Category: Blocked Fallopian Tubes
Appropriate Patients to Refer
Read more: Appropriate Patients to ReferOverview Our manual physical therapy is often effective in treating moderate to severe mechanical problems, including debilitating and unresolved pain or dysfunction. We often do well with symptoms related to post-surgical scarring or unknown mechanical etiology. When medical treatments have failed, you want to avoid surgery, or your patient wants a natural or more conservative…
7 Myths About Blocked Fallopian Tubes
Read more: 7 Myths About Blocked Fallopian Tubes1. “Just relax, it will happen.” This myth is a crowd favorite and probably one of the most frustrating, often perpetuated by those who have not personally dealt with infertility. You may have been subjected to the knee-jerk statement, “Just stop trying so hard.” Wouldn’t it be great if you could clear your fallopian tubes by…
Patient Story: Two Natural Pregnancies After Blocked Fallopian Tubes
Read more: Patient Story: Two Natural Pregnancies After Blocked Fallopian TubesJulie, a former patient, talks about treatment at Clear Passage® and how it has changed her life. What brought you to Clear Passage®? I had an IUD put in in 2009. Immediately afterward, I began to experience a little pain during intercourse, which got worse until I got the IUD removed in January 2012. The pain…
Clear Passage® Publishes Landmark 10-Year Infertility Study
Read more: Clear Passage® Publishes Landmark 10-Year Infertility StudyHands-On Physical Therapy Matches or Exceeds Medical Success for Female Infertility We are thrilled to announce that in a study of 1,392 infertile women treated at Clear Passage® during a period of 10 years, our therapy was found to be equivalent to or exceed standard medical treatments for common causes of female infertility, including both…
How Does Tubal Surgery Compare to Other Infertility Treatments?
Read more: How Does Tubal Surgery Compare to Other Infertility Treatments?There are a number of infertility treatments available. One of the treatments offered to women with blocked fallopian tubes is tubal ligation, also called tuboplasty. One of the goals of this procedure is to remove adhesions – scars that form when the body heals from surgery, infection, inflammation, or trauma. What happens during tubal ligation…
Hydrosalpinx: Your Questions Answered
Read more: Hydrosalpinx: Your Questions AnsweredHydrosalpinx refers to fluid that collects within the fallopian tubes after an injury or infection and affects a woman’s fertility. We recently received several questions about this hydrosalpinx and how to treat this condition. Read on as Clear Passage® Director of Services Belinda Wurn, PT, answers. Q: Can I get pregnant if I have hydrosalpinx?…
VIDEO: Opening Blocked Fallopian Tubes – Naturally
Read more: VIDEO: Opening Blocked Fallopian Tubes – NaturallyI had adhesions along my fallopian tubes, and one of my tubes was partially blocked. When I found out I was pregnant, we were just thrilled. We did a total of four in vitro fertilizations, which all failed. No pregnancies with any of them. So by that time, we were really at our wits’ end,…
Opening Blocked Fallopian Tubes – Surgical vs. Natural
Read more: Opening Blocked Fallopian Tubes – Surgical vs. NaturalAs the place where natural conception occurs, the fallopian tubes are truly the place where life begins. Due to their location and size, fallopian tubes can become blocked from pelvic scars or adhesions. Together, these “mechanical causes” account for about 40% of all female infertility. Tubes can block near the uterus (proximal), by the ovary…
The Three Types of Fallopian Tube Blockages
Read more: The Three Types of Fallopian Tube BlockagesWhen trying to make treatment choices for fallopian tube occlusion, it is crucial to understand the type of blockage. The success of treatment options varies greatly depending on the location of the blockage. Fallopian tubes can be blocked in three places: Fallopian tubes that are blocked proximally have the highest success rate for opening with…
Blocked Fallopian Tubes After Chlamydia
Read more: Blocked Fallopian Tubes After ChlamydiaChlamydia, often known as the “silent” STD, can cause extensive scarring and adhesions within the female reproductive tract. Because Chlamydia produces relatively few noticeable symptoms, women are often unaware they have it until they struggle with infertility and undergo extensive diagnostic testing. Although doctors can cure Chlamydia with pharmaceuticals, the adhesions and scar tissue caused…
