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Medicine or hormone treatments are often the first steps in infertility treatment. They are also used for in vitro fertilization and other assisted reproductive technologies.
Ask your doctor questions about medicines you are considering, including whether there are long-term effects, how long the treatment lasts, how often you must be tested while taking it, and whether there are any side effects that will affect your daily life.
If you have irregular or no ovulation, using medicine or hormones to stimulate ovulation will increase your chances of pregnancy. But these treatments increase your risk of multiple pregnancy, which poses health risks to both you and your fetuses. When thinking about an infertility treatment:
Other rare complications—such as ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome—can result from hormone shots used to stimulate ovulation, usually for assisted reproductive technology such as IVF.
| By: | Healthwise Staff | Last Revised: April 23, 2010 |
| Medical Review: | Sarah Marshall, MD - Family Medicine Femi Olatunbosun, MB, FRCSC - Obstetrics and Gynecology | |
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