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Chapter 1
Do you have an infertility problem ? When to Start Worrying!

Chapter 2
How Babies are Made - The Basics

Chapter 3
Finding Out What’s Wrong -- The Basic Medical Tests

Chapter 4
Testing the Man - Semen Analysis.

Chapter 5
Beyond the Semen Analysis

Chapter 6
Diagnosis and Treatment for Male Infertility -- More Confusion !

Chapter 7
The Case of the Man with a Low Sperm Count.

Chapter 8
Microinjection: The Latest Advance in Treating the Infertile Man.

Chapter 9
Ultrasound - Seeing with Sound.

Chapter 10
Laparoscopy -- The Kinder Cut

Chapter 11
Hysteroscopy

Chapter 12
The Tubal Connection

Chapter 13
Ovulation -- Normal and Abnormal

Chapter 14
The Older Woman

Chapter 15
Polycystic Ovarian Disease (PCOD)

Chapter 16
The Cervical Factor

Chapter 17
Hirsutism -- Excess Facial and Body Hair

Chapter 18
Endometriosis -- The Silent Invader

Chapter 19
Ectopic Pregnancy – The Time Bomb in the Tube

Chapter 20
Unexplained Infertility

Chapter 21
Secondary Infertility -- Caught Between Fertile And Infertile Worlds

Chapter 22
Empty Arms -- The Lonely Trauma of Miscarriage

Chapter 23
Understanding Your Medicines

Chapter 24
Intrauterine Insemination

Chapter 25
Test Tube Babies - IVF & GIFT

Chapter 26
PREIMPLANTATION GENETIC DIAGNOSIS - the newest ART
Chapter 27
Using Donor Sperm

Chapter 28
Surrogate Mothering

Chapter 29
When Enough is Enough - The Decision to End Treatment

Chapter 30
Adoption - Yours by Choice

Chapter 31
Childfree living - Life without children

Chapter 32
Stress And Infertility

Chapter 33
The Emotional Crisis of Infertility

Chapter 34
How to Cope with Infertility

Chapter 35
Infertility and Sexuality

Chapter 36
Support Groups-Self-Help is the Best Help

Chapter 37
Myths and Misconceptions

Chapter 38
Helping Hands - How Friends and Relatives can Help

Chapter 39
RIGHTS OF THE INFERTILE COUPLE - AND WHAT SOCIETY NEEDS TO DO ABOUT THEM

Chapter 40
Alternative Medicine: Exploring Your Treatment Options

Chapter 41
Making Decisions about Treatment

Chapter 42
How to Find the Best Doctor

Chapter 43
How to Make the Most of Your Doctor

Chapter 44
Let the reader beware - making sense of medical stories in the news

Chapter 45
THE INFERTILE PATIENT'S GUIDE TO THE INTERNET

Chapter 46
The Ethical Issues - Right or Wrong ?

Chapter 47
How Much Does Treatment Cost?

Chapter 48
Pregnant - At Last !

Chapter 49
Preventing Infertility

Chapter 50
The Infertile Patient's Prayer and Infertility "Defined"

Chapter 51
Making IVF affordable

Chapter 52
Why are women scared of IVF ?

Chapter 53
INFERTILITY RECORD SHEET


Chapter 54
Self-Insemination

The Older Woman

This is why the older woman presents a number of unusual personal problems. For one, most women can hear their own biologic clock ticking away loudly, and don't like being reminded about the fact that their age can be a limiting factor in their fertility. Moreover, many of these women are busy executives pursuing a career. They are very used to being successful, and find it difficult to come to terms with their biologic frailty. Because of all the media hype , they expect the assisted reproductive technologies to provide them with a quick answer . However, few reports emphasise that pregnancy rates in older women, even with IVF, are only half of what they are with younger women - so that typically, a woman who is more than 40 years of age has a less than 10 % chance of having a live birth in an IVF cycle. Older women also find it much more difficult to get social support. Society can be both sexist and ageist, and most people feel it is "unnatural" for an older women to want to try to get pregnant.
The major problem for the older woman is that time is at a premium ! She simply cannot afford to waste her precious time on ineffective treatments; and it is better for her to move on to IVF sooner rather than later !
Older women present doctors with many challenging problems. For one, they usually respond poorly to ovarian stimulation, and pregnancy rates with treatment are lower. They also have an increased risk of having a miscarriage - and in women over 41 years of age, this risk can be as much as 50% ! Moreover, as a woman ages, she has an increased risk of having medical problems in her pregnancy , because of preexisting medical problems such as diabetes and hypertension.
An especially thorny issue is the increased risk of birth defects because of aging eggs. As eggs get older, they have an increased risk of harbouring chromosomal errors, and this increases the risk of the baby having a chromosomal error, such as trisomy 21 ( Down syndrome). Most clinics will offer prenatal diagnosis ( such as chorion villus sampling, and amniocentesis ) to these women to screen for birth defects during pregnancy - but since some of these procedures increase the risk of a miscarriage, the couple often find themselves on the horns of a dilemma - and it is hard for them to decide whether to do the test or not to.
What is the oldest age at which an infertility specialist should accept a woman for treatment ? Is there a particular age at which a woman should be denied treatment ? If so, then why ? and what should this age be ? and who should decide ? " Menopausal mums" have grabbed much media attention, and have raised a number of controversies - which still remain unresolved.
Much research is going on to try to increase the pregnancy rates after IVF in older women. One high tech option is to screen the embryos for aneuploidy ( an abnormality in chromosomal number) using FISH ( fluorescent in situ hybridisation) for preimplantation genetic diagnosis, a technique in which embryos are biopsied and their chromosomes analysed using probes. If only chromosomally normal , healthy embryos are transferred back, then researchers feel that embryo implantation rates and pregnancy rates will be higher. Another option is assisted zona hatching, using chemicals or a laser, to create an opening in the zona ( shell ) of the embryo. Scientists feel that this technique can allow the embryo to " hatch " and thus escape from the zone and implant into the uterine lining more easily. However, the clinical benefit of these procedures is still unclear.
For older woman with a persistently poor ovarian response, many options have been explored to try to improve the number of eggs produced. This includes using supplemental growth hormone ; and the newer recombinant gonadotropins.. However, the results of these have been disappointing, and the fact remains that we do not have an effective method of helping poor ovarian responders.
A very effective option for older woman whose own eggs do not grow well is that of using donor eggs or donor embryos. However, this is obviously a very sensitive emotional issue, and each couple needs to make their own decision. While using donor eggs and embryos does dramatically improve pregnancy rates, it is often an option many couples find hard to come to terms with. It is also becoming increasingly difficult to find suitable egg donors. While egg donation has become commercialised in USA, this has raised a lot of hue and cry, because critics feel that young women are being enticed to "sell their eggs". Finding altruistic egg donors is an uphill task for most women, because they are often very reluctant to ask for help , since this would involve telling others about their problem. Support groups like NEEDS ( National Egg and Embryo Donation Society) in the UK have been very helpful in motivating voluntary egg donors by creating public awareness of the need for healthy young women to donate their eggs. Clinics have also adopted various approaches to help resolve this problem . Some large clinics run successful anonymous egg donation programs; others use known egg donors ( either paid or unpaid); and others encourage their patients to share their supernumerary eggs ( often for a financial consideration) with other patients.
An exciting option for the future may be that of egg banking . A lot of research is being focussed on developing more efficient methods to cryopreserve and store eggs. If this becomes clinically practicable, then it may become possible to freeze a woman's eggs or ovarian tissue when she is young, and store these for her in liquid nitrogen at -196 C, so that she can use her own "young" eggs in the future, whenever she decides to start her family !

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