eating while pregnant

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

mercredi 14 novembre 2007

Who should evaluate the infertile couple?

Posted on 05:53 by Unknown
Patients end up seeing a Reproductive Endocrinologist as a result of a multitude of factors. Some are referred by friends and co-workers. Some are sent by their primary care provider or by their Ob/Gyn. Many are self-referred and end up seeing us because of advertising, the internet or because they read this fantastic book titled “100 Questions and Answers about Infertility.” Actually, I have yet to see a patient who came running to see me because of the book, but you never know what will happen once Oprah makes it a selection for her Book Club. Since many Ob Gyns refer patients to specialists we like to maintain a good working relationship with them, but sometimes this becomes an issue when it comes to the fertility evaluation.

Although many non-REs are perfectly capable of ordering the tests appropriate to the evaluation of the infertile couple, some may not know how to interpret the findings. Hence, we will sometimes see patients who have been managed in a sub-optimal fashion. For example, many Ob Gyns will treat patients with empiric clomiphene without any monitoring or even without completing a basic assessment of the fallopian tubes or sperm quality. This approach is not appropriate.

Many studies suggest either limited or no benefit to the use of empiric clomiphene without the synergistic addition of intrauterine insemination (IUI) in these cases. However, I assume that these physicians do occasionally see patients who conceive with this approach whereas I have a biased view since I see all the patients who have failed this therapy. Remember that a Reproductive Endocrinologist deals almost exclusively with fertility issues. No pregnancy management. No sudden calls to Labor and Delivery. No Gyn cancer issues (unless it pertains to fertility preservation). No urinary incontinence. Just fertility, fertility, fertility….24/7. Why limit ourselves to this clinical problem? Well that is a topic for another day…So that leaves us with today’s Question of the Day.


5. Who should evaluate the infertile couple?


In many cases, the routine fertility evaluation can be conducted by an obstetrician/gynecologist, a family practitioner, or a reproductive endocrinologist (RE). Certain tests can easily be obtained by physicians in the first two specialties, but a reproductive endocrinologist may be required to interpret advanced testing and provide the most accurate counseling. Women who are more than 34 years old may elect to immediately consult with a reproductive endocrinologist.
Envoyer par e-mailBlogThis!Partager sur XPartager sur Facebook
Posted in | No comments
Article plus récent Article plus ancien Accueil
Afficher la version mobile

0 commentaires:

Enregistrer un commentaire

Inscription à : Publier les commentaires (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • HSG vs HSC vs H2O sono...What is the difference?
    Medical terminology can really give patients fits and no where is this more apparent than in the distinctions between hysterosalpingogram (H...
  • Natural Cycle IVF. Part 3: It Works
    Although I anticipated posting this final part concerning NC-IVF two weeks ago, it took me longer than I had anticipated to pull all the dat...
  • Let It Snow, Let It Snow, Let It Snow
    Here I sit on a Wednesday afternoon watching DC clear out in anticipation of a "major snow event." In the mid-Atlantic this means ...
  • And the winner is....Aauuuuugggghhh.....
    Well, since the NHL season just ended 5 minutes ago with a crushing defeat for my hometown Boston Bruins I guess that winter is now official...
  • Question 41. I read on the Internet that two inseminations are better than one. Is this true?
    The internet is quite an amazing place. You get anything you need at 2 am and research obscure medical disorders to your heart's content...
  • Avoiding "cookie-cutter" Medicine
    Medicine has been called an art and to some extent this is clearly true. Although statistics, protocols and algorithms exist to guide therap...
  • How to do an FET
    In my last blog post I discussed the general concept of frozen embryos which is certainly a bit of a mind bending concept by itself. But I w...
  • Improving Implantation: The goal of SEET using PGS
    The Holy Grail of IVF is having an IVF pregnancy rate that approaches 100% with a low rate of pregnancy loss...Now, I know that some clinics...
  • Question 20. How expensive are infertility treatments?
    Children are not cheap. Unfortunately, those patients with infertility are having to invest in a bit more than dinner and a movie in order ...
  • Question 55. My husband and I were told by one RE that we needed ICSI, but another RE says that we don’t. What should we do?
    So if you have read the survey results you are aware that most readers like the clinical vignettes that I post to illustrate points of inter...

Blog Archive

  • ►  2014 (10)
    • ►  juillet (1)
    • ►  juin (1)
    • ►  mai (1)
    • ►  avril (1)
    • ►  mars (1)
    • ►  février (2)
    • ►  janvier (3)
  • ►  2013 (14)
    • ►  décembre (1)
    • ►  novembre (1)
    • ►  octobre (1)
    • ►  septembre (1)
    • ►  août (1)
    • ►  juillet (1)
    • ►  juin (1)
    • ►  mai (1)
    • ►  avril (1)
    • ►  mars (2)
    • ►  février (1)
    • ►  janvier (2)
  • ►  2012 (30)
    • ►  décembre (2)
    • ►  novembre (1)
    • ►  octobre (3)
    • ►  septembre (1)
    • ►  août (2)
    • ►  juillet (2)
    • ►  juin (3)
    • ►  mai (2)
    • ►  avril (2)
    • ►  mars (3)
    • ►  février (6)
    • ►  janvier (3)
  • ►  2011 (28)
    • ►  décembre (2)
    • ►  novembre (3)
    • ►  octobre (1)
    • ►  septembre (2)
    • ►  juillet (3)
    • ►  juin (2)
    • ►  mai (2)
    • ►  avril (3)
    • ►  mars (5)
    • ►  février (3)
    • ►  janvier (2)
  • ►  2010 (52)
    • ►  décembre (2)
    • ►  novembre (6)
    • ►  octobre (5)
    • ►  septembre (4)
    • ►  août (1)
    • ►  juillet (4)
    • ►  juin (3)
    • ►  mai (4)
    • ►  avril (9)
    • ►  mars (13)
    • ►  janvier (1)
  • ►  2009 (22)
    • ►  novembre (1)
    • ►  octobre (2)
    • ►  septembre (2)
    • ►  août (2)
    • ►  juillet (4)
    • ►  mai (2)
    • ►  avril (1)
    • ►  mars (3)
    • ►  février (2)
    • ►  janvier (3)
  • ►  2008 (27)
    • ►  décembre (2)
    • ►  novembre (1)
    • ►  octobre (3)
    • ►  septembre (6)
    • ►  juillet (1)
    • ►  juin (2)
    • ►  mai (3)
    • ►  avril (2)
    • ►  mars (1)
    • ►  février (2)
    • ►  janvier (4)
  • ▼  2007 (66)
    • ►  décembre (1)
    • ▼  novembre (5)
      • Progesterone: shots vs suppositories
      • HSG vs HSC vs H2O sono...What is the difference?
      • Who should evaluate the infertile couple?
      • Why are we not getting pregnant?
      • What is Assisted Hatching?
    • ►  octobre (6)
    • ►  septembre (7)
    • ►  août (11)
    • ►  juillet (13)
    • ►  juin (22)
    • ►  mai (1)
Fourni par Blogger.

Qui êtes-vous ?

Unknown
Afficher mon profil complet