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Fertility: Encyclopedia BETA


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Fertility

Fertility is the ability of people or animals to produce healthy offspring in abundance. In the English language, the term was originally applied only to females, but increasingly is applied to males as well, as common understanding of reproductive mechanisms increases and the importance of the male role is better known. The opposite of fertility is infertility. Human fertility depends on factors of nutrition, sexual behavior, culture, instinct, endocrinology, timing, economics, way of life, and emotions. Animal fertility is no less complex, and may display astounding mechanisms.

Fertility is also applied to farmlands and plants, where it implies a capacity to yield large crops of sound fruits, seeds or vegetables.

The fertility rate is a demographic measure of the number of children per woman. Although it has been until recently considered to be a fairly reliable indicator of population growth, it is no longer so in much of Asia. Due to selective abortion and other factors, the number of women themselves is declining. Therefore, the fertility rate as it has traditionally been defined is no longer an authoritative measure of population growth in China, India, and Myanmar.

Both women and men have hormonal cycles which determine both when a woman can achieve pregnancy and when a man is most fertile. The female cycle is approximately twenty-eight days long, but the male cycle is variable. Women ovulate at about the fourteenth day of their cycle, this obviously being the most fertile time for females. Men can ejaculate and produce sperm at any time of the month, but their libido dips occasionally, which scientists guess is in relation to their internal cycle. During the fourteenth week of fetal growth, a women's eggs (or ova) form in her ovaries, where they will remain until puberty. At puberty, the eggs will eventually start to mature one-by-one. At ovulation, the egg bursts from the ovary sometimes causing a small, sharp pain called mittelschmerz. If the egg is not fertilized by the male's sperm, the egg will break down within twenty-four hours into its components (mostly protein) and be reabsorbed by the body.

Male Fertility After 35

Fertility clinics generally recommend that men get their sperm frozen before 35, if they want to have children later. Men's sperm quality usually deteriorates after that age, although some men continue to produce healthy sperm long after 40.

Female Fertility After 30

Women's fertility peaks in their twenties, and deteriorates after 30. Of women trying to get pregnant, without using fertility drugs:

  • At age 30, 75% will get pregnant within one year, and 91% within four years.
  • At age 35, 66% will get pregnant within one year, and 84% within four years.
  • At age 40, 44% will get pregnant within one year, and 64% within four years.1


Those figures are for conception, not for the birth of a healthy baby. According to the March of Dimes, "about 9 percent of recognized pregnancies for women aged 20 to 24 ended in miscarriage. The risk rose to about 20 percent at age 35 to 39, and more than 50 percent by age 42."2Birth defects also increase with the age of the mother. According to the March of Dimes, "At age 25, a woman has about a 1-in-1,250 chance of having a baby with Down syndrome; at age 30, a 1-in-1,000 chance; at age 35, a 1-in-400 chance; at age 40, a 1-in-100 chance; and at 45, a 1-in-30 chance."3Multiplying the conception rate times the miscarriage rate times the birth defect rates should yield a rough likelihoodof a healthy birth:

  • 30-year-olds: .91 x .85 x .999 = 77%
  • 35-year-olds: .84 x .80 x .9975 = 67%
  • 40-year-olds: .64 x .55 x .99 = 35%


Multiplying the final figure by itself yields rough likelihoods of additional children:

  • 30-year-olds: 1 child 77%; 2 children 60%; 3 children 45%
  • 35-year-olds: 1 child 67%; 2 children 45%; 3 children 30%
  • 40-year-olds: 1 child 35%; 2 children 12%; 3 children 4%

See also

* Fecundity

References

* Note 1:
* Note 2:

External links

*Technostorks: Award-winning documentary on Infertility and IVF



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