Female Infertility: A Woman’s Woe

Womanhood is strongly associated with the ability of a woman to bear and nurture children. Its substance is reinforced by the intrinsic nature to care for the young. In fact,to be a mother was looked upon as the principal role of women as recorded in history  the world over. Hence, female infertility is such a dreaded state that could strongly affect a woman’s psyche and emotions.

How can female infertility be defined? Female infertility is a medical condition where a woman could not bear children. Some reasons cited to cause this are physical obstructions in the fallopian tubes, hormonal imbalances, stress and environment. The repeated occurrence of miscarriages is a symptom that points to infertility. Obstruction of the fallopian tubes due to scars and growths and irregular menstruation are symptoms that may indicate the possible occurrence of female infertility.

A woman who is not fertile would have an idea if she is not ovulating. To find out, a woman have three ways to know. Begin with the use of body temperature during the early hours of the day with a basal body thermometer that must indicate higher reading on the second half of the monthly cycle. Additionally, this involves changes in the appearance of the vaginal mucus due to the varying levels of sexual hormones.  Lastly, by using an ovulation predictor test , an over-the-counter urine test, which should yield positive (+) results if the hormone responsible for ovulation falls in on the adequate level.

Unpleasant results would necessitate the visit to a medical practitioner known as obstetrician-gynecologist who can do more tests to affirm infertility. These are: hysterosalpingogram which is the use of x-ray and liquid tracer dyes, hysteroscopy and laparoscopy that surgically checks and remove scars, polyps and fibroids, and ultrasound to check on the sizes and shapes of uterus and fallopian tubes.

Female infertility must be given attention because it is more than just a physical detriment; it is also a psychological and social predicament. It can give a woman reasons to feel insecure and incapable, thus, breed more psychosocial problems. If this medical condition is not given preferential treatment, it may result to many other problems such as sexual dysfunction that aggravates marital problems and  precipitate despair and breakdown. It is critical to give this matter a priority because solutions are at hand to give the woman and her husband the chance they so desperately want.

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Getting pregnant can be much harder than you think. For a healthy fertile couple the normal success rate is only around 15-20%, so it's not uncommon to take some time to conceive. Infertility or subfertility (that's when it takes longer than expected to conceive) affects around one in seven couples in the UK. The usual definition of infertility is when a couple do not achieve a pregnancy after two years of regular, unprotected sex. Common cases of infertility include, ovulation problems, tubal blockage or endometriosis, male fertility problems or unexplained problems.