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Doctor Malpani has also written a book called
"How to Get the Best Medical Care - For Less".
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Chapter 1 Do you have an infertility problem ? When to Start Worrying! Chapter 2 How Babies are Made - The Basics Chapter 3 Finding Out What’s Wrong -- The Basic Medical Tests Chapter 4 Testing the Man - Semen Analysis. Chapter 5 Beyond the Semen Analysis Chapter 6 Diagnosis and Treatment for Male Infertility -- More Confusion ! Chapter 7 The Case of the Man with a Low Sperm Count. Chapter 8 Microinjection: The Latest Advance in Treating the Infertile Man. Chapter 9 Ultrasound - Seeing with Sound. Chapter 10 Laparoscopy -- The Kinder Cut Chapter 11 Hysteroscopy Chapter 12 The Tubal Connection Chapter 13 Ovulation -- Normal and Abnormal Chapter 14 The Older Woman Chapter 15 Polycystic Ovarian Disease (PCOD) Chapter 16 The Cervical Factor Chapter 17 Hirsutism -- Excess Facial and Body Hair Chapter 18 Endometriosis -- The Silent Invader Chapter 19 Ectopic Pregnancy – The Time Bomb in the Tube Chapter 20 Unexplained Infertility Chapter 21 Secondary Infertility -- Caught Between Fertile And Infertile Worlds Chapter 22 Empty Arms -- The Lonely Trauma of Miscarriage Chapter 23 Understanding Your Medicines Chapter 24 Intrauterine Insemination Chapter 25 Test Tube Babies - IVF & GIFT Chapter 26 PREIMPLANTATION GENETIC DIAGNOSIS - the newest ART Chapter 27 Using Donor Sperm Chapter 28 Surrogate Mothering Chapter 29 When Enough is Enough - The Decision to End Treatment Chapter 30 Adoption - Yours by Choice Chapter 31 Childfree living - Life without children Chapter 32 Stress And Infertility Chapter 33 The Emotional Crisis of Infertility Chapter 34 How to Cope with Infertility Chapter 35 Infertility and Sexuality Chapter 36 Support Groups-Self-Help is the Best Help Chapter 37 Myths and Misconceptions Chapter 38 Helping Hands - How Friends and Relatives can Help Chapter 39 RIGHTS OF THE INFERTILE COUPLE - AND WHAT SOCIETY NEEDS TO DO ABOUT THEM Chapter 40 Alternative Medicine: Exploring Your Treatment Options Chapter 41 Making Decisions about Treatment Chapter 42 How to Find the Best Doctor Chapter 43 How to Make the Most of Your Doctor Chapter 44 Let the reader beware - making sense of medical stories in the news Chapter 45 THE INFERTILE PATIENT'S GUIDE TO THE INTERNET Chapter 46 The Ethical Issues - Right or Wrong ? Chapter 47 How Much Does Treatment Cost? Chapter 48 Pregnant - At Last ! Chapter 49 Preventing Infertility Chapter 50 The Infertile Patient's Prayer and Infertility "Defined" Chapter 51 Making IVF affordable Chapter 52 Why are women scared of IVF ? Chapter 53 INFERTILITY RECORD SHEET Chapter 54 Self-Insemination |
Polycystic Ovarian Disease (PCOD) Patients suffering from polycystic ovarian disease ( PCOD ) have multiple small cysts in their ovaries ( the word poly means many). These cysts occur when the regular changes of a normal menstrual cycle are disrupted. The ovary is enlarged; and produces excessive amounts of androgen and estrogenic hormones. This excess, along with the absence of ovulation, may cause infertility. Other names for PCOD are polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) or the Stein-Leventhal syndrome. Diagnosis PCOD can be easy to diagnose in some patients. The typical medical history is that of irregular menstrual cycles, which are unpredictable and can be very heavy ; and the need to take hormonal tablets (progestins) to induce a period. Patients suffering from PCOD are often obese and may have hirsutism , (excessive facial and body hair) as a result of the high androgen levels. However, remember that not all patients with PCOD will have all or any of these symptoms. This diagnosis can be confirmed by vaginal ultrasound, which shows that both the ovaries are enlarged; the bright central stroma is increased ; and there are multiple small cysts in the ovaries. These cysts are usually arranged in the form of a necklace along the periphery of the ovary. Typically, blood levels of hormones reveal elevated levels of androgens ( a high dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate ( DHEA-S) level) ; a high LH level; and a normal FSH level. We don't really understand what causes PCOD. However, we do know that the characteristic polycystic ovary emerges when a state of anovulation persists for a length of time. Patients with PCO have persistently elevated levels of androgens and estrogens, which set up a vicious cycle. Obesity can aggravate PCOD because fatty tissues are hormonally active and they produce estrogen which disrupts ovulation . Overactive adrenal glands can also produce excess androgens, and these may also contribute to PCOD. Treatment Treatment of PCOD for the infertile patient will usually focus on inducing ovulation to help them conceive. Weight loss: For many patients with PCOD, weight loss is an effective treatment - but of course, this is easier said than done! Look for a permanent weight loss plan - and referral to a dietitian or a weight control clinic may be helpful. Crash diets are usually not effective. Increasing physical activity is an important step in losing weight. Aerobic activities such as walking, jogging or swimming are advised. Try to find a partner to do this with, so that you can help each other to keep going. Ovulation Induction: The drug of first choice is clomiphene; this may be combined with low-doses of dexamethasone, a steroid which suppresses androgen production from the adrenal glands. Just taking clomiphene is not enough , and you need to be monitored ( usually with ultrasound scans) to determine if the clomiphene is helping you to ovulate or not. The doctor may have to progressively increase the dose till he finds the right does for you. If clomiphene does not work, HMG can be used. Some doctors prefer to use pure FSH for inducing ovulation in PCOD patients because they have abnormally high levels of LH. Ovulation induction can often be difficult in patients with PCOD , since there is the risk that the patient may over-respond to the drugs, and produce too many follicles, which is why the risk of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome ( OHSS) and multiple pregnancy is often increased in patients with PCOD. The doctor has to find just the right dose of HMG ( called the threshold value ) in order to induce maturation and release of a single , or only a few follicles , and this can sometimes be very tricky. Difficult patients may also need a combination of a GnRH analog (to stop the abnormal release of FSH and LH from the pituitary) and HMG to induce ovulation successfully. Doctors have now learned that many patients with PCOD also have insulin resistance – a condition similar to that found in diabetics, in that they have raised levels of insulin in their blood ( hyperinsulinemia) , and their response to insulin is blunted. This is why some patients with PCOD who do not respond to clomiphene are treated with antidiabetic drugs, such as metformin and troglitazone. Studies have shown that these drugs can help to improve their fertility by reversing their endocrine abnormality and thus improving their ovulatory response. Surgery: A recent treatment option uses laparoscopy to treat patients with PCOD. During operative laparoscopy, a laser or cautery is used to drill multiple holes through the thickened ovarian capsule. This procedure is called laparoscopic ovarian cauterisation or ovarian drilling or LEOS ( laparoscopic electrocauterisation of ovarian stroma) . Destroying the abnormal ovarian tissue helps to restore normal ovarian function and helps to induce ovulation. For young patients with PCO ovaries on ultrasound, if clomiphene fails to achieve a pregnancy in 4 months time, we usually advise laparoscopic surgery as the next treatment option, This is because LEOS helps us to correct the underlying problem; and about 80% of patients will have regular cycles after undergoing this surgery, of which 50% will conceive in a year’s time, without having to take further medication or treatment. Having regular cycles without having to take medicines each month can be very reassuring to these patients ! The risk of this surgery is that it can induce adhesion formation, if not performed competently. In the past, doctors used to perform ovarian surgery called wedge resection to help patients with PCOD to ovulate. The removal of the abnormal ovarian tissue in the wedge breaks the vicious cycle of PCOD, helping ovulation to occur . While wedge resection used to be a popular treatment option, the risk of inducing adhesions around the ovary as a result of this surgery has led to the operation being used as a last resort. For patients who do not respond to the above measures, intrauterine insemination is the next step. Some difficult patients with PCO may also need IVF in order to get pregnant. While PCO patients usually grow many eggs, quite a few of these may be immature, so that fertilization rates may be lower than average. Also, because of the PCOD, the risk of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome is increased in these patients. The good news is that with the currently available treatment options, successful treatment of the infertility is usually possible in the majority of patients with PCOD.
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