When used in conjunction with Western fertility treatments, acupuncture
increases conception rates by 26%. A recent study from Tel Aviv University
reports, “When combining IUI with TCM treatments, 65.5 percent of the test
group were able to conceive, compared with 39.4 percent of the control group,
who received no herbal or acupuncture therapy.” For the 4.5 million couples
experiencing infertility each year, acupuncture may be just what the doctor
ordered.
Acupuncture can increase fertility by reducing stress, increasing blood
flow to the reproductive organs and balancing the endocrine system, according
to several studies and medical research. The goal of an infertility
treatment from a Chinese Medicine perspective is not just to get pregnant, but
to stay pregnant and to have a healthy baby. Among many other benefits,
acupuncture can provide better blood flow to the ovaries and uterus, creating a
stronger chance for an egg to be nourished and carried to term.
Acupuncture consists of the gentle insertion and stimulation of thin,
disposable sterile needles at strategic points near the surface of the body.
Over 2,000 acupuncture points on the human body connect with 14 major pathways,
called meridians. Chinese medicine practitioners believe that these meridians
conduct qi , or energy, between the surface of the body and internal organs. It
is qi that regulates spiritual, emotional, mental and physical balance. When
the flow of qi is disrupted through poor health habits or other circumstances,
pain and/or disease can result. Acupuncture helps to keep the normal flow of
this energy unblocked, thereby increasing a couple's chances of conceiving.
Acupuncture infertility treatment can improve almost every cause of this
obstacle. While 40 percent of infertility is caused by problems in the female, another
40 percent is caused by problems in the male, such as low sperm count or
motility. The cause of female infertility stems from problems such as
anovulation and endometriosis. The remaining 20 percent is caused by unknown
factors.
One of the ways acupuncture infertility treatment increases fertility is
by reducing stress, which is often a key factor in the fertility of both
men and women. When people are under stress, the hormone cortizol is
released in the brain. This alters the brain's neurochemical balance, thus changing
hormone levels and disrupting the pituitary balance that is key to the
reproductive cycle. Chinese medicine can help support a woman through this
important time in her life—whether that is emotionally or physically,
acupuncture can help with much more than just conception. It can help with morning
sicknesss, nausea, aches and pains (low back pain, for example), anxiety
preparation for birth, and insomnia, among many others.
Because of the delicate balance between the hypothalamus, pituitary, and
reproductive glands, stress is capable of preventing a woman from ovulating
entirely. This can contribute to the cause of female infertility. Stress can
also create spasms in both the fallopian tubes and the uterus, which can
interfere with movement and implantation of a fertilized egg. In men, stress
can alter sperm counts, motility, and cause impotence. Acupuncture infertility
treatment counters the effects of stress and cortizol by releasing endorphins
in the brain. An herbal impotence cure is also an option for men and can reduce
stress.
Hormonal balance does not have to be disrupted by cortizol to cause
infertility. The most common cause of female infertility is an ovulation
disorder, in which the release of a mature egg from the ovary is prevented,
usually because of a hormonal imbalance. Without enough progesterone,
for example, the fetus is unable to attach to the uterus. High levels of
prolactin, the hormone that stimulates the production of breast milk, can
also prevent ovulation.
An imbalance in reproductive hormones can also negatively affect male reproductive
function, such as sperm motility and production. However, the fertility drugs
that stimulate ovulation in women by regulating the hypothalamus and pituitary,
the glands that control reproductive hormones, don't perform nearly as well for
men (success rates are about a third of those for women), nor have they been
approved for men by the FDA. Male infertility treatment must take another
track. An herbal impotence cure -- if impotence is a factor in a couple's
infertility -- causes no side effects and has a reported success rate when
taken in conjunction with male infertility treatment.
While the fertility pharmaceutical drugs commonly prescribed for
women can produce a 20 to 60 percent pregnancy rate, they also commonly include
such side effects as abdominal tenderness, bloating, fluid retention, weight
gain, and nausea. Some studies show that they may also cause breast
cancer.
Original article from pacificcollege.edu
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