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Description & Information
Baby-Comp has proven itself effective through clinical studies as a very accurate
tool for couples wishing to conceive. Baby-Comp has
helped many couples--even with reduced fertility--to plan their families with
success. With Baby-Comp you can...
- detect ovulation and optimum days for conceiving, up to 6 days in advance;
- receive a prognosis of due date;
- auto-record temperatures and chart cycle;
- indentify days for increased chance of male or female gender;
- enter when intercouse takes place;
- detect and indicate date of conception;
- have data printed for analysis;
- even use it for contraception.
Planning a Pregnancy with Baby-Comp
Baby-Comp performs all the same tasks as Lady-Comp but has an added pregnancy
planning level. This makes Baby-Comp a complete package allowing
you to either plan a pregnancy or prevent one.
Baby-Comp and Infertility
How can a device like Baby-Comp help in cases of infertility? First
and most importantly, it indicates the best possible date for conception when
ovulation occurs. Baby-Comp does this by closely monitoring
your cycle on a daily basis. You provide Baby-Comp with the information it
requires by means of simple input. This includes daily (but time flexible)
BBT measurements and menstruation dates. By analyzing this information,
Baby-Comp is able to detect ovulation and calculate in advance your best
opportunity for conceiving.
Baby-Comp makes it possible to recognize problems caused by hormone imbalance
or irregular cycles. Should a cycle disturbance or
irregularity exist, Baby-Comp will make this known through it's pattern of
fertility indication; this can be confirmed by a print out. Temperature
patterns can often assist in indicating more specific causes of any irregularity.
(If possible, you should try to correct any known cycle irregularities
prior to using Baby-Comp, so as to optimize its use.)
If you are not sure if you ovulate regularly or do not
know where in your cycle you ovulate, then you should use Baby-Comp right away to
collect data about your cycle.
Am I Infertile? What Can I do? What if I have had a
miscarriage in the past? Childlessness in couples who want to
have a family is most
frequently not caused by complete infertility but rather by a reduced level of
fertility, such as caused by a hormone imbalance. Couples only realize they
have problems conceiving when they try to have a child. It is quite normal
for a couple not to conceive in the first cycle; on average, a couple with
healthy fertility requires three months to initiate
pregnancy--even when pinpointing fertile days.
It is only if you have been unsuccessfully trying to get pregnant for more
than six months that one can talk about "conception problems", and
even then this is not considered infertility. True infertility only
exists when one partner is sterile. Involuntary reproductive sterility is
often associated with damage to the individuals reproductive cells caused
while still a fetus in the womb, usually by toxins. Such toxins do not
harm the mother but are very dangerous to the fetus and its proper development.
Chemical products such as household cleaners and nail polish can
harm a fetus' reproductive development. When mature, females may not produce the
follicular activity which leads to the releasing of the egg, and males may not
produce sperm cells. If you have been tested for these conditions
and the test results were negative--in other words, you are fertile--then
your difficulties in conceiving may be related to
either a) not accurately pinpointing your day of ovulation; or
b) a hormonal imbalance that does not allow you to ovulate or
allow the egg to imbed or remain imbedded in the uterus.
Hormone imbalance can cause ovulation to cease and can also lead to miscarriage.
An imbalance that leads to miscarriage is most often caused by a "luteul phase
failure". The luteul phase of your cycle is the back half of the cycle, which
extends from the time of ovulation to the time of menstruation. During this part of
the cycle, progesterone generally increases and acts as a balancing hormone.
During a pregnancy, sufficient levels of natural progesterone are required to
maintain a pregnancy. If progesterone levels drop or are not maintained, a pregnancy may
end in miscarriage.
If you would like more information about how to
balance hormones and how this assists with getting
and staying pregnant, please visit our
hormone
balance page. We offer personalized
assistance with our kit. To discuss your situation
with one of our representatives, please
contact us.
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