Welcome to the Physician's Portal

The Colorado Center for Reproductive Medicine is pleased to offer a site for our referring medical providers where you will find helpful information about infertility evaluation and patient referral, our laboratory services, and research and news updates. We want to help you take the best possible care of your patients with our up-to-date topics of interest page which include useful educational handouts.

All of the physicians at CCRM appreciate your partnership in helping patients to identify reproductive challenges and overcome the barriers to successful family building. We offer a ride range of infertility treatments and patient services as well as patient education, counseling and wellness programs and ongoing infertility research through our nonprofit organization the National Foundation for Fertility Research. Patients can benefit from our research efforts through participation in one of our studies which may provide financial coverage for a portion of their care at CCRM.

As part of our commitment to building partnerships with our referring community we continue to offer education to our fellow healthcare providers through periodic newsletters, Lunch and Learns, CME programs and recent publications. You may also contact a CCRM physician through the contact form on this site.

Fertility News


All news

Must-Know Scary Side Effect of the Pill

February 01, 2012

Dr. Minjarez discusses how birth-control Rx could be hiding signs of PCOS in Self Magazine

Your birth-control Rx could be hiding signs of PCOS, a condition that raises your risk for infertility, heart trouble and even cancer. Find out if you’re in danger—and how to stay safe.

PCOS: The Hidden Diagnosis

Fit and feeling good, Lori Rufrano, then 32, thought it was the right time to get pregnant. So did everyone else. "People asked me, 'When are you going to have kids? What's taking so long?'" she says. Soon she found herself asking the same question. Months after taking her last birth control pill, Rufrano, a physician in Long Island, New York, specializing in geriatric medicine, still hadn't had a period.

Worried, she made an appointment with Avner Hershlag, M.D., a reproductive endocrinologist and chief of the Center for Human Reproduction at the North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System. After a series of blood tests and an ultrasound, Rufrano got a diagnosis she had never suspected: polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), a hormone imbalance that affects up to 1 in 10 women of childbearing age.

Rufrano was shocked by the diagnosis because she hadn't had any symptoms—or so she thought. Turns out the Pill, which Rufrano had taken since her teens to help with painful ovarian cysts, had been masking the condition, temporarily resolving her cysts and regulating her period. By treating the symptoms, Rufrano thought she was fine, not realizing that she was dealing with a larger threat to her fertility and her health.

Women with PCOS may have elevated levels of male hormones, including testosterone, which prevent eggs from maturing and being released from the ovaries, Dr. Hershlag explains. Instead, eggs linger and form cysts. No healthy eggs means no periods and no babies. It may also quadruple the risk for uterine cancer, a study in Cancer Causes Control notes. If you don't ovulate, your endometrial lining thickens, allowing cancer cells to thrive.

Up to 70 percent of women with PCOS are also insulin-resistant, which can scramble your mix of sex hormones even more. Plus, insulin resistance may increase the risk for type 2 diabetes, heart disease and—if you do manage to get pregnant—complications such as gestational diabetes and preterm labor.

More than three million women take the Pill to regulate their cycle, and many of them start in their teens. According to a recent survey by the Guttmacher Institute, one third of teens ages 15 to 19 are on the Pill solely for noncontraceptive reasons, such as cysts and missed periods. Both of these can be crucial signs of PCOS, yet doctors often fail to check for the underlying problem, says Debra Minjarez, M.D., a reproductive endocrinologist at the Colorado Center for Reproductive Medicine.

"There are so many hormonal changes during adolescence that many doctors consider these a part of normal development," Dr. Minjarez says. "They prescribe birth control to regulate the cycle, assuming it will eventually regulate itself. But with PCOS, it doesn't."

Source: Self Magazine

Ericka Sóuter

Self Magazine

Facebook Twitter DZone It! Digg It! StumbleUpon Technorati Del.icio.us NewsVine Reddit Blinklist Add diigo bookmark

Physician Resources



Contact a CCRM Physician

Request CCRM Literature

Request a Visit to CCRM

Contact CCRM

More>>>

CCRM News


All news

Must-Know Scary Side Effect of the Pill

February 01, 2012

Dr. Minjarez discusses how birth-control Rx could be hiding signs of PCOS in Self Magazine

Your birth-control Rx could be hiding signs of PCOS, a condition that raises your risk for infertility, heart trouble and even cancer. Find out if you’re in danger—and how to stay safe.

PCOS: The Hidden Diagnosis

Fit and feeling good, Lori Rufrano, then 32, thought it was the right time to get pregnant. So did everyone else. "People asked me, 'When are you going to have kids? What's taking so long?'" she says. Soon she found herself asking the same question. Months after taking her last birth control pill, Rufrano, a physician in Long Island, New York, specializing in geriatric medicine, still hadn't had a period.

Worried, she made an appointment with Avner Hershlag, M.D., a reproductive endocrinologist and chief of the Center for Human Reproduction at the North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System. After a series of blood tests and an ultrasound, Rufrano got a diagnosis she had never suspected: polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), a hormone imbalance that affects up to 1 in 10 women of childbearing age.

Rufrano was shocked by the diagnosis because she hadn't had any symptoms—or so she thought. Turns out the Pill, which Rufrano had taken since her teens to help with painful ovarian cysts, had been masking the condition, temporarily resolving her cysts and regulating her period. By treating the symptoms, Rufrano thought she was fine, not realizing that she was dealing with a larger threat to her fertility and her health.

Women with PCOS may have elevated levels of male hormones, including testosterone, which prevent eggs from maturing and being released from the ovaries, Dr. Hershlag explains. Instead, eggs linger and form cysts. No healthy eggs means no periods and no babies. It may also quadruple the risk for uterine cancer, a study in Cancer Causes Control notes. If you don't ovulate, your endometrial lining thickens, allowing cancer cells to thrive.

Up to 70 percent of women with PCOS are also insulin-resistant, which can scramble your mix of sex hormones even more. Plus, insulin resistance may increase the risk for type 2 diabetes, heart disease and—if you do manage to get pregnant—complications such as gestational diabetes and preterm labor.

More than three million women take the Pill to regulate their cycle, and many of them start in their teens. According to a recent survey by the Guttmacher Institute, one third of teens ages 15 to 19 are on the Pill solely for noncontraceptive reasons, such as cysts and missed periods. Both of these can be crucial signs of PCOS, yet doctors often fail to check for the underlying problem, says Debra Minjarez, M.D., a reproductive endocrinologist at the Colorado Center for Reproductive Medicine.

"There are so many hormonal changes during adolescence that many doctors consider these a part of normal development," Dr. Minjarez says. "They prescribe birth control to regulate the cycle, assuming it will eventually regulate itself. But with PCOS, it doesn't."

Source: Self Magazine

Ericka Sóuter

Self Magazine

Facebook Twitter DZone It! Digg It! StumbleUpon Technorati Del.icio.us NewsVine Reddit Blinklist Add diigo bookmark