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If you are planning a family and want to time your baby-making
sex you are most likely to feel the need to assess your
fertility in order to optimize chances of pregnancy so that you
may know when to consult a doctor. Knowing how to evaluate your
fertility goes a long way to allay concerns of couples wanting
to start a family. Evaluating fertility provides a greater
insight into matters like ovulation, the best time to conceive,
and other fertility related issues like age and chances of
pregnancy without treatment.
Both male and female fertility is dependent upon hormonal cycles
which in turn determine when a woman can become pregnant and
when males are most fertile. The female reproductive cycle is
approximately 28 days and a three to six day variation is
considered to be normal. Ovulation occurs on the fourteen days
before the next menstrual period is due. A woman's fertility is
at its peak on the day of ovulation and lasts till the fourth
day prior to the start of the next period.
The question that is on the minds of most couples who are
desirous of starting a family is of how to ascertain the exact
days of ovulation and whether it is occurring or not. There are
quite a few ovulation calculators available with doctors as well
as on the Internet that make it possible to ascertain fertility
levels. What you need to do is to simply enter the first day of
your last menstrual period and the calculator tells you the next
ovulation date. Such calculators, however, do not work if your
menstrual cycle is irregular and longer than 35 days or shorter
than 21 days.
But there are other ways of ascertaining fertility. If you can
track your cervical mucus, it can tell you with a fair degree of
accuracy, whether you are ovulating or not. The cervical mucus
is thin, profuse, clear and stretchy just before ovulation.
After ovulation, the cervical mucus becomes thick, tacky, scanty
and sticky. You can observe this change in the character of
cervical mucus by seeing or feeling it.
You can also determine the occurrence of ovulation by using the
Basal Body Temperature method. The body temperature varies
during ovulation and after it. The hormone, progesterone,
produced by the corpus luteum triggers off an increase in the
body temperature after ovulation by 0.5 to 1.0 degrees. The
Basal Body temperature method of assessing fertility is a simple
procedure that requires you to note your oral temperature every
morning before engaging in any activity. This is important
because eating, drinking and even moving about change the body
temperature and render the procedure ineffective. The basal
thermometer allows you to measure the smallest increase in
temperature as it has a least count that can measure up to a
tenth of a degree. And therefore, if you record your basal body
temperature on a chart on the onset of menstruation and note the
temperature fluctuations throughout the period of the menstrual
cycle, you can get a fair assessment of the timing of your
ovulation. A rise of about 0.5 degrees in temperature on or
about fourteen days in the cycle would suggest that ovulation
has occurred.
Blood tests to determine ovulation are expensive and
inconvenient. You can, however, opt for the ovulation predictor
kits that are available in the market. These simple and
affordable kits measure the Luteinizing Hormone (LH) surge that
happens shortly before ovulation. Home urinary tests are
accurate as much as the surge in LH is concerned but do not
establish ovulation as a certainty.
In case you are having difficulty in conceiving, the most
foolproof method of ascertaining fertile periods is to visit
your doctor as they are fully equipped with the latest advances
in technology for treatment. You should choose the doctor on the
basis of your specific requirements for consultation. Family
doctors or general practitioners are not fully trained to treat
your reproductive system and are most likely to direct you to a
specialist. Obstetricians or gynecologists are better trained
for women's health issues. A fertility specialist or
reproductive endocrinologist is trained in the field of
reproduc
rforming advanced reproductive techniques like in-vitro
fertilization.
Fertility in men is mainly associated with their ability to
produce sperm and transporting it out their body so as to enter
the reproductive tract of the partner. Men can do this any time
of the month but the quantity and quality of the sperm can be
affected by stress, anxiety, and medical conditions like
prostrate enlargement or infertility. Sterility is often
mistaken for infertility in men and it should be noted that
infertility does not mean a total inability to make your partner
pregnant. With advancement in medical research, infertility is
now defined with temporal and physical elements. You should
assume infertility only if a concerted effort at conception has
been made with unprotected intercourse and failed.
About the author:
Fertility Facts http://www.fertilityfacts.org offers extensive
articles and resources on fertility, infertility, treatments and
pregnancy.

