610-981-6000

Posts Tagged ‘cell phone’

Women Gets Pregnant with Cell Phone… Sort Of

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

It’s been all around the Intrawebs and media sites have gobbled up the headline:  Women Gets Pregnant Using iPhone

To be sure, it’s a great “hook”.  But when you actually read the report, you’ll discover that what she did was download an app that helped her chart her ovulation.  It’s actually not anything new — women have been using this method of natural fertility awareness for centuries.  However, it may give false hope to some individuals.

To be sure, there is nothing wrong with measuring your temperature or charting your menstrual periods to determine your most “fertile” points of the month.  But there may be hidden factors to infertility that cannot be addressed or uncovered when using this method:

  1. The fertility issue may not be on the woman’s part.  Up to 40% of couples experiencing infertility discover that the male – not the female — is the one with the fertility concerns.
  2. The woman may not be ovulating or ovulating regularly despite the occurrence of menses.  This means that although she is having a period, she’s not really fertile or may be only fertile a small percentage of the time.
  3. The woman may have other medical problems of which she’s unaware.  Without a complete examination including tests, the source of the couple’s fertility problems may not be apparent if they only use a natural form of charting fertility.

Our recommendation?  If, after using a non-medical method to chart fertility (like the i-Phone app) you are unable to get pregnant within 6 months, it’s time to see a reproductive science specialist.  That way, you’ll be wasting no time.

By the same token, we congratulate the couple for achieving their goal!

  • RSI… helping miracles happen.
  • Join RSI on Twitter
  • Cell Phone Use and Male Infertility

    Friday, July 10th, 2009

    Guys who use their cell phone for prolonged periods of time may be inadvertently contributing to their infertility problems.  So says a news item from WebMD

    Holding the cell to one’s ear isn’t the culprit; it’s when hands-free devices are used (think Bluetooth) and the cell phone is placed in the man’s lap (if sitting), in his pocket or snapped on his waistband.  Small doses of radiation from the cell phone can actually contribute to male infertility, according to researchers.

    As noted in the article:

    Semen exposed to radiofrequency electromagnetic waves emitted from cell phones had higher levels of damaging free radicals, lower sperm motility (the ability of the spermto move and swim) and sperm viability (the percentage of live sperm), and possibly greater oxidative stress…

    For men and their partners who are having trouble conceiving naturally, these findings may provide a clue to their personal fertility mystery.