headermask image

header image

category archive listing Category Archives: Pregnancy

Chapel Hill Tubal Reversal Center - Is It the Best?

by Sandra Wilson

If you are one of the thousands of women who decide they wants a tubal ligation reversal, you can’t go wrong with the Chapel Hill Tubal Reversal Center. Hundreds of thousands of women are told that tying their tubes is the best means of birth control each year and they have this surgery. Later, sometimes just a short time later, they begin to regret what they have done. Don’t fret,though, as with the CHTRC, you will have the best opportunity to reverse that procedure.

Unlike any other place you can name, tubal reversals are the only thing done at the center. You won’t have to worry about something else, like in vitro fertilization, being pushed on you. As an IVF is a more expensive procedure that usually requires more tries, you will find this is the procedure that will be presented as your best option whether it truly is or not. Not so at CHTRC.

Perhaps what makes this center the premiere place begins with Dr. Gary Berger. No one has the education, training or medical background that Dr. Berger has in this specialized field. For more detailed information about his background, please check out the pages on drbergertubal.com. Add his background to the fact that tubal reversals are all he does and that he does them four times a day, five days a week, and you have experience that no one else can match.

6 Tips for Searching Through Tubal Reversal Clinics

by Sandra Wilson

As we have stated in other articles, every year many, many women change their minds about the sterilization procedure they had and now want a tubal reversal. Thus begins their search for which of the tubal reversal clinics available will be the best one for them. Whether you want a tubal ligation reversal so you have a good chance at having another child or you want one for relief of post tubal ligation syndrome (PTLS), you need to look for the best place to have the procedure.

Probably the first thing you want to consider in tubal reversal clinics is whether or not doing tubal ligation reversal surgeries is the only thing done there. After all, if given a choice, do you want to go to a clinic where that is all they do? Or do you want to go to one where they do in vitro fertilization (IVF), vasectomy reversals and who knows what else? Kind of dilutes the experience of the staff, doesn’t it? Not only that. I think you will find that the staff just might try to persuade you to the more expensive, yet less successful, IVF. The clinic will simply make more money with that procedure than a tubal reversal because the success rate of each cycle is only about 30% and costs much more than a reversal surgery.

Tubal Reversal Doctors - How to Pick Yours

by Sandra Wilson

Among all the tubal reversal doctors that say they will do your tubal ligation reversal surgery, how do you know which is the right one to choose? In the rest of this article, I hope you will learn about some of the information you should ask any potential surgeon to find out if he or she will be right for you. After all, whether it is to have another child or for relief of post tubal ligation syndrome, you are putting so much of your future into this person’s hands. You want to make the right choice.

Let’s begin with the surgeon’s background. Where did he go to school? This includes his or her undergraduate schooling as well as the medical school. Was it pretty exclusive and were they top ranking schools? How about where he did his internship and residency? Were these done at notable institutions? What sort of tubal reversal training did he receive during this time? Did he even get to see even one tubal ligation reversal being done during this time? Because this is considered an elective surgery and most insurance won’t pay for it, it doesn’t get done in hospitals where most doctors are trained.

Post Tubal Ligation Syndrome - How to Relieve the Pain

by Sandra Wilson

As a means of contraception, tubal ligation surgery has been used on millions of women in just the U.S. itself over the years. When researching this method, one can’t help but come upon stories about Post Tubal Ligation Syndrome. Women who suffer from this after effect of the surgery relate awful examples of the symptoms that they suffer. A basic search on the web on the topic will lead you to horrible story after horrible story.

A long list of thirty-five possible symptoms can be found when looking into the symptoms of Post Tubal Ligation Syndrome, or ptls for short, on different websites. However, when you read the personal stories of the women suffering from this after effect, you will most often read of longer bouts of and stronger PMS symptoms, bad mood swings, and very altered periods usually with severe bleeding so bad they cannot even leave home. Also suffered are migraines, no sex drive, weight gain and severe cramping.

How To Conceive That Baby Quickly

by Benjamin Wise

When it comes to getting pregnant there are both the medical facts and a little common sense required in order to improve your ability to have the baby you have always wanted. Before trying to get pregnant it is always wise to consult with a medical professional to ensure that everything is ok and that the conditions are right so as to achieve your goal.

To ensure a healthy vessel for a new baby to grow in, women should be sure to eat lots of vegetable, take their vitamins, exercise, and do whatever is necessary to remain healthy.

The menstrual period on average is around twenty eight days. If it is twenty nine days then count fifteen days for your cycle and if thirty, count sixteen. I think you get the picture. Be advised that this method is not always accurate but it is one of the many metrics you can use to pinpoint the right time to get pregnant.

The average menstrual period is twenty-eight days. The average ovulation period is two to four days. To get a general idea of when you begin ovulating, and assuming you have a twenty-eight day cycle, simply count forward fourteen days from the first day of your period. If your cycle is twenty-nine days, count fifteen days forward, and so and so forth. Remember to adjust accordingly to your individual cycle.