Journal Of Infertility

A diagnosis of infertility means we haven’t been able to get pregnant after a year of trying. If you’re a lady over 35, it means you haven’t been ready to get pregnant after 6 months of trying. Women who are able to conceive but not carry a pregnancy to term can also be diagnosed with infertility. A woman who’s never been ready to get pregnant are going to be diagnosed with primary infertility. A woman who’s had a minimum of one successful pregnancy within the past are going to be diagnosed with secondary infertility. Infertility isn’t just a woman’s problem. Men can be infertile too. According to the Office on Women’s Health Trusted Source, about one-third of infertility cases are often attributed to female infertility while men’s problems account for an additional third of infertility cases. The remaining third of cases could also be caused by a mixture of male and feminine infertility, or they'll have no known cause. Female infertility are often caused by a spread of things that affect or interfere with the subsequent biological processes: ovulation, when the mature egg is released from the ovary, fertilization, which occurs when sperm meets the egg within the Fallopian tube after traveling through the cervix and uterus, implantation, which occurs when a embryo attaches to the liner of the uterus where it can then grow and develop into a baby.     

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