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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

Hysteroscopy
Polyps
Endometrial or uterine polyps are soft, fingerlike growths which develop in the lining of the uterus (the endometrium).  They develop because of excessive multiplication of the endometrial cells, and are hormonally dependent , so that they increase in size depending upon the estrogen level.  They can usually be detected on an ultrasound scan if this is done mid-cycle, when estrogen levels are maximal, but are easily missed if the scan is not done at the right time of the menstrual cycle.  Polyps are an uncommon but important cause of infertility, because they can easily be removed during hysteroscopic surgery.

Fig 1. Uterine polyp as seen during hysteroscopy

Fig 2. Uterine polyp seen during ultrasound scan after infusion of saline which outlines the polyp in the cavity  

Fibroids
While the commonest problem found in the uterus is a fibroid (myoma), this is rarely a cause of infertility, and is usually an incidental finding of little importance.  Fibroids are common benign smooth muscle tumors which arise in the wall of the uterus, and may be single or multiple.  About 25% of all women over the age of 35 have fibroids.  Most fibroids develop in the wall of the uterus (intramural ) or protrude outside of the uterine wall (subserous fibroids), and these can usually be left alone, since they do not hinder fertility, and neither do they cause problems during the pregnancy. In fact, unnecessary surgery to remove the fibroid often causes more harm than good.  This surgery often creates adhesions, which causes the tubes to get blocked.  However, if the fibroids are very large, they may need surgical removal, and this procedure is called a myomectomy.  Some doctors give an injection of a GnRH analog prior to surgery in order to shrink the fibroid and make surgery technically easier. When performed by an expert, it is a safe and effective procedure which can be accomplished with minimal blood loss.  However, sometimes because of uncontrollable bleeding the surgeon may be forced to remove the entire uterus (a procedure called a hysterectomy), and this is obviously a disaster for the infertile woman! The standard technique for removing a fibroid is through open surgery (laparotomy).  It is now also possible to remove fibroids through the laparoscope, but laparoscopic myomectomy does not allow for optimal reconstruction of the uterus. Submucous fibroids are an important cause of infertility, because they interfere with implantation of the embryo, by acting as a foreign body.  These are best removed by an operative hysteroscopy. While surgery can remove the fibroid, it can recur again, and most doctors advise the patient to try to conceive as soon as possible after surgery.

Fig 2. Schematic showing a submucous fibroid; and a subserous fibroid compressing the right fallopian tube

Fibroids may grow larger during the pregnancy, but usually pregnancy and delivery are uneventful.  In rare cases, after a myomectomy, uterine rupture may occur during pregnancy or delivery, and this complication may result in severe blood loss, fetal loss and even maternal death.  Because of the potential for catastrophic results, it is recommended that women have cesarean deliveries in the following circumstances: 1) when the myomectomy involved full-thickness incision of the uterine wall or multiple deep uterine incisions or 2) when myomectomy was complicated by infection which may have weakened the uterine wall or 3) when there is doubt regarding the adequacy or extent of the uterine repair.
The uterus was often a neglected organ in the infertility workup, partly because we did not have the tools to study it properly.  Hysteroscopy, hysterosalpingography and vaginal ultrasound are all complementary procedures for evaluating the uterine cavity in the infertile woman.  The HSG is good for looking for polyps, adhesions and septa which appear as "filling defects" on the X-ray. However, careful radiologic technique is a must. Vaginal ultrasound is excellent for detecting submucosal fibroids or polyps, which can be missed on hysteroscopy and HSG.  Of course, the major advantage of hysteroscopy is it offers the chance of treating the problem as well!
We are now also developing newer techniques to study the uterus.  One of our major areas of ignorance today is the complex process of embryo implantation.  It is obvious that the endometrium has a key role to play in this process, in which the embryo has to appose and attach itself to the maternal endometrium and invade into it.  The normal endometrium contains cell adhesion proteins called integrins, which allow the embryo to interact with it.  Studies have shown that the endometrium of some infertile women is deficient in some of these integrins, and this deficiency may be responsible for failure of the embryo to implant successfully.  Thus, testing the endometrium for beta integrin can be a useful marker for uterine receptivity.  This test involves doing an endometrial biopsy at a specific point in the menstrual cycle, and evaluating this with special staining techniques, but is only available on a research basis so far.

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