Can You Get Pregnant When You Have PCOS?
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For a condition thatโs so widespread, PCOS is not well understood. The official NHS figures estimate that as many of 20% of women in the UK could be affected (thatโs one in five of the female population!), but female reproductive health problems are notoriously poorly communicated by doctors, especially in the short time available in the average appointment.
This can leave many people feeling like a diagnosis of PCOS is the same as being told youโre infertile, leading many to give up hope of having children when really there is plenty of cause for hope. Today weโre looking at how PCOS affects your fertility, and what you can do to improve your chances!
PCOS and Ovulation
PCOS is an endocrine condition, which means itโs driven by your hormones, specifically, excesses of Insulin, Oestrogen, and Testosterone. The conditions begin with your body producing too much insulin, which in turn stimulates your body to produce more Oestrogen and Testosterone than normal. Itโs these hormones that affect your menstrual cycle, leading to the fertility effects of PCOS.
When PCOS affects your menstrual cycle it interferes with the way eggs are matured in your ovaries: normally it will take between 11 and 27 days for an egg to grow to maturity in a sac in the ovary (a โfollicleโ leading to the name of this part of your menstrual cycle, the โFollicular Phaseโ). With PCOS, it takes longer and longer for that egg to grow and mature, and your body cannot necessarily register its progress, due to the hormones of PCOS interfering with its usual pathways. This means you ovulate infrequently, irregularly, and in some cases not at all.
Getting Pregnant with PCOS
There are two important steps to take when youโre trying to get pregnant with PCOS: to encourage your body to ovulate more frequently and to track when you ovulate so youโre ready to try and conceive when youโre at peak fertility.
You can try to stimulate ovulation by changing your diet: a low GI diet can help to regulate your insulin levels, reducing the intensity of PCOS, and restoring a more normal ovulatory pattern. You can then use a fertility device to track when youโre ovulating. The best ones can actually give you a prediction in advance of when your fertile window will be, letting you target the best possible time and improve your chances of conceiving when you want to.ย
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Newly middle-aged wife of 1, Mom of 3, Grandma of 2. A professional blogger who has lived in 3 places since losing her home to a house fire in October 2018 with her husband. Becky appreciates being self-employed which has allowed her to work from 'anywhere'. Life is better when you can laugh. As you can tell by her Facebook page where she keeps the humor memes going daily. Becky looks forward to the upcoming new year. It will be fun to see what 2020 holds.