Thursday, October 28, 2010

Mariah Carey: Pregnant After all!

Mariah Carey has officially confirmed that she and husband Nick Cannon are expecting a baby in the spring.

After months of speculation about her pregnancy, the 40-year-old singer spoke with Access Hollywood’s Billy Bush about the good news.



“Yes, we are pregnant, this is true!” Mariah shared. “It’s been a long journey. It’s been tough because I’ve been trying to hold on to a shred of privacy.”

“The greatest gift on earth is a child,” Nick said in the interview. “We’ve had names picked out from the first day we met and we want to stay true to that.”

Congrats to the happy couple!

Women over 40 lead surge in demand for IVF

Women over the age of 40 are flocking to fertility clinics in a final attempt to start a family before their biological clock stops ticking, latest figures show. 

The fortysomethings are the fastest-growing group of patients seeking IVF, up from less than 1,000 in 1991 to more than 6,000 in 2006.

Demand for IVF has soared for all age groups in the past decade, with almost 40,000 cycles of treatment provided in 2006. Forty-plus women have led the surge, rising from 10 per cent of all cycles in 2000 to more than 15 per cent in 2006.

Experts said the trend was a consequence of the social pressures on women to delay starting a family while establishing their careers and growing awareness of the potential of fertility treatment. But they warned that many older women faced having their hopes dashed as success rates for IVF declined sharply with advancing years.
The figures also reveal rising demand from single and lesbian women. Cycles of treatment provided to single women increased from 600 in 1999 to more than 1,200 in 2006. The number of treatment cycles for lesbian couples rose from 300 to almost 1,000 in the same period.

Medical advances and improvements in technique have seen success rates for treatment increase dramatically. The overall live birth rate has risenfrom 14 per cent per cycle of treatment in 1991, to 21 per cent in 2006. The success rates are even higher for women under the age of 35 with more than one in four becoming pregnant at the first attempt. But the rates fall sharply after women pass the age of 35, declining to 12 per cent at age 40.

Moreover, the over-40s have not seen the improvement in live birth rates experienced by younger women. Success rates have improved only slightly over the past 15 years as doctors have run up against the barrier of female biological clock. After the age of 43, more than 95 per cent of patients treated return home childless.

Angela McNab, chief executive of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA), which published the figures on the occasion of the authority's annual conference in London yesterday, said the growth in demand from women over 40 was worrying. "Scandinavian countries are seeing the trend to delay motherhood even more markedly," she said. "It is a matter of concern. We may need to remind women about the biological clock and the difficulty of achieving pregnancy over 40."

She denied that clinics were pushing the treatment to older women, citing the practice of some doctors to refuse treatment to women in their forties. "I don't think the clinics are over-selling IVF [to older women]," she said. "I think there is greater awareness among the public about infertility and the range of treatments available."
NHS trusts refuse to fund treatment for women over the age of 40 on advice from the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (Nice) because of the low success rate, leaving women to pay for the treatment.

The average cost of a cycle of treatment ranges from £4,000 to £8,000. A woman having three or four cycles faces a bill of at least £12,000 and up to £32,000.

Sam Abdalla, director of the Lister fertility clinic, said society was imposing a "massive strain" on women by forcing them to choose between family and career. "It puts more of a burden on the women because it reduces their chances of conceiving and puts more strain on the treatment, especially in women over 45." He added that treatment in women over 40 was "less successful, with fewer pregnancies, a higher miscarriage rate and a lower live birth rate". But he stressed that the vast majority of women seeking treatment - 85 per cent - were under 40 with around half under 35.

For these women, the HFEA plans to publish figures showing the cumulative success rate for two or more cycles of treatment, to help those who fail to get pregnant at the first attempt decide whether it is worth continuing. Preliminary calculations show women under 35 increase their chances of having a baby from 26 per cent with one cycle of treatment to 55 per cent with three cycles. Nice recommends three cycles on the NHS but most NHS trusts provide only one cycle.

Ms McNab said: "The figures speak well for themselves. What that means for the primary care trusts is for them to consider."
The figures show a rise in the proportion of couples in whom male infertility is reported. Experts said this was likely to be due to better diagnosis of male problems rather than an increase in men with infertility. 

Source: http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-families/health-news/women-over-40-lead-surge-in-demand-for-ivf-451908.html

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Elizabeth Adeney !!PREGNANT AT 66 THE MOTHER-TO-BE SETS OFF A MEDICAL AND ETHICAL DEBATE!!



Elizabeth Adeney, a 66-year-old divorced businesswoman who is approximately eight-months pregnant, will soon be the oldest woman to give birth in UK history. She beats out the previous record-holder by four years.Woman is Pregnant at 66.

Britain's oldest mother, aged 66, gives birth to a 5lb 3oz boy

A woman of 66 has given birth to a baby boy  -  making her Britain's oldest new mother. 

Elizabeth Adeney and her newborn son, who weighed 5lb 3oz, are said to be doing 'extremely well'  in hospital.

The child, who was conceived through IVF, was delivered by caesarean section on Tuesday afternoon. 

Doctors are understood to have brought the procedure forward because Mrs Adeney, who carried her son almost to full term, had developed a complication. 

Mrs Adeney becomes the UK's oldest mother by four years, overtaking Patti Farrant who had a son, Jude, at the age of 62 three years ago. 

A friend of the divorcee said: 'Lizzie is absolutely thrilled. This is something she thought might never happen. She can't wait to get home and start her new life with her boy.' 


As revealed in the Daily Mail earlier this month, Mrs Adeney travelled to Ukraine for the IVF treatment as clinics here refuse to treat women over 50. 

The case has reignited the debate over post-menopausal motherhood which has been made possible by modern scientific techniques. 

Mrs Adeney first had fertility treatment two decades ago during her short-lived marriage to Robert Adeney, now 71, but was told by medical experts at the time that she could no longer continue with attempts to fall pregnant. 

A source close to Mr Adeney said the marriage foundered as Mrs Adeney became consumed with the desire to have children.
 

Fertility Statistics

Infertility impacts more than one in every six Australian couples, or over three million Australians, and this trend is increasing. Infertility is predicted to affect one in three couples within the next ten years. 

Infertility is clinically diagnosed after a couple has been unsuccessful in their attempts to conceive after one year of trying to fall pregnant. It can also refer to the inability to carry a pregnancy to term. Infertility can affect the male or female partner, or both.

Today we are choosing to pursue parenthood much later in our reproductive lives than ever before. Some studies are estimating that the average age for females to conceive for the first time is about 30.2 years. Compare this to previous generations when the average age was 24.

Australian Bureau of Statistics figures show the number of births in women aged over 30 has doubled in the past 25 years.
The birth rate for women under 29 has almost halved over the past 20 years.

The highest birth rate is now between the 30 to 34 age group for women.

Women aged between 35 and 39 are having more babies than women aged 20 to 24.

The ‘baby boom' period peaked in 1961 when women were having an average 3.5 babies each. In 2000, this number declined by half to 1.75 babies per woman within 40 years.

Marriage is happening later now and this could be a significant factor in the decline of conception rates. In 1979, the median age of a woman marrying was 21 - in 2002 it was 29. From age 21, a woman typically has about 1 million eggs and by 29 this number drops to an average 250,000.

An average healthy couple in their 20s has a 20 percent chance of successful conception in any given month. After the age of 35, this success rate drops to a 10 to 15 percent chance. In a woman over 40, the odds drop to a 5 percent chance of conception. After the age of 45, the conception percentage is about 1 percent.

However, Jason believes these statistics are not solid, indisputable facts and there is still hope for women who can defy the laws of statistics and make the improbable happen. Even with these statistical odds, the number of births among women aged 45 to 49 today has increased a remarkable 500 percent from only a decade ago.

Through Jason Jackson's Greenslopes Naturopathic Clinic, at least 60 48-year-old women and more than a few 50-year-old women have given birth for the first time after being given little to no chance of natural conception.

Male reproductive failure is thought to be the cause of 50 to 70 percent of infertility cases in western countries.

Of the 20 per cent of couples who experience infertility, the causal factor can be in found in 80 per cent of couples.

Source: http://www.makingbabies.net.au/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=9&Itemid=7

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Pregnancy Booster Clomid (Pregnancy Health Guru)



Clomid is one of several prescription fertility drugs that can be used to aid conception and boost fertility.

A guided tour of the IVF procedure



This video tells you all wanted to know about IVF but didn't know whom to ask ! So what actually happens in an IVF cycle ? We all know that IVF is expensive - but you still have a hundred questions ! Is it painful ? complicated ? how do they take out your eggs ? how do they put them back ? what actually happens in the IVF lab ? Here's a guided tour of what going through an IVF cycle involves !

Getting Pregnant After 40 - Top Prenatal Vitamins

Increasing chances of  getting pregnant can be important, especially for women over 40. Taking the top prenatal vitamins is one of the best tricks to getting pregnant fast. Below you'll find a recommended prenatal vitamin for every situation, plus some additional help on your quest in trying to conceive a baby.

The good news is that
pregnancy after 40 isn't as difficult as it used to be. A getting pregnant calendar should be your first step: make sure you carefully mark the days of your cycle in order to maximize your chances. Knowing your ovulation date is the single most important factor when it comes to conceiving a child, so make sure you and your partner are aware of when these days are.

The best pregnancy food to eat includes anything that will help you stay energized. Balance proteins such as meats, fish, eggs and poultry against healthy carbohydrates like fruit, nuts, and whole grains or cereals. Drink plenty of water to keep your body hydrated, and try to increase your physical activity so that you're getting at least 30 minutes of exercise each day. Getting pregnant after 40 requires your body to be in the best possible shape, both for you and your future baby.


The best pregnancy vitamins include supplements that
your body may no longer be getting enough of. As a woman advances in age her metabolism decreases, and the breaking down of food and nutrients isn't as efficient as it used to be. Trying to conceive a baby while your body is deficient of essential minerals can be an uphill battle, which is why the following recommended prenatal vitamin regimen should be considered:

* Folic Acid - This supplement is a must have. It's the number one pre-pregnancy vitamin prescribed to women of any age, and it's an important part of early fetal development. You should make sure
Folic Acid is at the top of your list.

* Iron - Getting enough iron can be a problem as you get older. For women who are anemic, iron is especially important. Make sure you're getting your daily recommended allowance.


* Calcium - As you probably already know, calcium breakdown can be a common female problem as age increases. Ovulation and getting pregnant requires that you get more than enough of this vital element.

* DHA - Many top prenatal vitamins include docosahexaenoic acid (DHA). This is an omega-3 fatty acid normally found in fish that is important for brain and heart development and health. Because women trying to become pregnant often limit their intake of fish due to concerns about mercury, they sometimes miss out on getting enough DHA in their diet. Make up for it here.


* Alpha Lipoic Acid - Essential to producing energy at a cellular level, C0Q10 and alpha lipoic acid are fairly expensive and not commonly found in most prenatal supplements... but these nutrients can have incredibly powerful effects on your body's function. If you can work these into your budget, they're certainly worth it.


* Zinc - Want to really boost fertility? Zinc has been shown to do just that, in numerous studies. It can be taken while trying to get pregnant in order to stimulate fertility and you should continue to take it while pregnant to help in the development in your baby's tissues.


*
Vitamin B6 - Not only do the B-complex vitamins help give you an energy boost, but this particular supplement has been proven to decrease symptoms of morning sickness. By increasing chances of getting pregnant with this mineral, you're also helping out with how you'll feel once you've already conceived.

No matter how old you are, it's never a bad idea to be on the best pregnancy vitamin plan possible. It's also important to realize that there are foods that you should avoid while trying to get pregnant, and over the counter medications and herbal remedies that could be counterproductive to
having a baby. On the flip side of the coin, there are many that can actually help in Getting pregnant after 40.

Source: http://www.articlealley.com/article_864805_61.html
Read more at http://www.articlealley.com/article_864805_61.html?ktrack=kcplink

Want a Baby Someday? How to Preserve Your Fertility

If you're thinking about getting pregnant later in life, you need to take certain steps right now to help keep your body in peak baby-making shape

Marisa Cohen


Considering you probably spend a good amount of energy trying to block conception, it's kind of odd to think about preparing yourself for a day when you might want to raise the gate to your reproductive system and having a baby. Maybe you're not at that point now—you're happily putting in long hours at a job you love, you're still enjoying being able to jump in the car for a road trip on a moment's notice, or you just haven't yet found a guy who's worthy of mixing his DNA with yours. But you'd still like to think that if the baby jones hits you like a ton of bricks, pregnancy over 40 won't be a problem.

Yet everywhere you look, an article or book (or even your own mom!) is there to remind you that your fertility drops every year you wait. You probably know the scary stats: Women reach their reproductive peak in their twenties, and by age 35, the risk of infertility jumps to 22 percent. But before you start Googling egg freezing (by the way, that's still experimental, and only a tiny number of babies have been born from frozen eggs), keep in mind that every woman's biological clock is different. Some women can get pregnant easily at 40, while others run into problems as early as their twenties. And while you can't stop the clock on the most important fertility factor—your age—there are plenty of lifestyle changes you can make now to up your odds of getting pregnant later.


If you want to get pregnant in five years...

See your doctor. If you want to keep your body baby-ready, staying in top physical shape is essential. That means getting any fertility-sapping health issues—like diabetes, polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), or endometriosis—under control; diagnosing and treating STDs; and devising a healthy diet and exercise plan. If you're past 35 and wondering whether you have the option of waiting a few more years, you can also ask your doc to do a little detective work on what's known as your ovarian reserve.

"All women are born with a certain number of eggs, and you lose them over your reproductive life span," explains Michael Soules, M. D., medical director of Seattle Reproductive Medicine. "At some point— about 10 years before the onset of menopause— the number drops to a level where your fertility is compromised." But there are fertility tests that can gauge how many eggs are still sitting on the bench waiting for their turn at bat. The best ones are an ultrasound to count the number of follicles in your ovaries and a blood test to check your hormone levels at certain points in your cycle. These tests, which Soules says are usually covered by insurance—check with your plan to make sure—can't guarantee that you're fertile (too many other factors come into play). But they can tell you how loudly your clock is ticking and whether you need to consider speeding up your schedule.

>Brush and floss. Could something as simple as flossing your teeth help keep you fertile? Perhaps. "Several studies have indicated that a woman's oral health may be related to her reproductive success," says Susan Karabin, D. D. S., a spokesperson for the American Academy of Periodontology. In one study, women who needed fertility treatments had higher levels of gum bleeding and inflammation than those who conceived naturally, the Journal of Periodontology reports. "Brush and floss every day and get a professional cleaning and exam every six months," advises Karabin, who adds that not smoking and avoiding sugary foods and drinks are also key to keeping your teeth and gums healthy.

>Practice safe sex. You wouldn't think condoms would come up in a conversation about getting pregnant, but safe sex can be a crucial factor in your future ability to get knocked up. If you contract an STD such as gonorrhea or chlamydia (which could be in your system without causing symptoms) and it goes untreated, it can lead to a serious condition called pelvic inflammatory disease, which can scar the fallopian tubes, causing infertility. So get tested regularly—and make sure your partners do, too.

>Stamp out cigarettes. If higher rates of lung cancer and breast cancer haven't made you swear off smoking, consider this: The American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) estimates that lighting up is linked to 13 percent of infertility cases. Tobacco messes with your fertility in all kinds of ways: It makes your eggs deteriorate faster than they naturally would with age, increases your risk of early miscarriage and ectopic pregnancy (a dangerous condition in which the egg implants in your fallopian tubes or ovaries instead of your uterus), and can bring on early menopause (up to four years earlier, compared with nonsmokers). Plus, if you wind up needing in vitro fertilization (IVF), smoking will reduce your chances of success by 34 percent. The encouraging news, though, is that once you do quit smoking, your fertility level will return to normal in about a year (considering that it takes the average puffer two to four tries before quitting for good, you should start trying to kick the habit well before that). While you're at it, recruit your partner, parents, and friends to quit with you: A recent study in Tobacco Control found that women who were exposed to secondhand smoke six or more hours a day as adults were 36 percent more likely to have trouble getting pregnant.

>Take your vitamins. "Every woman of reproductive age—even if you're not actively trying to get pregnant—should take a multivitamin containing folic acid," says Jorge Chavarro, M. D., an instructor at Harvard Medical School and co-author of The Fertility Diet" According to Chavarro, folic acid appears to improve fertility by stimulating ovulation and giving an embryo essential proteins needed for survival. His research also found that women who took iron supplements were 40 percent less likely to have fertility problems, so look for a vitamin with at least 40 milligrams of iron and 400 micrograms of folic acid, and get in the habit of downing the pill every morning. 


Source http://www.womenshealthmag.com/health/pregnancy-preparation

Monday, October 25, 2010

60-year-old mom delivers twins



A 60-year-old New Jersey woman has given birth to twins. CNN's Randi Kaye reports

Lawmaker Noda becomes pregnant at 49 after fertility treatment

TOKYO —
Seiko Noda, a 49-year-old House of Representatives member of the opposition Liberal Democratic Party, has become pregnant through artificial insemination after years of fertility treatment, sources close to the matter said Wednesday.
   
The former minister in charge of posts and telecommunications as well as consumers affairs is currently 15 weeks’ pregnant and is scheduled to give birth around February next year, when she will be 50. Noda is not married but has a de facto marital relationship with her partner, they said.
   
In 2004, Noda published a book titled ‘‘Watashi wa Umitai’’ (I Want to Give Birth) which depicts her physical and emotional struggles in undergoing fertility treatment and clashes with LDP House of Councillors member Yosuke Tsuruho, who was then her partner and initially opposed to the treatment.
   
Noda confirmed her pregnancy in an article in the weekly Shukan Shincho, which goes on sale on Thursday.
   
Noda says she received the treatment in the United States at a cost of ‘‘several million yen,’’ according to the article, a copy of which was made available on Wednesday.
   
As Noda is a major advocate of a system to allow married couples to have separate surnames and current Japanese law stipulates that couples should have the same surname, she has opted not to officially register her marriage.
   
She had made it public that she could not conceive because of a blocked fallopian tube and that she suffered a miscarriage after successfully getting pregnant through in vitro fertilization while maintaining a partnership with Tsuruho.
   
The two LDP lawmakers ended their five-year relationship in 2006.


   
In the magazine article, Noda calls for Japan to introduce legislation that would authorize such things as surrogate motherhood and egg donations from third persons ‘‘by acknowledging reality.’‘
   
‘‘Whatever happens, I want to give birth,’’ she says.
   
The six-term lower house member, who was once touted as a potential candidate to become Japan’s first female premier, has been calling on the government to implement drastic measures to reverse Japan’s falling birthrate such as creating a new ministry dedicated to improving the environment for childbirth and childrearing.
   
In May this year, she expressed her eagerness to run in the next leadership election of the LDP. 


(Source) http://www.japantoday.com/category/politics/view/lawmaker-noda-becomes-pregnant-at-49-after-fertility-treatment

Surprise, Surprise: Pregnancy Over 40

Even if you’re looking menopause in the face, you can still get pregnant. Five women who thought they were past their childbearing years tell how unplanned pregnancies changed their lives.

A State of Shock

It might have been embarrassing to walk through the lobby of the ob-gyn clinic crying, but Andrea Garduno was too unsettled to care. Anyway, she knew the entire staff at the El Paso clinic from her days working there as a student nurse. They were almost as surprised as she to learn that at 43, after sending two daughters off to college, she was pregnant again. Garduno had just one ovary and, thinking pregnancy was not a big risk at her age, had been using only contraceptive foam. ("It might as well have been Reddi-Wip," she says now.) The office manager put her arm around her shoulders and said, "Andie, don't worry. I have a friend who went through this, and her daughter just graduated from Stanford, with honors. And she's told me that this daughter has been the biggest blessing of her life."

Garduno would find those words reassuring in the months ahead, but for the moment, she was focused on how to break the news to her husband. He was a urologist and she, his surgical nurse. When she reached the operating room, he was performing a needle biopsy on a patient's prostate gland. "I leaned over and said, 'I want you to know that I'm six weeks pregnant,'" Garduno recalls. "And he just got this look on his face."
The shock of accidental pregnancy in women over 40 is far more common than you might expect. True, fertility declines with age: Only 15 in every 1,000 women over 40 become pregnant, compared with about 170 in 1,000 women in their 20s. But the fact is, slightly more than half of pregnancies in older women are unintended, according to the Alan Guttmacher Institute, a reproductive-health research center in New York City. Only teenagers and women 20-24 have higher rates of unintended pregnancies. And like teenagers, we tend to assume -- or at least vaguely hope -- that pregnancy won't happen to us.


(Read More) http://www.more.com/2024/2476-surprise-surprise-pregnancy-over-40

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Increasing Your Chances Of Getting Pregnant Fast Through Your Diet

If you are looking at ways of increasing your chances of getting pregnant fast, did you realize that your diet and lifestyle can play an enormous part in improving the odds? Indeed, simple modifications can be all that is needed to get you on the right track.


Very often, when couples are having difficulty conceiving, they often look towards invasive, expensive and time-consuming procedures when all along, the answer was in front of them. Your diet and lifestyle play an enormous part in your overall wellbeing and the efficiency of all bodily processes, of which conception and pregnancy are intrinsically linked.


To start off, take a look at your BMI. Maintaining a healthy weight is extremely important if you are trying to conceive. Hormones are affected by levels of body fat and ovulation can be seriously disrupted if your weight is too high. However, do not despair. Even if you are considerably overweight and getting down to a healthy BMI seems like an insurmountable mountain, just losing a few pounds can be enough to trigger a reaction within the body to get ovulation working properly again-indeed losing between 5% and 10% of your body weight can get things moving.


Improving your diet is an excellent way of increasing your chances of getting pregnant fast. Sticking to the principles of a healthy diet is the way forward and also ensuring that your body is well-hydrated. Water makes up a large proportion of our body and is responsible for helping with the correct workings of many of our normal bodily functions. You should ensure that you drink at least 2 liters of fluid each day, preferably water and diluted fruit juices.


Your diet should include:-


* Healthy lean proteins, mainly from non-animal sources
* At least 5 portions of fruits and vegetables daily
* Avoid trans fats
* Eat healthy oils
* Take a good all round multivitamin supplement
* Eat plenty of iron
* Drink full fat milk and try to include full fat yogurt and cheese, avoiding the reduced fat versions unless you are very overweight


In addition to your diet, exercise can really help in increasing your chances of getting pregnant fast. However, this is a case where more is not always better! Moderate exercise is great in helping get the body's functions working correctly, but too much exercise can inhibit ovulation. Roughly half an hour of brisk walking is an ideal daily exercise.


There is a holistic system which has been clinically researched over 14 years and which guarantees to help with increasing your chances of getting pregnant fast. Containing secret natural infertility cures, powerful techniques and the step-by-step holistic infertility cure system which is all you will ever need to permanently eliminate infertility within weeks. Most women will become pregnant within 3-4 months. To see further details, please visit Get Pregnant Fast.



Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/pregnancy-articles/increasing-your-chances-of-getting-pregnant-fast-through-your-diet-1860943.html

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Pregnant At 40

How To Get Pregnant After 40 Naturally? Get Pregnant Fast After Forties Using Natural Methods

Well, if you are trying to get pregnant after 40, then chances are it may take longer than when you were below 30's.....because fertility decreases with the increasing age and moreover ovulation is less frequent and the chances of uterine problems such as endometriosis increases with age. Poor egg quality is one of the most common reasons that are responsible for infertility in the women over 40.

How to Get Pregnant Naturally After 40? and Have Healthy Baby?

The general risks associated with pregnancy after 40 are

1. Miscarriages, They are fairly common among 40's mothers than among much younger mothers. Women between ages 35 and 40 have a 20% chance of miscarriage whereas older women of 44 to 50 have nearly a 50% chance for miscarriage.

2. Placental problems seem to increase with age. Placenta pervia is a condition in which part or all of the cervical opening is covered by the placenta. This may cause severe bleeding posing a threat to the life of both mother and child.

3. Pregnancy occurring in the fallopian tubule is another complication that 40's mothers may have to deal with.

4. Also 40's moms run the risk of having a child that may have congenital abnormalities such as down's syndrome.

But these complications can be avoided with simple and holistic natural methods. You have to look for All Natural Methods that greatly enhances your chances of getting pregnant and having a healthy baby.

Fertility yoga is one of the most popular and effective natural fertility options for the treatment of infertility at any age. There are various kinds of yoga that can increase your chances of getting pregnant. However, you are advised to take an expert advice before start practicing yoga as some types of yoga can hinder your conceiving ability.

Hydrotherapy is another effective natural fertility technique. It involves the therapeutic use of water that helps in decreasing the stress levels and improving health, which in turn improves your chances of getting pregnant.

There are lot more natural methods that teaches you How to Get Pregnant After 40 (forty) Naturally

Lisa Olson's Pregnancy Miracle shows you ways to overcome the obstacles that cause infertility, by using completely natural and holistic methods.

This guide is very effective and Lisa Olson herself got pregnant at the age of 43 following her 5 step method after being infertile all her life. The Pregnancy Miracle Program has helped thousands of women round the world who were struggling to get pregnant.

With Pregnancy Miracle book, you'll learn how to

    * Get Pregnant Quickly While Reversing Infertility Permanently. It's a fact - 92% of the women who use conventional treatments to increase their chances of getting pregnant fail and sometimes even end up worse than when they started. Now you can learn how to be in the successful 8% group that keeps infertility off forever.

    * Get Pregnant Holistically. It's a fact- getting pregnant naturally and reversing Infertility can never be achieved by tackling one of the many factors responsible for Infertility . If you've ever tried to tackle your Infertility using a one-dimensional treatment like hormone pills, sexual positions, or even chnanging your diet and failed it's probably because you have tackled only one aspect of the condition. Not only will this system teach you the only way to get pregnant naturally, you will also learn the only way to reverse Infertility for good - the holistic way.

    * Get Pregnant Naturally. Without Drugs or Typical Infertility Treatments. Drugs, and expensive painful procedures such as IVF or IUI to treat infertility only seldom work but the side effects and the procedures are nasty. The tiny handful infertility sufferers who have learned how to treat their Infertility from within and without ever using drugs, painful surgical procedures or over the counters are the only women in the world who keep it off permanently. Now you can learn these Infertility cure secrets from a nutritionist, Chinese medicine researcher and a former sufferer who knows from real-world experience exactly how it's done.

Source http://www.articlesbase.com/womens-health-articles/how-to-get-pregnant-after-40-naturally-get-pregnant-fast-after-forties-using-natural-methods-2007925.html

Friday, October 22, 2010

Infertility in Women Over 40

As the social scenario has changed, from playing the sole role of a homemaker, women have also taken up the responsibility of earning their families’ daily bread. A woman may not be compelled to fend for her family. However, today, financial independence has become just as important an aspect as any other stereotypical characteristic associated with being a woman. In their endeavor of securing their future, women have been postponing motherhood. Although we have changed sociologically, sadly our biological systems have not kept pace with time. This fact is most evident with respect to fertility in women. As more and more women are planning to start their families late, infertility in women over 40 is a stark fact that many have to face today.

Causes of Infertility in Women Over 40

A woman is born with all the eggs she is supposed to have in her lifetime. As a woman ages the number of eggs left in her start decreasing. This is contrary to the sperms produced in men, in whom the reproductive cells are being continuously produced once they reach puberty. Hence, the difficulty in conceiving, as a woman becomes older. Also the eggs start ‘aging’ over time. Therefore as a woman becomes older, the eggs in her have greater chances of having defects. The result is an increase in the probability of genetic abnormalities like Down’s syndrome in children of older mothers as well as miscarriages. Know more on the treatment for down syndrome and the characteristics of down syndrome.

Besides the facts concerning the number and quality of eggs present in a woman, other factors that influence fertility are:

    * Hormonal changes
    * Thinning of the lining of the womb, that becomes hostile to a fertilized egg
    * Irregular menstrual cycle
    * Diseases of the reproductive system like endometriosis, polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) and chlamydia. More information on endometriosis and pregnancy.
    * Vaginal secretions becoming less fluid and more hostile to sperms.
    * Increase in weight

Fertility and Age - Infertility in Women over 40

There are various causes for infertility in women. However, age is the single most important factor that affects a woman's reproductive capabilities. What is interesting is that most of the reasons for decreasing pregnancy rates (that have been enlisted above), are dependent on the age of a woman. Fertility in women starts decreasing roughly from the 27th year onwards. However, the effects of the changes on the reproductive abilities of a woman as she grows in years, become glaringly evident once she crosses the age of 40. For example, a woman in her 20s has a 20 to 30% chance of getting pregnant every cycle. Chances of a miscarriage is 5% to 10% and the probability that her baby would have genetic defects like Down’s syndrome is 1/1200. In women in early 30s, fertility falls to 15% and the rate of miscarriage increases to 20%. In case a woman in this age does not conceive after actively trying for 9 months, she should seek medical help. At the age of 35 to 40, the rate at which a woman can conceive falls to 10%. The miscarriage rate increases to 25% and the probability of having genetic defects in the fetus increases to 1/350. Most healthcare professionals advise women over 35 to undergo genetic testing to find out genetic abnormalities.

After a woman reaches 40 her fertility rate drops to 5%. The rate of miscarriage increases to 33% and the possibility that genetic abnormalities may occur in a child increases to 1/38. Studies reveal that 90% of the eggs in women above 40 have genetic defects. Also, the pregnancy rate through invitro fertilization (IVF), which is the most successful infertility treatment, is only 10% in women after 40. Hence women in this age group must seek professional help if they do not conceive after having actively tried for 3 months.

Once a woman crosses 45, egg donation becomes the only option for getting pregnant. Pregnancy rate for women over 45 is only 1%. This is because after this age all the eggs in a woman are genetically inviable. Even in case of egg donation, the age of the egg donor is important. Even if the egg donor is young, in case the woman has crossed 45, an important question to consider before she tries to conceive is, whether her body would be able to bear the stress of pregnancy. Although with scientific developments, invitro fertilization has become the answer to infertility problems, this technique has its own problems that are often overlooked. Some of the complications of IVF are premature birth and disabilities in babies. Read more on egg donation procedure and on women's health.

Scientific advancements have perhaps blinded us to the fact that age does have an effect on a woman's reproductive performance. With the increasing trend of postponing pregnancy, infertility in women over 40 is emerging as an alarming fact.

Source: Buzzle.com