Women
Protect Your Fertility
Most of us take our fertility for granted. It is a dangerous assumption when one in six couples seek help because they have difficulty concerning child bearing. Many of these people have fertility problems which could have been avoided. Twelve years ago. My aunty had a coil inserted. From the start, she had problems. Her period stopped and she had terrible pains. Signs of pelvic infection. “I asked my doctor to remove the coil, but he just gave me antibiotics and told me to go away, the pain was back I couldn’t sit down and having sex was out of the question. When the drugs could not work, the doctor removed the coil. My Aunty had no problem until recently, when she and her husband were unsuccessfully trying to have a child of their own. Tests confirmed that my aunty’s fallopian tubes were blocked due to pelvic infection and she’ll never be able to conceived in the normal way.
My Aunty feels that the doctor’s reluctance to remove the coil when she asked may have confributed to her fertility problems. According to Mr Payert Goswarning, Medical Director of London’s Churchill Clinic Luf and fertility centre.
“Most fertility problems are preventable, if couples tool more care.
Some of the saddest cases are the women who become infertile without knowing it. It happens often through symptomless infections from their sexual partners. By far the most common is Chlamydia trachumatic. One in eight women unknowingly have chilamydia. If untreated, the infection may spread to scar and block the fallopian tubes. Infected tubs can increase the risk of woman having an ectopic pregnancy (outside the womb) or becoming infertile. Very few women are born with clamaged fallopian tubes, yet this accounts for infertility in about one third of women. Women seeking contraception for the first time should get a “fertility MOT’ from a doctor. This would include testing for chalmydia and other sexually transmitted diseases (STDS) and advice on how to protect themselves by using condom. Certain medical procedures, such as abortion, pelvic surgery and having IUD inserted, can spread Chlamydia. All women expecting to undergo these should be tested for Chlamydia and treated if necessary. aFter STDs, the most common course of blocked tubes is pelvic surgery, usually to remove overian cyst. In most cases surgery can be avoided. A lot of overian cyst will go away on their own, given time.
Ovulation problems account for at least another third of female infertility. Between five and ten percent of these cases can be blamed on weight problems.
Women who are excessively over weight, under weight or who go on crash diets are more likely to suffer from hormonal imbalances which preccent them from occulating. A ked sign that excessive weight may be affecting ovulation can isan erratic menstrual cycle. Being over weight can also affect men’s fertility by reducing their count. Smoking can cause ovulating problems, too, it may upset egg production and interfere with the blood supply to the womb, making it difficult to conceive and increasing the risk of having a mixcarriage for men, smoking more than eight to ten sticks of cigarettes per day can lead to infertility in those with “lazy” sperm.
Julie Jumbo
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