Infertility & Reproduction Health Center
Should I have infertility testing?
If you and your partner have been having trouble getting pregnant, it's possible that one or both of you has a medically treatable fertility problem. As you decide whether to look for a cause, you will have various medical and personal questions to consider. Together, you can use this Decision Point to guide your thinking. It offers basic facts about infertility, testing, and when testing is appropriate. You can also use it to define your personal goals, feelings, and values about infertility testing and treatment.
Consider the following when making your decision:
- If you are younger than 30 and trying to conceive, most doctors recommend well-timed intercourse for at least a year before considering testing and treatment.
- If you (woman) are closer to 35, it's reasonable for both you and your partner to consider testing for treatable causes of infertility sooner, before age-related factors make it too difficult to conceive.
- Infertility testing and treatment can be difficult, sometimes traumatic, and expensive. Before starting infertility testing together, discuss how far you would be willing to go with testing and treatment. Only have testing for conditions that you are willing and financially able to have treated or that would help you move on to other options such as adoption.
- Prolonged infertility testing and treatment can intensify the stress of infertility. If you are becoming overly stressed or your relationship is suffering, ask your doctor to recommend a professional counselor who can help you get through this crisis together.
- As a couple, you have the final word on how to use your infertility test results based on your medical information, goals, and values.
What is infertility?
Infertility is defined as a couple's inability to become pregnant after 1 year of sex without using birth control. But "normal fertility" is defined as the ability to naturally conceive within 2 years' time.
A man's fertility is not known to be severely affected by age. A woman's fertility gradually drops from her mid-30s into her 40s, due in great part to the natural aging of the egg supply. For any couple, defining infertility is a personal issue-influenced by a woman's age and how much time a couple chooses to try conceiving without medical intervention.
What causes infertility?
In about 35% of couples, testing reveals a male fertility problem, as with sperm production or ejaculation. In about 50% of couples, the primary cause is a female fertility problem with ovulation, fallopian tube function, or other pelvic problems, such as endometriosis. Some couples find that both partners have a fertility problem. In 10% of couples, no cause of infertility is found.1
What types of infertility testing are available?
Testing for causes of infertility can range from simple, inexpensive, and painless to complicated, expensive, and surgically invasive. If you decide to test for a cause of infertility, your doctor will want to check both of you at the same time. Using your fertility awareness information, semen analysis, and blood tests for hormone levels, your doctor can easily check for the most common male and female infertility problems.
- Initial tests of male and female hormone and semen analysis can signal problems with egg or sperm production. Typically, an abnormal sperm analysis will be followed by a repeat analysis. Depending on the problem, abnormal hormone or sperm results are followed up with further testing or treated with medicines or hormones.
- Tests that examine the reproductive tract, such as hysteroscopy, hysterosalpingogram, sonohysterogram, endometrial biopsy, ultrasound, laparoscopy, and transrectal ultrasound, can identify disease or structural problems that might be reversible.
Use the following reference as you consider whether to proceed with various types of testing. Initial tests are listed first, followed by other tests that may be recommended, depending on initial testing results.
| Which partner is tested and type of testing | Reasons to have this testing | Potential concerns |
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Female partner, at home: Basal body temperature and other fertility awareness measures |
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Female partner, at home: Home ovulation test kit for luteinizing hormone (LH) |
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Male partner: Semen analysis |
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Both partners: Hormone tests, including luteinizing hormone (LH), progesterone, follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), prolactin, and testosterone |
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Female partner: Hysterosalpingogram |
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Female partner: Ultrasound Hysterosonogram with transvaginal ultrasound to evaluate the uterus and fallopian tubes (also known as sonohysterogram) |
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Female partner: Laparoscopy |
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Male partner: Sperm antibody test |
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Female partner: Hysteroscopy |
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Male partner: Testicular ultrasound |
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Male partner: Testicular biopsy |
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Both partners: Karyotype, other genetic testing |
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Both partners: Culture of semen and cervical mucus |
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How can you and your partner use the information from infertility tests?
Based on your unique test results, your doctor can give you the best possible information about your next testing or treatment options. At each point in the testing process, pause and assess what you have learned and decide what you want to do next.
Here is a general example of how a couple and their doctor might use information from infertility tests.
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If a couple's initial tests are normal , finding no reason for their difficulty conceiving
(unexplained infertility), they can:
- Continue trying to conceive naturally, having sex just before ovulation to increase their chances of pregnancy.
- Continue testing for an infertility cause. Further testing checks the fallopian tubes to be sure that eggs can enter the tubes, be fertilized, and implant in the uterus. These tests are more invasive, uncomfortable, and risky.
- Try treatment with intrauterine insemination (IUI), with or without superovulation medicine.
- If a sperm analysis shows a sperm problem , a woman may not need any tests. But to conceive a pregnancy, the sperm problem may require insemination or assisted reproductive technology (ART) treatment, which intensively involves the female partner. ART uses medicine, tests, and procedures to produce, collect, fertilize, and implant multiple eggs.
- If a sperm analysis is normal but a woman's basal body temperature and hormone tests suggest that she isn't ovulating , she may not need further tests. She may choose to try medicine that stimulates her ovaries to produce and release eggs.
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If test results show a problem with the fallopian tubes , a couple may choose a
fallopian tube procedure or
in vitro fertilization (IVF) to conceive a pregnancy.
- When successful, a fallopian tube procedure can enable a woman to have more than one pregnancy without ongoing fertility treatment and repeated use of IVF.
- Tubal surgery does not work for tubal problems that are severe.
At any point in the infertility testing and treatment process, a couple has the freedom to stop or take a break. Many couples find that a break in the intensity is necessary for them to maintain their physical and mental health.
If you need more information, see the topic Fertility Problems.
If you decide to test for a cause of infertility, you can then decide how much or how little testing you are willing to pursue. Although you don't need to make all your decisions about testing and treatment at the start, take some time together to talk about your hopes, values, and limits. The following worksheet will help you evaluate and communicate with each other and your doctor.
Your choices are:
- Start or continue with testing for a cause of infertility, then use the results to help make your family planning decisions.
- Decide against starting or continuing to have infertility testing, and make your family planning decisions with the information you currently have.
The decision about whether to have testing for a cause of infertility takes into account your personal feelings and the medical facts.
| Reasons to have infertility testing | Reasons not to have infertility testing |
|---|---|
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Consider infertility testing if you:
 Are there other reasons you might want to proceed with infertility testing? |
Do not consider fertility testing if you:
 Are there other reasons you might not want to proceed with infertility testing? |
These personal stories may help you make your decision.
Use this worksheet to help you make your decision. After completing it, you should have a better idea of how you feel about starting or continuing with infertility testing. Discuss the worksheet with your doctor.
Circle the answer that best applies to you.
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We have spent at least 6 months having intercourse during our "fertile window" before and including the day of ovulation. |
Yes | No | Unsure |
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I want to continue trying to conceive naturally before thinking in terms of infertility. |
Yes | No | Unsure |
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It important to me that we have a biological child. |
Yes | No | Unsure |
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I consider adoption as a possible family planning choice. |
Yes | No | Unsure |
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I would consider using donor eggs or sperm to conceive. |
Yes | No | Unsure |
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We have the financial resources to afford infertility testing, treatment, pregnancy care, and child-related expenses. |
Yes | No | Unsure |
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We have health insurance that covers some of our costs. |
Yes | No | Unsure |
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If a semen analysis and blood tests revealed no problems, I would be willing to continue with testing. |
Yes | No | N/A |
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I know what kinds of treatment options I would be willing to consider. |
Yes | No | Unsure |
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We have a plan for how long we would want to look for and treat a cause of infertility. |
Yes | No | Unsure |
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We have determined the best way to periodically evaluate our testing and treatment plan. |
Yes | No | Unsure |
*NA = Not applicable
Use the following space to list any other important concerns you have about this decision.
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What is your overall impression?
Your answers in the above worksheet are meant to give you a general idea of where you stand on this decision. You may have one overriding reason to have or not have testing for a cause of infertility.
Check the box below that represents your overall impression about your decision.
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Leaning toward proceeding with infertility testing |
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Leaning toward NOT proceeding with infertility testing |
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WebMD Medical Reference from Healthwise
