Thirty-five
year-old Tracy had tried everything: monitoring her cycles through body
temperature, over-the-counter fertility predictors and finally,
fertility-enhancing drugs and in vitro fertilization. But after three
years of trying, she still wasn’t pregnant. She began to think she was “too
old” to have a family, though she was seemingly in great physical shape.
Tracy is not
alone. Thousands of women go to fertility specialists each year. “After
fertility treatments fail, many women are told ‘no’ [about having children]
because of their age,” says D’arcy Brown, DC. But chiropractic may offer hope.
At least one recent study showed that, after receiving chiropractic care,
previously infertile women were much more likely to become pregnant (Journal
of Vertebral Subluxation Research, 2003). And while reasons behind
chiropractic’s success in treating infertility aren’t certain, there are a
number of possibilities why it may work.
Dr. Brown, who
practices in Aspen, Colorado, believes proper alignment works in several ways
to increase the likelihood of becoming and staying pregnant. Chiefly, improper
alignment of the cranial, spinal, and pelvic bones can hinder the nervous
system, which controls a woman’s reproductive system, causing imbalances and
hampering her ability to get and stay pregnant.
Distortions
of the sphenoid bone in the skull— which can result from passage through the
birth canal or from accidents later in life— are particularly problematic, says
Brown, since misalignments there can affect the cranial nerve and pituitary
gland. The pituitary gland is the regulator of a number of hormones important
to fertility, including the follicle-stimulating hormone, estrogen, and
progesterone. If any of these are out of balance, explains Brown, it can be
very difficult to get pregnant.
Like Tracy,
many of the patients Brown sees for infertility have tried everything. They
come to chiropractic as a last resort. Brown first talks to them about their
menstrual health history, noting signs of imbalance, which have often been
problematic since the onset of menstruation, including heavy cramping, mood
swings, and missing periods. “We balance the body [through chiropractic],” says
Brown. Patients receive a combination of chiropractic and craniosacral
adjustments, three times a week to start. After adjustments start to hold,
patients visit once or twice a week.
How long
should chiropractic take to work? Not long, says Brown. “We give it three
months. Often women will become pregnant in the third or fourth month of
treatment.” Brown has an impressive 75 percent success rate so far. Unless
there have been serious compromises to reproductive health, he says, such as a
history of extreme athletic activity or substance abuse, chiropractic may set
the stage for a successful pregnancy for women like Tracy.
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