gamete intra-fallopian transfer, sperm and several surgically obtained eggs are placed in a fallopian tube, where fertilization normally takes place.
(iii) Like artificial insemination and in vitro fertilization, these procedures have caused ethical controversies, as has surrogate parenting, in which a second female undergoes artificial insemination with the male's sperm to conceive and bear a child for a couple whose female partner is sterile.
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