Fertility Solutions, NZ.Ltd, Australasian Distributor
for the Ovacue Fertility Monitor



ovulation monitor
OvaCue, the world's most advanced ovulation monitor.

 

Ovulation Science and the Electrolyte Method

Patented method -- Proven results

In studies overseen by the National Institutes of Health, Cue products using the patented Electrolyte Method™ have been shown to predict ovulation with 99% accuracy.

You need advance notice

Release of the ovum or egg is called ovulation. Once the egg is released from the ovary and matures in the fallopian tubes, it will survive and be able to be fertilized for a very short time, at most about 24 hours and as a little as 8 hours. The other half of the conception process is the spermatozoa (sperm). Healthy sperm can fertilize an egg for about 48 hours or more after their deposit in the woman. Sperm requires up to 24 hours to reach the egg.

It takes a woman's body several days to prepare for ovulation. This process is managed by complex interaction of hormones. About a week before ovulation, a threshold of increasing amounts of the hormone estrogen is reached. At this time, one ovum is selected from among the many available in either of the two ovaries. This one ovum begins to grow and the uterus begins to be prepared to receive a possibly fertilized egg.

At the same time, other hormones are changing the amounts of minerals like sodium and potassium (electrolytes) that are kept or discarded by the body. This is what produces the Cue Peak, a high point in the Cue salivary readings of electrolytes.

Why salivary electrolyte readings are better than urine LH

A few days after the Cue Peak, the luteinizing hormone (LH) in the blood increases and decreases very sharply over a period of 24 hours (the LH peak). LH is the hormone that triggers the release of the ovum from the ovary. The egg is released within 24 hours after the LH is at its highest in the blood.

Some time (as much as 12 hours) after the peak of LH in the blood, LH is also present in the urine. It is this increasing concentration of urine LH that can be detected by the different brands of urine-based ovulation predictors. Prediction using this method depends on the exact relationships between the time of the highest blood LH, the time the urine stick begins to see the LH, and the time of the measurement. At best, the time between the urine signal and actual ovulation cannot be more than 24 hours in advance. At worst, it is seen only after ovulation has already occurred, offering no chance of conception for the current cycle.

I used the Cue approximately three years ago and became pregnant after three months. It was hard to believe after four years of trying that a system as simple as the Cue could work so quickly. Now I can attest to the fact that it does work (and very quickly may I add) because this will be my second pregnancy with the Cue monitor. Thank you. I'm now a believer.
--Nancy Q.


You can look it up.

Cue products using the Electrolyte Method have been proven accurate at ovulation prediction in medical studies that have tracked over 2,000 women's cycles.

Click to view a bibliography of relevant articles, including the peer-reviewed research

Copyright 2005, Fertility Solutions, NZL