Taco Bout Fertility Tuesday

Bad Advice, Good Intentions: When Fertility Reassurance Becomes a Delay

19 min · 10 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Bad Advice, Good Intentions: When Fertility Reassurance Becomes a Delay

Descripción

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/621007/fan_mail/new] Fertility advice can be wrong even when the person giving it meant well. In this episode of Taco Bout Fertility Tuesday, Dr. Mark Amols explores how reassurance, incomplete evaluations, and well-intentioned attempts to “save money” can sometimes delay the fertility care patients actually need. This episode looks at the emotional stress patients feel when they realize they may have lost time, the difference between bad intentions and bad outcomes, and why advice like “just keep trying,” “your labs are normal,” or “at least you can get pregnant” can sometimes miss the bigger picture. Dr. Amols also discusses when OB/GYNs can appropriately help with fertility concerns, when referral to a fertility specialist matters, and why good advice should include a reason, a timeline, a next step, and a point where the plan changes. Thanks for tuning in to another episode of 'Taco Bout Fertility Tuesday' with Dr. Mark Amols. If you found this episode insightful, please share it with friends and family who might benefit from our discussion. Remember, your feedback is invaluable to us – leave us a review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred listening platform. Stay connected with us for updates and fertility tips – follow us on Facebook. For more resources and information, visit our website at www.NewDirectionFertility.com. Have a question or a topic you'd like us to cover? We'd love to hear from you! Reach out to us at TBFT@NewDirectionFertility.com. Join us next Tuesday for more discussions on fertility, where we blend medical expertise with a touch of humor to make complex topics accessible and engaging. Until then, keep the conversation going and remember: understanding your fertility is a journey we're on together.

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Portada del episodio The Ovary’s Side of the Story: Menstrual Cycle Myths Explained

The Ovary’s Side of the Story: Menstrual Cycle Myths Explained

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/621007/fan_mail/new] Most people think of the menstrual cycle as bleeding, cramps, cycle day one, or an app prediction. But the period is really the final report — not the main event. In this episode of Taco Bout Fertility Tuesday, Dr. Mark Amols explains the menstrual cycle from the ovary’s point of view. Learn how the brain, ovary, and uterus communicate each month, why one follicle becomes dominant, why IVF does not “use up” future eggs, and why so many common menstrual-cycle myths fall apart once you understand the science. We cover myths like whether ovaries take turns, whether one ovary means ovulating every other month, whether bleeding always means ovulation, whether cycle apps really know when you ovulate, and whether everyone needs to wait three months after a miscarriage before trying again. The menstrual cycle is not a calendar, an app prediction, or a right-left ovary schedule. It is a hormone conversation between the brain, ovary, and uterus. Thanks for tuning in to another episode of 'Taco Bout Fertility Tuesday' with Dr. Mark Amols. If you found this episode insightful, please share it with friends and family who might benefit from our discussion. Remember, your feedback is invaluable to us – leave us a review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred listening platform. Stay connected with us for updates and fertility tips – follow us on Facebook. For more resources and information, visit our website at www.NewDirectionFertility.com. Have a question or a topic you'd like us to cover? We'd love to hear from you! Reach out to us at TBFT@NewDirectionFertility.com. Join us next Tuesday for more discussions on fertility, where we blend medical expertise with a touch of humor to make complex topics accessible and engaging. Until then, keep the conversation going and remember: understanding your fertility is a journey we're on together.

1 de jul de 202619 min
Portada del episodio Progesterone Shots: Are Fertility Doctors Sadists or Just Following the Science?

Progesterone Shots: Are Fertility Doctors Sadists or Just Following the Science?

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/621007/fan_mail/new] Progesterone-in-oil shots, also known as PIO shots, are one of the most feared and hated parts of IVF. They are uncomfortable, intimidating, and often leave patients wondering: “Do I really need this, or is my fertility doctor just being cruel?” In this episode of Taco Bout Fertility Tuesday, Dr. Mark Amols explains why progesterone matters for implantation, how estrogen and progesterone work together to prepare the uterine lining, and why the type of embryo transfer cycle changes everything. The key question is not simply whether progesterone shots are better than vaginal progesterone. The real question is whether your body is making progesterone on its own. Dr. Amols breaks down the difference between ovulatory or modified natural frozen embryo transfers and programmed frozen embryo transfers. In an ovulatory cycle, the body forms a corpus luteum and produces progesterone naturally. In a programmed cycle, there is no ovulation, no corpus luteum, and therefore no natural progesterone production — meaning all progesterone support must come from medication. This episode also reviews the research comparing daily progesterone-in-oil shots, vaginal progesterone alone, and combination protocols using vaginal progesterone plus intermittent PIO injections. The data shows why vaginal progesterone alone may not be enough in programmed frozen embryo transfer cycles and why many clinics still rely on PIO for reliable progesterone support. Dr. Amols also discusses progesterone blood levels, why levels can be hard to interpret with vaginal progesterone, why clinics may differ in their protocols, and how some patients may be candidates for fewer injections or modified natural cycles. If you are preparing for an embryo transfer, taking progesterone, or wondering why your clinic recommends PIO shots, this episode will help you understand the science behind the shot — and hopefully hate your doctor a little less. The bottom line: fertility doctors are not sadists. Progesterone-in-oil may be a literal pain in the butt, but in some embryo transfer cycles, it has an important purpose. Thanks for tuning in to another episode of 'Taco Bout Fertility Tuesday' with Dr. Mark Amols. If you found this episode insightful, please share it with friends and family who might benefit from our discussion. Remember, your feedback is invaluable to us – leave us a review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred listening platform. Stay connected with us for updates and fertility tips – follow us on Facebook. For more resources and information, visit our website at www.NewDirectionFertility.com. Have a question or a topic you'd like us to cover? We'd love to hear from you! Reach out to us at TBFT@NewDirectionFertility.com. Join us next Tuesday for more discussions on fertility, where we blend medical expertise with a touch of humor to make complex topics accessible and engaging. Until then, keep the conversation going and remember: understanding your fertility is a journey we're on together.

24 de jun de 202617 min
Portada del episodio Can Your Embryo Fall Out? The Truth About Bed Rest After Embryo Transfer

Can Your Embryo Fall Out? The Truth About Bed Rest After Embryo Transfer

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/621007/fan_mail/new] Can your embryo fall out after an embryo transfer? Do you really need bed rest after IVF? Can walking, peeing, coughing, laughing, going up stairs, having stress, or riding home in the car ruin your chances? In this episode of Taco Bout Fertility Tuesday, Dr. Mark Amols breaks down one of the most common fears patients have after embryo transfer: whether one wrong move can prevent implantation. We discuss where the bed rest myth came from, why the uterus is not an open space where an embryo can simply “fall out,” and what the evidence actually says about bed rest after embryo transfer. Dr. Amols also explains why normal movement is okay, why peeing after transfer is not a problem, and why patients should not spend the two-week wait blaming themselves for every sneeze, step, or bump in the car. This episode also covers the difference between fresh and frozen embryo transfers, why activity restrictions after a fresh transfer may be more about enlarged ovaries than the embryo itself, whether retroverted uteruses change the equation, and why clinic instructions can vary. And yes, we also talk about McDonald’s French fries after embryo transfer — because no IVF superstition is safe on this podcast. If you are preparing for an embryo transfer, recovering from one, or stuck in the two-week wait replaying everything you did, this episode will help separate fear from fact. In this episode, we cover: *  Can an embryo fall out after embryo transfer?  *  Does bed rest improve IVF success?  *  Is it okay to pee after embryo transfer?  *  Can walking, coughing, sneezing, laughing, or stairs hurt implantation?  *  Fresh vs frozen embryo transfer activity restrictions  *  Retroverted uterus and embryo transfer positioning  *  Sex after embryo transfer  *  Stress during the two-week wait  *  McDonald’s French fries and IVF superstitions  *  Why patients should stop blaming themselves after transfer  The takeaway: after embryo transfer, take care of yourself — but you do not need to treat yourself like a porcelain doll. Rest if you want to rest, not because your embryo needs you perfectly still. Thanks for tuning in to another episode of 'Taco Bout Fertility Tuesday' with Dr. Mark Amols. If you found this episode insightful, please share it with friends and family who might benefit from our discussion. Remember, your feedback is invaluable to us – leave us a review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred listening platform. Stay connected with us for updates and fertility tips – follow us on Facebook. For more resources and information, visit our website at www.NewDirectionFertility.com. Have a question or a topic you'd like us to cover? We'd love to hear from you! Reach out to us at TBFT@NewDirectionFertility.com. Join us next Tuesday for more discussions on fertility, where we blend medical expertise with a touch of humor to make complex topics accessible and engaging. Until then, keep the conversation going and remember: understanding your fertility is a journey we're on together.

17 de jun de 202618 min
Portada del episodio Bad Advice, Good Intentions: When Fertility Reassurance Becomes a Delay

Bad Advice, Good Intentions: When Fertility Reassurance Becomes a Delay

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/621007/fan_mail/new] Fertility advice can be wrong even when the person giving it meant well. In this episode of Taco Bout Fertility Tuesday, Dr. Mark Amols explores how reassurance, incomplete evaluations, and well-intentioned attempts to “save money” can sometimes delay the fertility care patients actually need. This episode looks at the emotional stress patients feel when they realize they may have lost time, the difference between bad intentions and bad outcomes, and why advice like “just keep trying,” “your labs are normal,” or “at least you can get pregnant” can sometimes miss the bigger picture. Dr. Amols also discusses when OB/GYNs can appropriately help with fertility concerns, when referral to a fertility specialist matters, and why good advice should include a reason, a timeline, a next step, and a point where the plan changes. Thanks for tuning in to another episode of 'Taco Bout Fertility Tuesday' with Dr. Mark Amols. If you found this episode insightful, please share it with friends and family who might benefit from our discussion. Remember, your feedback is invaluable to us – leave us a review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred listening platform. Stay connected with us for updates and fertility tips – follow us on Facebook. For more resources and information, visit our website at www.NewDirectionFertility.com. Have a question or a topic you'd like us to cover? We'd love to hear from you! Reach out to us at TBFT@NewDirectionFertility.com. Join us next Tuesday for more discussions on fertility, where we blend medical expertise with a touch of humor to make complex topics accessible and engaging. Until then, keep the conversation going and remember: understanding your fertility is a journey we're on together.

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Portada del episodio The Cup, the Clock, and the Count: What to Expect at Your Semen Analysis

The Cup, the Clock, and the Count: What to Expect at Your Semen Analysis

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/621007/fan_mail/new] A semen analysis is one of the most important fertility tests, but for many patients, it is also one of the most awkward. In this episode, Dr. Mark Amols walks through what to expect at a semen analysis appointment, how to prepare, what happens during collection, and why this test gives fertility clinics such valuable information. In this episode of Taco Bout Fertility Tuesday, Dr. Amols explains why semen analysis is not a masculinity test, but simply a lab test that helps guide fertility treatment. He covers abstinence timing, at-home versus in-office collection, what to do if part of the sample is missed, why timing matters, and what the lab is looking for when evaluating sperm count, motility, morphology, volume, and total motile sperm count. He also discusses why one abnormal semen analysis does not automatically mean infertility, when repeat testing may be needed, how testosterone can affect sperm production, and what the next steps may be if the results are abnormal. Whether you are preparing for your first semen analysis or supporting a partner through fertility testing, this episode helps make the process less intimidating, less confusing, and maybe just a little less awkward. Thanks for tuning in to another episode of 'Taco Bout Fertility Tuesday' with Dr. Mark Amols. If you found this episode insightful, please share it with friends and family who might benefit from our discussion. Remember, your feedback is invaluable to us – leave us a review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred listening platform. Stay connected with us for updates and fertility tips – follow us on Facebook. For more resources and information, visit our website at www.NewDirectionFertility.com. Have a question or a topic you'd like us to cover? We'd love to hear from you! Reach out to us at TBFT@NewDirectionFertility.com. Join us next Tuesday for more discussions on fertility, where we blend medical expertise with a touch of humor to make complex topics accessible and engaging. Until then, keep the conversation going and remember: understanding your fertility is a journey we're on together.

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