Posts Tagged ‘infertility’
Everything You Need To Know About Endometriosis And Infertility
Depending on which reference source one reads, women with endometriosis have a fertility rate of 50 to 65 percent, whereas the general population of women has a fertility rate of 88 percent. Among women with endometriosis, it is believed that 30 to 50 percent are infertile, although the true incidence of infertility is unknown, For that matter, no one knows the true incidence of infertility in the general population.
The paradox of infertility in endometriosis is that most of the standard medical treatments for the disease are contraceptive. Endometriosis is essentially an estrogen-dependent disease; the drugs used to treat it deplete the body of estrogen and therefore shrink the endometriomata. But pregnancy also is estrogen dependent. So it’s unlikely that you will become pregnant while you are receiving treatment, and when you go off the drugs in an effort to have a baby, your endometriosis will probably get worse again.
To add to the irony, drugs that increase the chance of conception also tend to exacerbate endometriosis. They have other serious side effects as well, so if you feel as though you are between a rock and a hard place, you are.
What’s more, if endometriosis does indeed cause infertility, then eradication of the disease should render a woman fertile. Unfortunately, it doesn’t always work that way. Treatment of mild to moderate disease does not necessarily improve the rate of fertility over doing nothing. You may become pregnant after treatment but according to statistics, the general incidence does not increase. Women who undergo various treatments for endometriosis, and who also are being evaluated for fertility, have variable outcomes in the success of the treatment on fertility. This suggests that endometriosis affects individual women’s ability to become pregnant in different ways.
If the disease is caused by an anatomical abnormality, surgery to correct it may or may not be effective-depending on the skill of your surgeon and whether you develop serious adhesions. If you have the predisposition to endometriosis since you were in your mother’s uterus, chances are the longer you wait, the less likely you are to get pregnant.
If you decide to have surgery (the less invasive the procedure, the greater the chance of preserving whatever fertility you have), timing becomes even trickier. Most physicians believe that there is a postoperative “window of opportunity” that lasts about six to nine months. This is when you luck is at its peak. After about nine months of menstrual periods after surgery, if there are still some endometriomata left in your abdomen, the buildup of scar tissue, cysts, and adhesions will once again impair fertility.
One extremely frustrating thing about endometriosis and infertility is that the disease appears to increase the chance of natural abortion (miscarriage). So there are women who can become pregnant but cannot carry to term. Surgery and medication may help correct this problem, but so far no scientific data exists.
Karol Cardinson is a Health specialist with over 20 years in Diet and Nutritions Research as well as a former Infertility sufferer and can help you with getting pregnant sooner and naturally. Find out how to reverse Female and Male Infertility naturally while improving the quality of your life! For more information go to Infertility Solutions Online
Life Books for Children When You Have Little Information
Crafting a life book may seem like a overwhelming task. If you aren’t a particular crafty person or don’t have much information about your child’s life before he or she became a part of your life, it can be hard to figure out where to start.
Each adoptive family varies in the amount of information they may have about their child’s birthmother. Some families have a relationship where the birth mom may actually baby sit for the family occasionally, to seeing them for a visit once a year, to having no contact whatsoever.
Adoptive families that have more than one adopted child may have one birthmom that is very involved and another that has no contact. Hence, sometimes a birthmom of one child will even send notes or small gifts to the sibling of the child.
When you have an open relationship with your child’s birth mom you may be able to get any information you wish for your child’s adoption scrapbook album. The birth mom may even be enthusiastic to lend a hand to help write down information or answer questions to help your child have a remarkable book.
If you don’t have very much information about your child’s birth or birth family-if any at all-don’t worry. You can still design an incredible book that helps your child understand his or her history.
For example, one of the most essential pages of the life book is about the biological mother, but you may not even have a photograph of her. Be sure to include a quotation or poem about how birth moms may feel when making the adoption choice for their child. Then write something for the book like, “Did you know that birth moms and dads give their special DNA to their children. I’ll be your beautiful smile and dark eye lashes came from your mom!”
Sometimes you may not even know the birthdate of your child or where he or she was born. Rather than calling attention to this fact, write something like, “You were probably born sometime during the winter of 2005 because when you came to the orphanage you weight about the same as the other children born about that time.”
Remember, it’s the amount of love and effort that you put into the album that your child will most appreciate. As he grows older and asks questions, you can do research together to help answer questions. Until then, don’t let a lack of information prevent you from creating a loving adoption scrapbook album for your child. Kids love reading about themselves and even like to make up their own stories to fill in any blanks in the story.
