Sunday, January 24, 2010

Is there any form of birth control that doesn't inhibit a fertilized egg from implanting?

I want a birth control that stops ovulation and possibly thickens the cervical mucus. But I am against having one that changes the endometrium (which reduces the likelihood of implantation by the fertilized egg).





Once an egg gets fertilized (off chance or not) it's an embryo and a living thing and it's too late for me to stop it. That is my baby. I don't think the general public realizes how birth control actually works. Most people think it only suppresses ovulation. See the website for the generic form of orthotryciclen.





http://www.drugs.com/cdi/tri-sprintec.ht鈥?/a>Is there any form of birth control that doesn't inhibit a fertilized egg from implanting?
Yasmin.Is there any form of birth control that doesn't inhibit a fertilized egg from implanting?
NOT ovulating is a BAD thing. You need to ovulate and menstruate on a regular basis or you run the risk of all kinds of cancers and other diseases.


Why would you want to thicken cervical mucus? To impede the transportation of sperm? Why don't you just use a barrier method such as condoms, diaphragms, cervical caps?
As far as I know, you're just looking at condoms and spermicide. The current IUD's have the progestin(sp?) hormone imbedded in them so that would be out.
I don't know of a birth control that strictly surpresses ovulation. Maybe certain pills, but you would have to ask your doctor and do your own research. I do know that Depo works like the pill, but also reduced the endo so that an egg can't implant, and that is obviously not what you want. And an IUD kills sperm, but the most popular kind also contains a hormone that works like the pill.
Depo Provera will stop the egg from being released...and in turn, will stop your periods. But I don't think it actually changes the uterine lining.

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