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Port Moresby Medical Laboratories (POMMEDLAB) |
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Www.pommedlab.com |



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Female Infertility & Sexual Dysfunction |
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Just as in males, female sexuality and fertility is a complex interplay of various hormone systems in our body and our nervous system. They influence health and activity of structural elements of sexual organs including uterus (womb), fallopian tubes, ovaries, and local vaginal and cervical environment, and breast development. Some of these hormones include follicular stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), progesterone, oestrogen, prolactin, thyroid hormones, testosterones, and adrenal gland hormones (DHEAS, cortisol). For example, LH and FSH is produced from pituitary gland and help ovaries to develop eggs for fertilization and produce estrogens and progesterone. Progesterone and oestrogen in turn assist development of womb to prepare for implantation and development of fertilised egg and prepare vaginal and cervical environment for sperm transport.
Any imbalance in sex hormones and other hormones will affect egg development, structural problems of ovaries, tubes and wombs, vaginal and cervical environment and hence cause fertility problems, menstruation disorders and sexual difficulties. For example, excess prolactin causes inhibition of FSH and LH and hence, release of eggs from ovaries and cause infertility, high oestrogen relative to progesterone will cause irregular menstrual disorder (heavy bleeding).
By measuring these hormones, your doctor can diagnosis cause of your sexual problem or infertility along with other non-blood test reports such as ultrasound, hysterosalpingogram and clinical history. |
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Question 1. What is the basis of blood testing? |
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Question 2. What blood Tests are available? |
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Question 4. How is the result reported? |
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Question 3. How is the tests done? |
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Blood Test results are reported as values against a reference value of population of healthy individuals. Your doctor will correlate your report with findings of examination an other non-blood tests to make an appropriate diagnosis and offer treatment advice. Possible problems picked-up on blood testing include hypothyroid (low fT4, high FSH), hyperthyroid (high fT4, low TSH), brain tumour (high prolactin), primary ovarian failure (low oestrogen & progesterone, high FSH & LH), adrenal gland tumour (high testosterone+ excessive body hair), low cortisol (Addison’s disease), high cortisol (Cushing's syndrome) and polycystic Ovarian syndrome (high LH>FSH). |
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Sex Hormone tests are measured from a small sample of blood taken in the arm. A small blood sample of about 5-10mls is taken. No special preparation is required. Often this is done together with other basic chemistry tests including kidney, liver, diabetes, gout, calcium and cholesterol. |
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Question 5. What other blood tests are available? |
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Other non-blood test include hysterosalpingogram (HSG). HSG assesses anatomy of the endometrial cavity of the uterus and the fallopian tubes between days 6 and 13 of the cycle - this also depends on the specifics of the woman's normal cycle. Laparoscopy. This is a surgical procedure and should not be performed until the basic testing has been done on both partner. |
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Question 6. What if my result is abnormal? |
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This is just one of the batch of investigations your doctor will perform help diagnose your problem. You should discuss you result with your doctor. |
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POMMEDLAB provide testing for FSH, LH, prolactin, testosterone (T), estradiol (E2), progesterone (P4), Free T4, TSH, testosterone and cortisol. |
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Question 7. What treatments are available for infertility or sexual problems? |
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Question 8. How would you ensure that my result is confidential? |
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Various treatment options with be available depending on specific cause. This may include medical/drug treatment, surgery or psychological counselling. Discuss with your doctor. |
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All tests done at POMMEDLAB are confidential. You result will only be known to yourself and no one, not even your spouse and family will know your result without your written permission. Our staff are well-informed of need for patient confidentiality. If you feel that this confidentiality is bridged by any of our staff– do not hesitate to contact our management on our hotline. |
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Question 9. Who should be Tested?
Women with the following should have their hormones tested?
Heavy/Excessive Periods Intermittent Vaginal Bleeding Infertile after 2 years of unprotected sex Recurrent abdominal Pain Breast Discharge Recurrent Miscarriages Excess Facial/Body Hair Post-menstrual symptoms Delayed Puberty Excess Vaginal dryness Painful intercourse
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