Is Chronic Stress Affecting Your Fertility?
In Harmony Holistic Stress Relief
Nov. 6, 2007 abc Good Morning
America
Nonstop pressure and chronic stress
may have a significant effect on fertility and may prevent some women from
getting pregnant, according to experts.
"I like to say a little of this
and a little of that is worse than you think for your reproductive
system," said Dr. Sarah Berga, of Emory University School of Medicine.
Berga, who has studied the impact of
stress on fertility for years, said while humans are designed to deal with a
certain amount of stress, chronic stress may prevent some women from ovulating.
She said it starts with the
hypothalamus, the part of the brain that controls the release of hormones.
"Your brain is hard to fool. If
you're under eating, overworking and over exercising, the hypothalamus is, in
essence, keeping a running tally of what you're doing," Berga said.
"Even though you can say to yourself, 'I'm not stressed.' Your
hypothalamus may come up with a different answer."
If the hypothalamus senses stress,
the messages sent to the ovary to release eggs may be interrupted and cause
stress-induced infertility. It's an interesting process, but one that patients and even some doctors may find
difficult to accept.
Susan Epstein, 49, spent years running
herself ragged, not only as a long-distance runner, but later as a busy wife,
student and exercise physiologist.
Oral fertility drugs helped her get
pregnant with her first child, but when she attempted to get pregnant a second
time, Epstein couldn't. Even three rounds of IVF didn't help her.
After visiting Berga, Epstein, who
defines herself as "a get up and get going kind of woman," found out
stress was inhibiting her fertility.
"I was into my career and my
husband had a professional career. I had a small baby. I was new at all those
things," Epstein said. "I was also exercising, still running every
day — trying to keep everything afloat."
But, she said she had a difficult
time believing her lifestyle could be hindering her from having the child she
desired.
"I had a really hard time
thinking it was me because you want to get an answer, so they can fix something
— you know a prescription, a pill," Epstein said.
Berga said it is often difficult for
women to learn less stress can increase their fertility.
"Suddenly, we're telling them,
'you need to alter your lifestyle in some way. Run less. Eat more.' This can
sound like pretty bad news," Berga said.
But, for many, stress-related
infertility can be reversed. In one study, Berga found ovulation was restored
in seven out of eight women who underwent talk therapy, compared with two of
eight who did not.
After hearing her lifestyle might be
affecting her fertility, Epstein decided to de-stress her life. She left her
job to take care of her baby, and made a conscious effort to relax. She took up
yoga and piano.
"I had to stop running. I had to
gain some weight. I had to take more time for myself," she said. "It
sounds like exercise was time for myself, but that was really part of my whole
stressful routine."
To her surprise within four months
and without any medication, Epstein was pregnant. Her daughters are now 11 and
7.
"It was such a relief to like
let go, for me," Epstein said. "I think it must have sent all the
positive hormones in my brain that said, 'OK, you're ready now.'"
It is important to note not all
stress can produce infertility, ABC News medical editor Dr. Tim Johnson said on
"Good Morning America" today. The acute stress, known as fight or
flight, isn't the type of stress that causes the problem, he said.
And while the research about stress
and women seems to point in one direction, the link between stress and men is
less clear.
"We don't have such a direct
connection with sperm production and men," Johnson said. "The
connection with women is much clearer."
Johnson said it's important for
people listen to their bodies, but not merely for fertility.
'For our health and in general, we
need to pay attention to the signals our body is sending us," he said.
In Harmony Holistic
Stress Relief
646-377-0448
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