The body can achieve its most fertile state when all the nutrient and energy producing processes are optimal. This means that when we provide the body with the nutrients and water that it needs to maintain the optimal function of the brain, heart and other organs and systems that are vital to sustaining life, it will be in balance and reproductive health is more likely to be supported. But if our diet is deficient of essential nutrients, the few nutrients that we do absorb will primarily be used up in these vital processes and there may not be sufficient nutrients to support reproductive health. In addition, if we adopt negative lifestyle behaviors, such as drinking alcohol, high stress, consuming a diet high in sugar, refined carbohydrates, caffeine, additives and preservatives, exercising excessively, the bi-products of these behaviors require additional valuable nutrients to process, support or metabolize and the result will be nutrient deficiency. Today we can consider ourselves overfed but undernourished.
However, if we aim to follow an optimal diet and lifestyle plan to support mind and body wellbeing, we can help to ensure, as much as possible, the health of the egg, sperm, uterine environment and hormone balance. For optimal fertility we are aiming for:
Vitamin D is a hormone that we make in our skin during sunscreen-free sun exposure; 80-90% is obtained this way. It is well-known for its function in maintaining calcium and phosphorus balance and promoting bone mineralization. But there is increasing evidence to suggest that vitamin D deficiency is linked to an increased risk for cancer, autoimmune disease, diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. There is also evidence that vitamin D modulates reproductive processes and has a significant role to play in both male and female fertility.
While there is limited direct research linking vitamin D to infertility, a study conducted involving 84 infertile women having IVF treatment, revealed that the women with higher levels of active vitamin D (25(OH)D) in their blood and follicular fluid, were significantly more likely to achieve clinical pregnancy following treatment.
Vitamin D may help boost levels of the female sex hormones progesterone and estrogen and thereby regulate menstrual cycle. It plays an important role in estrogen activity in the ovary, in the endometrial lining and the pituitary gland.
There is some evidence suggesting that vitamin D deficiency might be involved in insulin regulation, metabolic syndrome and in PCOS.
Vitamin D deficiency is linked to low sperm count and poor motility and is essential for the healthy development of a sperm’s nucleus. It also increases levels of the male sex hormone testosterone.
As humans we evolved near the equator and spent most our time outside and naked. Our modern lifestyle means we spend most of our time inside and fully clothed and as a result our vitamin D synthesis suffers.
Having a blood test to measure the amount of vitamin D in your blood is the only way to know if you’re getting enough vitamin D. The blood test, 25(OH)D, is available at Fakih IVF.