Once a woman is diagnosed with infertility, the overall likelihood for successful treatment is 50%.
Whether a treatment is successful depends on:
Fertility treatments are most likely to benefit women whose infertility is due to problems with ovulation. Treatment with medications is least likely to benefit infertility caused by damage to the fallopian tubes or severe endometriosis, although in vitro fertilization can help women with these conditions to conceive.
The first step of treating infertility in many cases is to treat the underlying cause of infertility. For example, in cases where thyroid disease causes hormone imbalances, medication for thyroid disease may be able to restore fertility.
The most common medications used to treat infertility help stimulate ovulation. Examples of these types of medications include:
Clomiphene is a medication patients take by mouth (orally). It causes the body to make more of the hormones that cause the eggs to mature in the ovaries. If a woman does not become pregnant after taking clomiphene for six menstrual cycles, a health care provider may prescribe other fertility treatments.
Letrozole is an oral pill that decreases the amount of estrogen a woman makes, stimulating her ovaries to release eggs.
Gonadotropins such as follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) are hormones that are injected in a woman to directly stimulate eggs to grow in the ovaries, leading to ovulation. Health care providers normally prescribe gonadotropins when a woman does not respond to clomiphene or to stimulate follicle growth for assisted reproductive technology (ART).
hCG is a hormone similar to luteinizing hormone that can be used to trigger release of the egg after the follicles have developed.
Bromocriptine and cabergoline are pills taken orally to treat abnormally high levels of the hormone prolactin, which can interfere with ovulation. Pituitary growths; certain medications, including antidepressants; kidney disease; and thyroid disease can cause high levels of prolactin.
If disease of the fallopian tubes is the cause of infertility, surgery can be used to repair the tubes or remove blockages in the tubes. Success rates of these types of surgery, however, are low (approximately 20%, depending on the skill of the surgeon).
These surgeries involving the fallopian tubes also increase the risk of ectopic pregnancy, which is a pregnancy that occurs outside of the uterus. Ectopic pregnancies are also called “tubal pregnancies,” because they most often occur in a fallopian tube.
Surgery to remove patches of endometriosis has been found to double the chances for pregnancy. Surgery can also be used to remove uterine fibroids, polyps, or scarring, which can affect fertility.
Women have unique health issues. And some of the health issues that affect both men and women can affect women differently.
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