High Cholesterol Levels May Make It Harder To Get Pregnant (STUDY)

High Cholesterol Levels May Make It Harder To Get Pregnant
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By: By Cari Nierenberg, Contributing writer
Published: 05/20/2014 02:10 PM EDT on LiveScience

Couples may have a harder time becoming pregnant if both the man and woman have high cholesterol levels, a new study suggests.

Researchers found that free cholesterol levels in men and women were higher, on average, among couples who did not become pregnant during the 12-month study than among couples who did conceive. (Free cholesterol is cholesterol that is not bound to another molecule; by contrast, HDL and LDL cholesterol is bound to proteins.)

The results also showed that couples in which the woman had higher free cholesterol levels and the man did not also took longer to become pregnant than couples in which both partners had normal cholesterol levels.

"We found a relationship between high free cholesterol levels and a longer time to pregnancy in couples," said study researcher Enrique Schisterman, a senior investigator at the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development in Rockville, Maryland. [11 Big Fat Pregnancy Myths]

"This is the first study to look at cholesterol levels in both partners at the same time, and their influence on the probability of becoming pregnant," Schisterman said.

The findings are published onlinetoday (May 20) in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism.

Cholesterol and conception

In the study, the researchers monitored 501 couples in Michigan and Texas who were trying to have a baby and were not being treated for infertility. Nurses took blood samples from the women and men at the beginning of the study and measured the levels of five fats: free cholesterol, total cholesterol, phospholipids, triglycerides and total lipids.

During the yearlong study, 347 couples became pregnant. After evaluating the fat levels in each partner individually, and also using a couples-based approach, the researchers found a strong link between higher levels of free cholesterol in couples and their time to become pregnant.

This association held true even after the researchers took into account other factors that could influence fertility rates or lipid levels, such as the couple's age, education, body mass index (BMI), race and education.

Free cholesterol is not routinely tested in doctors' offices, but it is used in research. Cholesterol tests typically measure total cholesterol, lipoproteins (HDL and LDL cholesterol) and triglycerides.

The study suggests that cholesterol levels may be an important factor in healthy couples who want to conceive and who don't have infertility problems, Schisterman told Live Science.

Cholesterol might be related to fertility because it is a building block of both male and female hormones, he said.

These hormones, such as estrogen and progesterone in women and testosterone in men, play a role in a couple's ability to become pregnant. They influence the quality of men's sperm and semen, as well as ovulation, implantation and the maintenance of a healthy pregnancy in women, Schisterman said.

Health implications

The study findings have broad public health importance because the rate of high cholesterol levels and obesity is so high in the United States that even slight changes in the population, such as reductions in cholesterol levels or obesity rates, may affect couples' ability to become pregnant, Schisterman said.

He noted that maintaining healthy cholesterol levels is important throughout life, both when people are younger and hoping to start a family and as they get older and want to prevent heart disease.

One limitation of the study is that researchers had no data on participants' diets, which can influence lipid levels. However, they hope to include dietary measures in future studies.

"These are interesting preliminary findings," said Dr. Kim Thornton, a reproductive endocrinologist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Boston IVF. "However, they can't be applied clinically until there are randomized trials to confirm or refute these findings."

Thornton said free cholesterol is not measured routinely in her clinic but that patients are counseled on a number of lifestyle changes they can make to improve their overall fertility, such as stopping smoking and drug use, reducing alcohol intake and stress, and losing weight if they're overweight or obese.

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Before You Go

8 Things We Learned In 2013 About Having Babies
1. Sleep and diet can affect fertility.(01 of08)
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What makes one couple particularly fertile, while another struggles for months or years to get pregnant is, in many cases, a mystery. And though infertility is often due to factors that are entirely out of a couple's control, more and more research suggests that, in some cases, certain lifestyle factors, like sleep and diet, can make a difference. One study found that women who do shift work (working outside of the typical 8 to 6 framework) may have disrupted menstrual cycles and reduced fertility, while another found that getting between 7 and 8 hours of sleep each night was linked with the best outcomes among patients undergoing IVF. In terms of nutrition, one preliminary study suggested that women with polycystic ovarian syndrome hoping to conceive may benefit from eating a large breakfast and a smaller dinner in order to help with insulin levels, which can affect hormones. (credit:Getty)
2. Specific fertility treatments lead to more multiple births.(02 of08)
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A major report that delved into why the number of twins and other multiples in the U.S. is so much higher now than it was four decades ago found that a third of all twin births, and more than three-quarters of all triplet and higher-order births (i.e. multiples of three or more) were due to the use of some form of fertility treatment. But notably, the report also found that in vitro fertilization -- often singled out as the main culprit -- was, in fact, no longer the greatest contributor to the rate of multiples. Instead, other treatments, such as ovulatory medications, were the top cause. (credit:Getty)
3. Miscarriage is more common than most people know.(03 of08)
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When researchers with Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx polled a group of more than 1,000 men and women between the ages of 18 and 69, they found that they grossly underestimated how common miscarriage, or the loss of a fetus before the 20th week is: More than half said it occurs in fewer than 6 percent of all pregnancies, but estimates suggest it actually happens in roughly 15 to 20 percent. Moreover, many respondents wrongly identified the major causes, citing stress, oral contraceptives and physical exertion, when, in fact, chromosomal abnormalities are most often to blame. The study wasn't meant to stoke fear, but rather to point out how much misinformation there is about miscarriage, and how that can leave the women and men affected by it feeling very alone. (credit:Getty)
4. Maternal exercise benefits newborns' brains.(04 of08)
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Exercise is, understandably, the last thing on many women's minds when they're exhausted, sick and can't remember the last time they saw their toes, but one study showed that just a bit of moderate exercise (in addition to helping with things like mood and sleep) might also boost babies' brain activity, by contributing to a healthy fetal environment. Babies born to women who clocked at least 20 minutes of moderate cardio three times a week appeared to be better at processing certain sounds, which may have implications for overall brain development. "Our results show that the babies born from the mothers who were physically active have a more mature cerebral activation, suggesting that their brains developed more rapidly," the study researcher told HuffPost. (credit:Getty)
5. Junk food addiction may start in the womb.(05 of08)
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It was a highly preliminary study done in rats, but an investigation out of Australia nonetheless raised interesting questions about what can happen when women eat a significant amount of junk food during pregnancy. Researchers found that rats whose mothers ate diets high in fat and sugar (think sweet cereals and potato chips) had a greater preference for high-fat foods after birth than those whose mothers ate a diet that was low in fat and sugar -- and the gene expression in the reward pathways of their brains was changed, so that they had a greater predisposition to a junk food addiction later in life. Though it's too early to say if the findings can be extrapolated to humans, the study's main researcher argued that the "take-home message for women is that eating large amounts of junk food during pregnancy and while breastfeeding will have long-term consequences for their child's preference for these foods." (credit:Getty)
6. Pregnancy interventions are common ... and not always welcome.(06 of08)
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Despite the fact that roughly 60 percent of moms in the U.S. who were included in a survey about birth practices and beliefs said they feel giving birth is a natural process that shouldn't be interfered with unless it's absolutely necessary for medical reasons. However, one-quarter of the women surveyed said they had at least three interventions during birth, from taking drugs to speed up or start labor to having a C-section. Twenty five percent of respondents who were induced or had an epidural said they felt pressured at the hospital to do so, as did 13 percent of those who had a C-section. (credit:Getty)
7. Midwifery care is linked to better outcomes.(07 of08)
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Most women in the U.S. rely on doctors to provide their primary care during pregnancy and birth, but a growing minority rely on midwives, and a Cochrane review lent some serious support to that model. The review found that consistent midwifery care throughout pregnancy was linked to better outcomes for mothers and their babies, compared to women who saw family physicians, OBs, or some mix of health care providers. Women who worked with midwives had lower rates of episiotomy and epidural useand they were less likely to deliver their baby prematurely. None of the studies cited were conducted in the U.S., but the review's lead author argued that the findings are still relevant in this country. (credit:Getty)
8. Delayed cord clamping has benefits.(08 of08)
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The clamping and snipping of the umbilical cord can be a memorable post-birth moment -- particularly for hands-on fathers and partners -- but an investigation released in 2013 suggests its best done at least a minute or two after the baby is born. The review of 15 previously published trials from around the world found that delaying by just one minute can increase a newborn's iron supplies for up to six months post-birth. (credit:Getty)

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