Blog of the Society for Menstrual Cycle Research

Are You Too Physically Fit for Motherhood?

September 2nd, 2010 by Elizabeth Kissling

Image of slender white woman doing bicep curls with small barbell.The headline of a story at ABC news about infertility among female athletes is “Female Athletes Are Too Fit To Get Pregnant“. Many women athletes in their 20s, at peak performance levels and peak physical fitness by most measures, may find themselves unable to conceive. This is attributed to low percentages of body fat, which essentially shut down the hypothalamus, which then fails to trigger the H-P-O (hypothalamus, pituitary, ovary) hormone sequence necessary for regular menstrual cycles. About 12% of infertile women seeking treatment are athletes.

According to the article, even women who are not professional athletes (or training at that level) can experience infertility due to physical fitness:

It noted that recreational jogging — only 12 to 18 miles a week — can result in poor follicular development, decreased estrogen and progesterone secretion and absent ovulation.

Setting aside the seriousness of infertility, I’m intrigued by the tone of the article, and especially the language of the headline. In North America today, there is a strong emphasis socially and in mass media on the importance of exercise and being physically fit, and corresponding demonization of fatness as a personal moral failing. But amenorrhea and infertility as a result of thinness is reported without judgment and body-shaming. There are no quotations from experts about women exercising too much or advice to stop working out; instead, professional athletes are advised to freeze their eggs in their early 20s. When fat* women have trouble conceiving or have difficult pregnancies, it is frequently attributed to their weight, which is presumed to be a behavioral a matter of choice.


*I am following the practice of other advocates of fat acceptance and Health At Every Size (HAES) in using the term fat as a descriptive adjective, not a pejorative.

Post to Twitter Post to Plurk Post to Yahoo Buzz Post to Delicious Post to Digg Post to Facebook Post to MySpace Post to Reddit Post to StumbleUpon

Can you make a baby with a bottle of cough syrup?

April 13th, 2010 by Chris Hitchcock

In a story featuring a photo of a lovely couple holding a beautiful newborn, the Globe and Mail (a reputable Canadian national newspaper) has an article this week about using Robitussin as a fertility aid. According to the article, the TTC (trying to conceive) community is abuzz with this.

How an off-label application of over-the-counter cold medicine found a shelf life as a conception tool widely promoted online is a story marked with skepticism and disbelief. Robitussin’s effectiveness has been debated on chat forums, and references to its impact can be found in bestselling pregnancy books. In a time when fertility treatments cost thousands of dollars, it’s not surprising that a $5 solution has intrigued women for more than 20 years. But it is unusual that despite almost three decades of word-of-mouth debate, there’s little scientific evidence to prove that it works – or that it doesn’t – leaving it in a strange realm somewhere between old wives’ tale and unsung miracle drug.

The article later describes the published support for the active ingredient in aiding conception:

A Pennsylvania doctor, Jerome Check, published an article called “Improvement of cervical factor with guaifenesin” in the Journal of Fertility and Sterility in 1982. It documented a study of 40 couples who had been attempting unsuccessfully to conceive for at least 10 months.

The women were given 200 milligrams of guaifenesin three times a day, from the fifth day of menstruation through to ovulation. Dr. Check found that 23 of the women showed “marked improvement in postcoital tests after treatment, while seven showed slight improvement,” meaning that their cervical mucus was noticeably thinner.

More important, of those 23 couples, Dr. Check wrote that 15 became pregnant while testing the regimen. One patient with only mild improvement in her mucus levels also conceived. Dr. Check concluded that guaifenesin is “one of the simplest and cheapest treatment methods of addressing the cervical factor.”

I see that JH Check has published 3 further articles mentioning guaifenesin fertility, but he is a lone voice, aside from the TTC community of women, and some authors of lay books on becoming pregnant. A spokeswoman for the manufacturer said in e-mail, “We do not have any data for the use of Mucinex [the US product name] for fertility issues nor do we recommend its use for this purpose.” There’s no pharmaceutical interest driving (and funding) the research, so individual researchers need to somehow fund this themselves (would a national health granting agency fund such work?).

And apparently things like the quality of cervical mucous (which is part of how oral contraceptives block pregnancy) are no longer relevant, because

… the medical community has moved on, propelled by advances in technology that have seen in-vitro fertilization become standard treatment for fertility problems. “Cervical mucus can be overcome by doing insemination, so it doesn’t even matter,” Dr. Cheung said of Robitussin’s possible effect.

The article also describes the serious issues with ethics of research on infertility treatments, given the desperation of people seeking help:

“We see people who come to the support group who seem to be rushed into IVF without a real assessment,” she [Diane Allen, who runs the Canada-based Infertility Network] said. “They feel so desperate that if somebody told them to stand in the corner or cut off their arm or something – if they thought they’d have a child out of it – maybe they’d do it.”

Readers should note that statements published in re: Cycling are those of individual authors and do not necessarily reflect the positions of the Society as a whole.