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.
Infertility is defined as an inability to conceive after one year of
unprotected intercourse. For women using assisted reproductive
technology (ART) or alternative insemination procedures this definition
is not very applicable as possible flawed procedures, poor sperm quality
and other factors cloud the issue. Although Western
medicine is sophisticated in its treatment of infertility, treatments
are often unsuccessful.
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.
Strengthening the constitution is another important way TCM treats
infertility. Unexplained infertility is most often linked with a
predisposition to a genetic energy imbalance. If this area is not
functioning well, becoming pregnant may be challenging, problems with
the pregnancy may occur, or a difficult pregnancy may ensue that could
compromise the woman’s future health.
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.
A deep sense of joy and love can be found in pregnancy, childbirth, and
parenting. Families of all varieties can be empowered and supported in
their quest for a healthy pregnancy using Traditional Chinese Medicine
during the childbearing years.