Conceiving Your Baby Using Chinese Medicine Deciding to conceive a baby is often life’s biggest and most exciting choice. Excitement can turn to stress or disappointment if conception takes longer than expected. Many are labeled “infertile” making it difficult to maintain a positive attitude about conceiving. A growing number of people
today are
experiencing conception difficulties. An
estimated 10
to 25 % of coupled heterosexuals experience
infertility
with female infertility accounting for
approximately
two-thirds of the cases. Lesbians and single
women have
similar odds and often have further challenges
due to
lack of access to quality sperm. Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) identifies two main issues with lack of success when western mapping of health appears satisfactory. First is the reciprocity of body, mind, and spirit. Second is the woman and/or man’s inherent constitution. TCM explains that bound
emotions can
adversely affect our physiology generally via
the mind
and/or spirit. For example, stress,
resentment, frustration,
fear and anger can damage the flow of one’s
internal
energy. This damage, in turn, connects to the
blood
and the reproductive system, which can make
conception
very difficult. For all involved, regulating
the emotional
landscape is crucial to increasing
reproductive energy. Over thousands of years, the Chinese have developed tools to diagnose constitutional deficiencies and treat them successfully. They refer to a vital substance known as Jing, or Essence. It is the deep-rooted strength we receive from our parents, which we either deplete through an inharmonious lifestyle, or conserve through proper diet and moderate lifestyle. Activities such as Tai Chi, Qi Gong, yoga, and meditation are practices to nourish the Essence. Acupuncture and Chinese Herbs are tools to build and regulate the Jing. The exact reasons, from a western perspective, as to why TCM is so helpful in the treatment of female infertility, are yet to be established. It appears that acupuncture and herbs support the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian axis. Acupuncture efficacy in treating various conditions such as ovulatory dysfunction and endometriosis would support this theory. Acupuncture also improves uterine arterial blood flow and hence endometrial thickness, providing a positive effect on egg implantation. Acupuncture is nontoxic and
relatively
affordable as an alternative for women who are
intolerant
of, ineligible, or contraindicated for
conventional
hormone induction of ovulation, or as an
adjunct to
western fertility treatments for any family
experiencing
clinical, undiagnosed or circumstantial
fertility challenges,
enhancing the effectiveness.
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