Characteristics and incidence of dysfunctional ovulation patterns detected by ultrasound

Fertility and sterility, 47(4), 603-612

DOI 10.1016/s0015-0282(16)59110-9 PMID 3106099 Source

Abstract

The nature and incidence of normal and abnormal spontaneous ovarian cycles, identified with ultrasound and endocrine tracking, were examined in 45 regularly cycling infertile women with no definitive cause and 15 women who were apparently normal and were receiving donor insemination because of clearly infertile partners. In 136 cycles, four apparently distinct abnormal patterns were detected. The total incidence in the infertile group was 58% compared with 23% in the donor insemination group (P less than 0.005). Twelve of 26 subjects who had at least three cycles tracked showed two different abnormalities, and 1 subject had three different abnormalities in five abnormal cycles. These results suggest that abnormal cycles are a significant factor in unexplained infertility and that diagnosis and treatment cannot be based on the study of a single cycle.

Topics

dysfunctional ovulation ultrasound, abnormal ovulation patterns infertility, ultrasound cycle tracking unexplained infertility, anovulation follicle monitoring, luteal phase defects ultrasound diagnosis, ovarian cycle abnormalities, regularly cycling women ovulation problems, ultrasound endocrine tracking fertility, unexplained infertility ovulatory dysfunction, follicular monitoring abnormal patterns, cycle-to-cycle ovulation variation

Cite this article

Eissa, M. K., Sawers, R. S., Docker, M. F., Lynch, S. S., & Newton, J. R. (1987). Characteristics and incidence of dysfunctional ovulation patterns detected by ultrasound. *Fertility and sterility*, *47*(4), 603-612. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0015-0282(16)59110-9

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