
Doctor Malpani has also written a book called
"How to Get the Best Medical Care - For Less".
click here.
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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 |
Preventing Infertility Often preventing infertility is much easier and better than treating it ! What can you do to reduce the risk of being infertile ? The biggest preventable danger to fertility is due to uncontrolled sexually transmitted diseases ( STDs) such as syphilis, gonorrhea and chlamydia. These can cause irreparable damage to the reproductive tract in both men and women. STDs can be prevented by: - being informed and aware of the risks they pose. - not engaging in promiscuous sexual activity. Abstinence or monogamy is safest ! - using condoms if there is more than one sexual partner. - testing for STD if you are at risk - early and thorough treatment for STDs . This includes: careful followup; testing for cure; and screening of sexual partners. Often, couples will want to postpone childbearing after marriage. Contraception can also pose a hazard to future fertility, if not selected carefully.
An important preventable cause of testicular damage in men is uncorrected undescended testes . Undescended testes should be surgically treated at an early age to prevent damage - preferably before the age of 2 years. This requires educating mothers of young boys; and doctors as well. It may also be a good idea to immunise boys against mumps in childhood, thus preventing the ravage which mumps can cause to the testes in later life. Drugs - including alcohol , cocaine and marijuana - are all poisons . They can reduce sex drive; damage sperm production; and interfere with ovulation - and sometimes this damage is irreparable. Smoking tobacco also affects reproductive function - by depleting egg production; increasing the risk of PID; and lowering sperm counts. Often, the adverse effect is temporary, so that when these are stopped, the harmful effects on reproductive function are likely to be reversed. However, since abstinence is easier than moderation, the best option is not to smoke, drink or use drugs ! Occupational hazards can also decrease sperm counts. Many toxic drugs - including radiation, radioactive materials , anesthetic gases, and industrial chemicals such as lead, the pesticide DBCP and the pharmaceutical solvent ethylene oxide can reduce fertility by imparing sperm production. Intense exposure to heat in the workplace ( for example, long-distance truck drivers exposed to engine heat; and men working in furnaces or in bakeries) can cause long-term and even permanent impairment of sperm production. You should be aware of these hazards and may need to control your exposure if fertility is a concern. Wearing loose cotton underwear and trousers is advisable - tight clothes increase testicular temperature and may harm sperm production. X-rays can be harmful to gonads. If X-rays are needed, the scrotum should be covered with a lead shield . Unnecessary surgery can also cause harm to fertility. For example, appendectomy for chronic abdominal pain in young women can create pelvic adhesions which damage the tubes. It is also important to educate doctors and patients about the necessity ( or the non-necessity !) of certain operations in young women. Procedures like ovarian cystectomy to remove small ovarian cysts; myomectomy to remove small fibroids; and D&Cs may actually cause more harm than do good. If surgical procedures are needed, then these should be performed meticulously , preferably using microsurgical techniques. Minimally invasive surgery ( laparoscopic surgery and ultrasound guided procedures ) offers an alternative to conventional surgery in these patients, where conserving fertility is a major concern. For some young men with cancers ( such as Hodgkin's lymphoma or testicular cancers), the therapy for the cancer ( chemotherapy and radiation ) can destroy sperm production and render them sterile. For these men, sperm preservation ( by freezing in a sperm bank ) is an option to maintain their fertility. Some young couples use abortions as a method of family planning when they inadvertently get pregnant - either very soon after marriage - or even before. These unwanted pregnancies are then removed by medical termination of pregnancy - MTP. A MTP is usually a safe and easy surgical procedure but it can have complications . One of these is infertility because of blocked tubes following an infection after the surgery. Contraception should be easily available for couples - and they should be taught how to use it effectively. It is also important to prevent unnecessary damage to the cervix in women. Regular PAP smears to screen for early cervical precancerous disease allows conservative treatment of these lesions when they are found, thus preserving the function of the cervix. Unnecessary surgical treatment of benign cervical lesions such as erosions should also be avoided. Young women who are obsessed with their fitness can paradoxically impair their own fertility. Excessive dieting ; together with too much exercise in order to maintain a thin figure can actually cause irregular menstrual cycles and stop ovulation. This is especially common in women athletes , swimmers , gymnasts and dancers; and women with anorexia nervosa. Simply regaining body weight can reverse their infertility. Obesity can also interfere with ovarian function. Excessive fat disrupts normal hormonal production, causing abnormal ovulation. Reducing body weight down to normal can correct the problem. Another problem which has become more prevalent recently is the advanced age at which women are opting to have babies. Because of socio-economic pressures, women prefer to complete their education and pursue their careers before starting a family. This sometimes means that childbearing is postponed till women are in their late twenties or early thirties - and for some women at least, the biological clock has ticked on too far as a result of this delay. In addition to the natural decline in fertility with increasing age, the longer a woman puts off pregnancy, the more she risks having her fertility threatened for various other reasons - such as endometriosis and STDs. While postponing childbearing can be an economic necessity for some couples, the best time to have a baby from a biological point of view is when the woman is in her early twenties.
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