Informed-Health.net
The Science of Good Health

Pregnancy, Infertility and Alternative Medicine

Author: Dr. Lena Serghides, Ph.D.
Date: July 19, 2011

Editor’s Note: This is the second issue of Informed-Health.net, and we are happy to bring you the following information on becoming pregnant using healthy and natural means. The choice of topic was inspired by a book by Lisa Olson (described in the Resources section at the end of this article); the material presented in this article was written following an independent review of the academic literature.

Table of Contents

The Basics – How do you get pregnant?

For you to get pregnant two things have to happen. First your egg needs to get fertilized by your partner’s sperm, and second the fertilized egg needs to implant into the wall of your uterus and start growing. Your egg is released from your ovaries during ovulation. Once your egg is released it travels down your fallopian tube, reaches your uterus, and then is expelled (this process takes a few days). Sperm has to get to your egg after it is released and before it gets expelled. Sperm can survive in you for about 3 days. This is why the best time to have sex if you want to get pregnant is two or three days before ovulation, and then daily until 2 days after ovulation (for a total of 5 days of daily sex). Once the egg is fertilized it will travel to your uterus (womb) and settle in the endometrial layer (the endometrium is the lining of the uterus, that is expelled during your period). Often, a fertilized egg may fail to implant successfully, resulting in a failed pregnancy. However, you may not even notice this, as it will look like a slightly delayed period. Appropriate hormonal levels are very important in achieving a successful implantation. There are several natural things you can do to improve your chances of becoming pregnant and having a healthy pregnancy and baby, including being healthy and fit (eating right and exercising), having low stress, and other natural methods that we will discuss below.

What is infertility

Infertility is a term applied to a couple that have been trying to get pregnant for over a year and have failed to conceive, or have repeated ectopic pregnancies or miscarriages. It may also refer to a couple that have been pregnant before but are unable to get pregnant again. Infertility can cause many painful emotions in both partners, and it is important you recognise and discuss these emotions. This discussion could be with your partner, a friend, family, support groups, or with your doctor or health care provider. Ten to 15 percent of couples in the United States are dealing with infertility, so you are not alone.
There are many physical and emotional factors that can cause infertility in both women and men. Factors such as stress, a hormonal imbalance, and poor diet can inhibit the processes necessary for fertilization. Illness such as ovarian cysts, polycystic ovary syndrome, pelvic infection, endometriosis, fibroids, polyps, diabetes, thyroid disease, autoimmune disorders, or cancer, can cause female infertility. Age can also affect fertility, with fertility declining in women over the age of 35.

Simple things you can do to maximize your chance of getting pregnant

Adapted from the Mayo Clinic website:
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/how-to-get-pregnant/PR00103

How to predict when you are most fertile

How infertility is treated using conventional medicine

The American Congress of obstetricians and gynecologists provides a website describing western medicine approaches to dealing with infertility.
http://www.acog.org/publications/patient_education/bp137.cfm

How to treat infertility naturally using alternative medicine

Alternative medicine includes everything that is not considered conventional medicine, and this includes: chiropractic medicine, herbalism, traditional Chinese medicine, homeopathy, acupuncture, meditation, yoga, and nutritional-based therapies. The big difference in philosophy between conventional and alternative medicine is that conventional medicine is concerned with treating your symptoms with drugs and medical interventions like surgery, while alternative medicine takes a more holistic approach focusing on individualizing treatments, treating the whole person, promoting self-care and self-healing, and recognizing the spiritual nature of each individual. Alternative medicine focuses on good nutrition, and preventive practices (preventing you from getting sick, rather than only treating you after you have already become sick).

Nutrition

You stand the best chance of conceiving and having a healthy pregnancy if you maintain good nutrition. Things like preservatives, food additives, caffeine, artificial sweeteners, and too much sugar and salt, can affect your hormonal levels and have a dramatic impact on your fertility. And remember that many of these chemicals can cross the placenta and affect your growing baby. Here are some good nutrition tips to follow:

Supplements

Women that are either contemplating pregnancy, or already pregnant, should also consider taking the following supplements.

Acupuncture

Acupuncture is one of the more common alternative medicine procedures used in combination with conventional techniques for the care of women trying to conceive [8].

Acupuncture is believed to improve hormonal imbalances that can go along with amenorrhea, and related conditions, such as polycystic ovary syndrome. Several studies of women with fertility problems suggest that acupuncture may help promote ovulation [9].

Acupuncture is also thought to have both physiological and psychological effects that help reduce stress and improve fertility [10].

Acupuncture can also help with male infertility, since it was found to improve sperm motility in patients with oligoasthenozoospermia (low sperm count and low sperm motility).

In combination with IVF procedures, acupuncture has also been shown to improve the rates of pregnancy and live births [11]. In one study, IVF patients receiving acupuncture were less stressed and were 50% more likely to conceive than women who did not receive acupuncture.

Acupuncture was also shown to be effective at reducing depression during pregnancy.[12].

Resources

For more information regarding natural approaches to getting pregnant, we recommend a book by Lisa Olson. Lisa is a nutritionist and a health consultant who wrote a book after struggling with infertility herself for many years. With the help of a midwife and a Chinese medicine expert she became pregnant at the age of 43 and is now the mother of two daughters. She assembled all she learned into a book that is full of valuable information on how to naturally and permanently eliminate infertility issues and give birth to healthy children.

She describes several alternative medicine techniques that can help you improve your chances of reversing infertility and becoming pregnant, including changes in your diet, certain herbal supplements, stress relieving exercises, and many other methods. What is great about these methods is that they don’t involve drugs, or risky and painful surgery, or expensive infertility treatments like IVF and IUI, and they generally have no side effects. This book offers a comprehensive holistic infertility solution that includes 24 hour personal counseling and support until you become pregnant naturally. And the program is guaranteed – you can return it for a full refund within 60 days.

Many thousands of women have used this holistic program to successfully improve their health and well-being, and to beat infertility and become mothers of healthy babies. The book is clear, concise, and easy to understand. This book starts from square one and teaches you everything you need to know to get pregnant naturally without drugs or surgery.

It includes information on:

  • foods to avoid (there are beverages that can reduce your chances of conceiving by 50%),
  • the best foods to eat for increasing fertility
  • common household products you must avoid because they interfere with your hormone production and contribute to infertility
  • 100% natural supplements that can provide hormonal balance (very important in ensuring proper implantation and maintaining a pregnancy)
  • Step by step instructions for using acupuncture and acupressure to promote calm and enhance conception
  • Breathing and exercises that can heal your body, normalize hormone production, and increase your chances of becoming pregnant
  • A method to cleanse your body of chemicals that mimic hormones that can aggravate infertility
  • Vitamins that improve your cervical mucus to enhance fertilization
  • Herbs that can improve immunity and cleanse the body
  • Simple techniques to improve your chances of conception
  • The link between insomnia, stress, and infertility, and exactly what you should do to eliminate these from your life
  • 3 simple things that can increase a man’s sperm count and health

Click Here to Learn More »

Bibliography

1.

Vitamin D deficiency and insufficiency is common during pregnancy.

Johnson DD, Wagner CL, Hulsey TC, McNeil RB, Ebeling M, Hollis BW.

Am J Perinatol. 2011 Jan, 28(1):7-12.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20640974

The objective was to determine the incidence of vitamin D deficiency, insufficiency, and sufficiency in pregnant women. This study demonstrates that there is widespread vitamin D deficiency and insufficiency in pregnant women.

2.

An exploratory study of postpartum depression and vitamin D.

Murphy PK, Mueller M, Hulsey TC, Ebeling MD, Wagner CL.

J Am Psychiatr Nurses Assoc. 2010 May;16(3):170-7.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21659271

This study investigated whether a relationship exists between postpartum depression and vitamin D levels in the blood. Blood samples from 97 women were analysed, and a significant relationship was found between blood vitamin D levels and postpartum depression.

3.

Vitamin D supplementation during pregnancy: Double blind, randomized clinical trial of safety and effectiveness.

Hollis BW, Johnson D, Hulsey TC, Ebeling M, Wagner CL.

J Bone Miner Res. 2011 Jun 27. doi: 10.1002/jbmr.463.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21706518

This study examined the safety and effectiveness of vitamin D supplementation during pregnancy. Blood samples were taken from 350 pregnant women. Not a single health problem in the women was attributable to vitamin D supplementation. Further, the women taking 4000U of vitamin D had half the rate of pregnancy related disorders compared to women taking only 400U of vitamin D.

4.

Randomised clinical trials of fish oil supplementation in high risk pregnancies. Fish Oil Trials In Pregnancy (FOTIP) Team.

Olsen SF, Secher NJ, Tabor A, Weber T, Walker JJ, Gluud C.

BJOG. 2000 Mar;107(3):382-95.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10740336

The purpose of this study was to test the preventive effects of dietary n-3 fatty acids on pre-term delivery, intrauterine growth retardation, and pregnancy induced hypertension, in women with high risk pregnancies. The findings were that fish oil supplementation reduced the risk of pre-term delivery.

5.

Maternal supplementation with very-long-chain n-3 fatty acids during pregnancy and lactation augments children’s IQ at 4 years of age.

Helland IB, Smith L, Saarem K, Saugstad OD, Drevon CA.

Pediatrics. 2003 Jan;111(1):e39-44.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12509593

This study found that children who were born to mothers who had taken cod liver oil during pregnancy and lactation scored higher on the Mental Processing Composite (IQ test) at 4 years of age compared with the children whose mothers had not taken the supplement.

6.

The effect of perinatal omega-3 fatty acid supplementation on inflammatory markers and allergic diseases: a systematic review.

Klemens C, Berman D, Mozurkewich E.

BJOG. 2011 Jul;118(8):916-925.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21658192

This paper presents a review of the academic literature including 5 high-quality studies (randomised controlled trials, involving a total of 949 women). The conclusion was that fish oil supplementation of pregnant women decreases the rates of asthma and and allergies in their children.

7.

Vaginal lactobacilli, probiotics, and IVF.

Verstraelen H, Senok AC.

Reprod Biomed Online. 2005 Dec;11(6):674-5.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16417727

This paper reports that women seeking IVF treatments to treat infertility frequently have high rates of bacterial vaginosis. The paper suggests that this means that infertility may be caused, at least to some extent, by an abnormal bacteria colonising the vagina. This paper concludes that probiotics that contain live lactobacilli, capable of re-colonizing the vagina, may offer an elegant and safe choice of treatment for infertility.

8.

On the use of classical naturopathy and complementary medicine procedures in hospitals and clinics practicing gynecology and obstetrics in Germany. Results of a questionnaire survey.

Beer AM, Ostermann T.

Gynecol Obstet Invest. 2003;55(2):73-81.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12771453

The extent to which alternative medical therapies are used in gynecology and obstetrics clinics was measured. Acupuncture was used in 94.1% of the clinics surveyed, while homeopathy was used in 83.0% of the clinics.

9.

Acupuncture in obstetrics and gynecology: an overview of systematic reviews.

Ernst E, Lee MS, Choi TY.

Am J Chin Med. 2011;39(3):423-31.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21598411

This paper reviewed 24 systematic studies of acupuncture in the treatment of obstetrical and gynecological conditions, finding that 9 of the studies reported clearly positive outcomes. Although the authors state that there were many contradictions and caveats, they conclude that there is limited evidence in support of acupuncture as a treatment of obstetrical and gynecological conditions.

10.

Effect of acupuncture on assisted reproduction treatment outcomes.

Madaschi C, Braga DP, Figueira Rde C, Iaconelli A Jr, Borges E Jr.

Acupunct Med. 2010 Dec;28(4):180-4.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20959311

Acupuncture was evaluated as a complementary technique in the management of infertility. In cases where the causes of infertility were exclusively tubal-uterine or idiopathic, a positive influence of acupuncture on pregnancy was found. Moreover, trends toward an increase in implantation were seen when acupuncture was performed

11.

The use of acupuncture for managing gynaecologic conditions: An overview of systematic reviews.

Kang HS, Jeong D, Kim DI, Lee MS.

Maturitas. 2011 Apr;68(4):346-54.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21376483

This paper reviewed 16 high quality studies of Acupuncture in the treatment of gynaecologic conditions. They concluded that the current evidence suggests that acupuncture administered close to embryo transfer, during in vitro fertilisation treatment, improves the rates of pregnancy and live births.

12.

Acupuncture for depression during pregnancy: a randomized controlled trial.

Manber R, Schnyer RN, Lyell D, Chambers AS, Caughey AB, Druzin M, Carlyle E, Celio C, Gress JL, Huang MI, Kalista T, Martin-Okada R, Allen JJ.

Obstet Gynecol. 2010 Mar;115(3):511-20.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20177281

Acupuncture was administered to 150 pregnant women with major depressive disorder. The study concluded that acupuncture was as effective as the standard depression treatments, and is a viable treatment option for depression during pregnancy.



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