Glossary

  • ADHESIONS Scar tissue that may be located in the abdominal cavity, fallopian tubes, or inside the uterus. Can interfere with the transport of the egg and implantation of the embryo in the uterus.
  • AMENORRHEA Lack of menstrual period for 6 months or more.
  • ANOVULATION The failure to ovulate. This is the most common cause of female infertility. There are many different causes for the failure to ovulate, including problems with the central nervous system or pituitary gland, and abnormalities within the follicles or ovaries.
  • ASSISTED HATCHING (AH or AZH) A micromanipulation procedure in which an opening is made into the hard outer surface of the early embryo with the use of chemicals, mechanical techniques, or lasers to improve implantation after the embryo is transferred into the uterus.
  • ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY (ART) A group of treatment methods used to improve fertility, which involves collecting the eggs and putting them in direct contact with sperm. Including IVF, GIFT, ZIFT, ICSI, and Assisted Hatching.
  • AZOOSPERMIA Semen that contains no sperm, either because the testicles can’t make sperm or because the man’s reproductive tract is blocked.
  • BASAL BODY TEMPERATURE (BBT) The body temperature when taken at its lowest point, usually in the morning before getting out of bed. Charting a woman’s BBT is used to document ovulation. If the BBT pattern rises about a half degree during the latter half of the menstrual cycle, it suggests that ovulation has taken place.
  • BETA hCG TEST (BhCG) A blood test used to detect very early pregnancies and to evaluate the development of the embryo. The test measures hCG, which is secreted by the placenta after implantation.
  • BLASTOCYST A stage of embryonic development that occurs about 5 days after fertilization, when the embryo consists of two different cell types (those that will form the placenta and those that will form the fetus) and a central cavity.
  • BLASTOCYST TRANSFER Replacing blastocysts into the uterus.
  • BLIGHTED OVUM (EGG) Rarely-used term for an embryo that attaches itself to the uterine wall but the embryo does not develop. The amniotic sac may only contain fluid and no fetal tissue when the miscarriage occurs.
  • CERVICAL MUCUS The sticky, thick mucus produced by glands in the cervical canal that plugs the opening of the cervix. Most of the time this thick mucus plug prevents sperm and bacteria from entering the womb unless ovulation is about to take place. At this time, under the influence of estrogen, the mucus becomes thin, watery, and stretchy so that sperm can pass into the womb.
  • CERVIX The opening into the uterus.
  • CHEMICAL PREGNANCY A pregnancy verified by lab tests but which results in an early miscarriage before a gestational sac is seen on an ultrasound.
  • CHOCOLATE CYST A cyst in the ovary that is filled with blood. It is known medically as an “endometrioma.” The term chocolate cyst is used because it resembles melted chocolate. A chocolate cyst forms when endometriosis implants invade the ovary and bleed.
  • CLOMIPHENE (Clomid, Serophene) Often a first line of treatment to stimulate and induce ovulation. Clomid bindsto estrogen receptors in the hypothalamus. When their sites are occupied, the hypothalamus responds by telling the pituitary to release more FSH.
  • CONGENITAL Conditions present from birth, either hereditary or environmental.
  • CORPUS LUTEUM A yellow-colored cyst that forms from the ovarian follicle after it releases an egg. Once formed, the cyst produces estrogen and progesterone to prepare and support the uterine lining for implantation.
  • CRYOPRESERVATION The process of freezing tissues or cells and then storing them in liquid nitrogen at very low temperatures. This process is used to store sperm, embryos, and unfertilized eggs. They are stored in small vials or straws that can last for decades.
  • DONOR INSEMINATION (DI) A type of artificial insemination using sperm not from the male partner or husband.
  • DONOR SPERM Semen specimens donated and used in an ART procedure.
  • ECTOPIC PREGNANCY Also called a tubal pregnancy, this is a condition in which the embryo implants outside of the uterus, usually in the fallopian tube, although it can also occur in the ovary or abdominal cavity. If such a pregnancy is allowed to continue, it may eventually rupture the fallopian tube and cause life-threatening hemorrhage. Such a pregnancy can never be sustained and often leads to decreased or complete loss of function in the affected tube.
  • EGG DONATION Process in which eggs from a fertile woman are donated to an infertile woman for use in an ART procedure.
  • EGG RETRIEVAL A procedure used to collect eggs from a woman’s follicles for use in IVF, usually performed with ultrasound-directed needle aspiration during IVF.
  • EMBRYO A term that describes the time from fertilization of the egg until the first few weeks of pregnancy.
  • EMBRYO FREEZING See Cyropreservation
  • EMBRYO TRANSFER Placing an embryo into a woman’s uterus or into the fallopian tube after IVF
  • ENDOMETRIAL BIOPSY A removal of a small piece of the uterine lining for microscopic study.
  • ENDOMETRIOSIS A chronic condition in which some of the normal cells that line the internal cavity (endometrial tissue) are found outside the uterus – most often in the pelvic area involving the ovaries. Endometriosis may interfere with ovulation and with the implantation of the embryo.
  • ESTRADIOL A natural estrogen produced by the ovary and released through reproductive life. It supports the development of the uterine lining and is important to breast and other female organ development.
  • FALLOPIAN TUBES Hollow ducts through which eggs travel to the uterus once released from the follicle.
  • FERTILITY SPECIALIST A doctor who specializes in the diagnosis and treatment of infertility.
  • FERTILISATION Penetration of the egg by the sperm cell.
  • FETUS A term used to describe human in utero development, from the period of time when the embryo is fully formed at around 8 weeks, until birth.
  • FIBROID/MYOMA Benign tumors of the uterine muscle and connective tissue.
  • FIMBRIA Fingerlike projections at the end of the fallopian tube nearest the ovary. When stimulated by the fluid released from the follicles during ovulation, the fingerlike ends grasp the egg and sweep it into the tube
  • FOLLICLE STIMULATING HORMONE (FSH) A reproductive hormone that stimulates sperm production in a man; in a woman, FSH stimulates the growth of the ovarian follicle and the production of eggs.
  • FOLLICULAR PHASE The portion of a woman’s cycle before ovulation during which a follicle grows and high levels of estrogen cause the lining of the uterus to grow.
  • FOLLICLE A fluid-filled sac in the ovary that contains the eggs.
  • FSH FOLLICLE STIMULATING HORMONES (Puregon, Gonal-F, Menopur, Elonva) These drugs stimulate follicle growth.
  • GAMETE Term for either a sperm or egg.
  • GESTATION The medical term for pregnancy.
  • GESTATIONAL CARRIER A type of surrogacy in which a surrogate mother is implanted with the genetic offspring of another couple and then turns the baby over to them at birth.
  • Gn-RH AGONIST (Lucrin, Synarel) These drugs inhibit premature ovulation.
  • Gn-RH ANTAGONIST (Cetrotide, Orgalutran) These drugs inhibit premature ovulation.
  • GONADOTROPIN The hormones that stimulate the growth of the follicle, i.e. FSH and LH.
  • GONADS The gender-neutral term for the ovaries and testicles.
  • GYNAECOLOGIST A physician whose specialty is health care for women, especially the treatment of the female reproductive organs.
  • HORMONE A chemical substance that travels via the bloodstream and carries a signal from one part of the body to another.
  • HUMAN CHORIONIC GONADOTROPIN (Ovidrel, Pregnancy Hormone, Pregnyl) Also used as medication used to trigger ovulation.
  • HYPOTHALAMUS A part of the brain that regulates hormones, located next to the pituitary gland at the base of the brain.
  • HYSTERECTOMY A surgical procedure involving the removal of the uterus, and which usually removes the cervix but not necessarily the ovaries and fallopian tubes.
  • HYSTEROSCOPY A surgical procedure to check for abnormalities within the uterus. It is performed by placing a small, thin telescope-like instrument through the cervical canal to inspect the inside of the uterus. The procedure can be used both to diagnose and treat problems, since minor surgical repairs also can be done during operative hysteroscopy.
  • IMPLANTATION The process of attachment of the embryo to the maternal uterine wall.
  • INFERTILITY The inability to conceive after a year of unprotected, well-timed intercourse, or the inability to carry a pregnancy to term.
  • INTRACYTOPLASMIC SPERM INJECTION (ICSI) A lab procedure in which a single sperm is injected through the outer shell of the egg to enable fertilization.
  • INTRAUTERINE INSEMINATION (IUI) An Assisted Reproduction Technique which deposits washed sperm directly into the uterus, bypassing the cervix, and allowing the sperm to enter the fallopian tubes (where fertilisation normally occurs).
  • IN VITRO FERTILIZATION (IVF) Literally meaning “in glass,” the term refers to fertilisation that takes place outside the body in a small glass dish. This procedure involves stimulating the ovaries, retrieving eggs, fertilizing the eggs and then implanting the embryos in the woman’s uterus.
  • LAPAROSCOPY A minimally invasive surgical procedure in which a telescope-like instrument called a laparoscope in inserted through a small incision in the abdominal wall to view the inner organs in order to diagnose and sometimes treat suspected reproductive problems.
  • LH SURGE A sudden large release of Luteninizing Hormone from the pituitary glad that culminates in the release of a mature egg from the follicle about 36 hours after the surge begins.
  • LUTEAL PHASE The second half of the menstrual cycle that occurs between the release of an egg and the menstrual period.
  • LUTEINIZING HORMONE (LH) A pituitary hormone that stimulates the ovaries or testicles.
  • MENSTRUAL CYCLE The monthly series of physiologic reproductive changes in the uterus and other female organs that averages about 28 days, measured from the one menstrual flow to the next.
  • MICROMANIPULATION The use of high magnification and special instruments to manipulate sperm, eggs, and embryos during IVF.
  • MISCARRIAGE The spontaneous loss of an embryo of fetus before the 20th week of pregnancy. Most miscarriages occur during the first 14 weeks of pregnancy.
  • MYOMECTOMY The surgical removal of fibroid tumors from the uterus.
  • OLIGOMENORRHEA An irregular menstrual cycle that occurs in intervals longer than 35 days. This condition is usually caused by irregular coordination between the hypothalamus, the pituitary gland and the ovaries.
  • OLIGOSPERMIA The term for a low sperm count in the ejaculate.
  • OOCYTE The biological term for an egg.
  • OVARIAN CYST A fluid-filled sac within or on the surface of the ovary. The majority of ovarian cysts are not related to any disease and disappear without treatment within a few months.
  • OVARIAN FAILURE A condition involving a loss of normal ovarian function in which the ovaries dont produce eggs, so estrogen levels drop and follicle-stimulating hormone levels rise.
  • OVARIAN HYPERSTIMULATION SYNDROME (OHSS) A complication occasionally seen in women who take certain fertility medications that stimulate egg production. Ovarian hyperstimulation can cause ovarian enlargement and discomfort and fluid can leak into the abdominal area. Most cases are mild.
  • OVULATION The release of a mature egg from a follicle.
  • OVULATION INDUCTION Drug treatment that stimulates the development and release of one or more mature eggs from the ovaries.
  • PAPANICOLAOU (PAP) SMEAR A microscopic examination of cells scraped from the cervix to detect cancerous or precancerous conditions of the cervix.
  • PELVIC INFLAMMATORY DISEASE (PID) A general term for infection of the female reproductive organs.
  • PITUITARY GLAND The small gland found at the bone of the brain that secretes many hormones, including FSH and LH.
  • POLYCYSTIC OVARIAN SYNDROME (PCOS) A metabolic condition associated with irregular ovulation. The condition may include obesity, infertility and excess hair growth.
  • PREIMPLANTATION GENETIC DIAGNOSIS (PGD) Genetic testing of an embryo during IVF to determine potential genetic abnormalities of the embryos prior to transfer to the uterus.
  • PROGESTERONE An important ovarian hormone that is normally secreted after ovulation and during pregnancy. Progesterone triggers thickening of the lining of the uterus so it can accept implantation of a fertilized egg.
  • PROLACTIN The pituitary hormone that stimulates the production of milk in breast-feeding women. It also circulates in low levels in the bloodstream of nonpregnant women. High levels of prolactinin non-pregnant women can cause annovulation.
  • PROSTATE GLAND The gland encircling the urethra in men that produces a third of the fluid in the ejaculate.
  • SALPINGECTOMY Surgical removal of one or more fallopian tubes. Salpingectomy is usually performed if the tube has become infected or to treat an ectopic pregnancy.
  • SALPINGITIS Inflammation of the fallopian tube.
  • SEMEN Fluid of the male reproductive tract, containing sperm and a number of other substances such as water, simple sugars, alkaline chemicals, and prostaglandins.
  • SEMEN ANALYSIS (SA) A laboratory test used to assess the amount and quality of a man’s sperm and semen.
  • SPERM The microscopic cell that carries the male’s genetic information to the female’s egg.
  • SPERM BANK A service that maintains frozen sperm samples.
  • SPERM COUNT The number of sperm in the ejaculate, also called sperm concentration and given as the number of sperm per milliliter. A low sperm count is called oligospermia. A sperm count of 15 million/ml or above is considered normal.
  • SPERM MORPHOLOGY The evaluation of the size and shape of sperm in a semen sample.
  • SPERM MOTILITY The ability of sperm to swim.
  • SPERM WASH A technique used to separate sperm cells from the seminal fluid, resulting in a small volume of highly concentrated sperm used for IUI treatments.
  • STERILITY A condition that results in the absolute inability to reproduce.
  • TESTICLES Also known as testes, testicles are the male sex glands located in the scrotum. Testicles store and produce sperm and are the main source for the secretion of the male hormone testosterone.
  • TESTICULAR BIOPSY A surgical procedure in which a small sample of testicular tissue is removed for microscopic examination to see if sperm are present and able to be retrieved.
  • TESTOSTERONE The primary male hormone responsible for secondary sex characteristics and for supporting the sex drive. Testosterone is also necessary for sperm production.
  • TUBAL LIGATION Female sterilization. The fallopian tubes are blocked to prevent the egg from meeting sperm. Commonly known as “having the tubes tied”.
  • ULTRASOUND Use of high-frequency sound waves that are reflected off solid tissues to give an image of internal body structures. This device is used to detect and count follicle growth in many fertility treatments and to detect and monitor pregnancy.
  • UTERUS Part of the female reproductive system that contains and nourishes a fetus prior to birth.
  • ZYGOTE An embryo in the early stages of development.