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Tubal Surgery or IVF - Which Is Right for You?

by Sandra Wilson

Did you know there is an alternative to IVF and that it is tubal surgery? Whether this type of an operation will work for you depends upon the reason for your infertility. However, you should definitely be aware that IVF is not the only recourse for infertility. Tubal surgery can be your answer instead.

What type of infertility problems does tubal surgery help with? One of the leading causes of infertility is tubal blockage of some type. Many times brought on by disease, the tubal blockage prevents the egg from reaching the uterus. Tubal surgery will remove the blockage.

To best compare to tubal surgery, let’s learn a bit more about IVF. Using various resources around the web including the NY Times and CNN, you can find that one cycle of IVF will be $10,000 to $12,000. During this cycle, you will be given a course of drugs to boost your egg producing ability and to prepare your body. The eggs are gathered and then fertilized. At the appointed time of development, they are placed in your uterus where you will hope one or more implants itself.

Now, some women are just too old to do this. I read in the New York Times of a 49 year old bride who wanted children. In this case, eggs can be bought from an egg donor usually a woman in her 20s. But your body must still be made ready with hormones and drugs for the implantation of the fertilized egg.

No matter what hell you may go through in order to become ready, whether to produce your own eggs and carry a fetus or just to carry the fetus, you may not be lucky enough to maintain the pregnancy. Usually this seems to be a case of implantation not taking place.

What is really bad is this means you will now need to pay for another cycle of IVF. Most women do not become pregnant on the first try. You can figure out the costs and related health impact yourself.

Tubal surgery, however, goes in and removes the section of blocked tubes. The rest of the tube that is not blocked is sutured together giving you a good chance to become pregnant again. This is the same surgery done in tubal ligation reversal where the burned or clipped area is removed and the good sections sewn together. One surgery and you don’t have to pay any more for failures to get pregnant in any one month.

So how good is the success rate of IVF to tubal surgery? Let’s use the study Dr. Berger did on his tubal surgery patients. He had a success rate up to 87%. You can check out his site yourself to see the various factors that play into the success rate and how it varies. Looking at one cycle of in vitro fertilization, you will find that there is only a 30% success rate. As we said before, you usually have to go through more than one cycle of IVF and this is why making tubal surgery a much better option for women who have infertility due to tubal blockage.

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Tags: Pregnancy

6 Comments to “Tubal Surgery or IVF - Which Is Right for You?”

  1. on 27 Mar 2009 at 11:33 amIksenpets

    One time medication for one si USD:12.00 [Peru/Health/Children] People in severe poverty can’t afford medicine when th

  2. on 28 Mar 2009 at 7:05 amrenea_evans

    well get a life of course…its rude for me to say like that but sometimes or to put it right many times we dont get along so well with our families then thats the time to start a life of our own….it could be the same house even then you can find different ways of ignoring them and the best thing to do to understand other people's lifestyle and nature living with you and try to act accordingly…

  3. on 31 Mar 2009 at 1:00 pmmagnanimousman

    she went to germany…did you go to the concert?i have family in germay:)i have a count in youtube too :)

  4. on 31 Mar 2009 at 8:56 pmMonique

    Rahsheen, Mona, Tad.

  5. on 08 Apr 2009 at 2:58 pmSwampD

    DM: Taking it on the chin: Eddie ‘the Eagle’ Edwards has plastic surgery to reduce his famously protruding ja..

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