What Can I Do to Speed Up Ovulation After Birth Control?

When one is trying to conceive, the process of getting pregnant can become frustrating and emotional. There is no one hormone that is responsible for pregnancy, but several that release on a schedule to prepare the body for ovulation of the egg and implantation of the embryo. Ovulation is the time during the cycle that a woman can become pregnant. After using birth control for a period of time, the hormones in the body will need to regulate themselves to begin ovulation again.
  1. What Happens While on Birth Control

    • Most birth control works by preventing ovulation from occurring. Without ovulation, there is no egg to be fertilized, thereby resulting in not becoming pregnant. To begin ovulation again, simply coming off of the birth control should work. Once birth control is no longer used, the body will return to the normal production of hormones, which will mean that normal ovulation will occur. While this return to a normal hormone level can happen within the first month, some may not for up to 12 or even 18 months.

    With A Doctor's Help

    • There is no way to speed up the ovulation process without a doctor. A doctor is needed to administer the right hormones at the right times to ensure that the body prepares for the embryo properly. FSH, or follicle stimulating hormone, is needed to stimulate the ovary to create a follicle. This is followed by estrogen to encourage LH, or luteinizing hormone, to release the egg from the follicle. The releasing of this egg is ovulation. If your body did not return to this cycle in a timely way, a medical professional can assist in dosing proper amounts of hormones to facilitate ovulation.

    Clomid

    • If your doctor diagnoses that your hormones are all properly cycling, then she may prescribe a drug called clomid to induce ovulation. Clomid is a drug specifically created to induce ovulation. It is successful in 80 percent of patients. A doctor needs to closely observe the administering of clomid. For clomid use, you should be under the care of a medical professional.

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