Psychosocial stress as a cause of infertility

Fertility and sterility, 59(3), 685-689

PMID 8458480 Source

Abstract

An adaptive model for the evolution of reproductive failure predicted psychosocial stress to increase as anatomic causes of infertility decrease. The nonanatomic infertility group in our study reported greater psychosocial stress than intermediate (P < 0.008) or anatomic groups (P < 0.0005). Controls, women with nonanatomic etiologies who were not attempting pregnancy, also reported higher psychosocial stress than the anatomic group (P < 0.007). Results are consistent with the hypothesis that psychosocial distress contributes significantly to the etiology of some forms of infertility.

Topics

psychosocial stress infertility, emotional stress reproductive failure, psychological factors unexplained infertility, mind-body fertility connection, stress-related anovulation, nonanatomic infertility causes, psychogenic infertility diagnosis, lifestyle stress conception difficulty, holistic infertility evaluation

Cite this article

Wasser, S. K., Sewall, G., & Soules, M. R. (1993). Psychosocial stress as a cause of infertility. *Fertility and sterility*, *59*(3), 685-689.

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