Our clinical interest

A fertility specialty, not a side service

The original site said the clinical interest clearly: fertility and infertility related issues only. The redesigned site keeps that focus and makes it easier for patients to understand where acupuncture may fit.

Three offices. Focused fertility care. By appointment.

Original Fertility banner from the clinic website.

Fertility-Fertility-Fertility

The practice was built around one patient need.

Trying to conceive can be hopeful, private, frustrating, expensive, and emotionally heavy all at the same time. A fertility acupuncture visit should not add confusion. We keep the conversation practical and cycle-based.

Traditional Chinese Medicine pattern assessment is combined with a clear respect for the medical plan you already have.

Original video cover graphic from the ChicagoClinic.com website.
Legacy video cover from the original ChicagoClinic.com site.

Specialty areas

Common fertility concerns

Cycle regularity

Irregular cycles, delayed ovulation, short luteal phase, spotting, PMS patterns, and period changes.

IVF/IUI support

Timing support around monitoring, insemination, retrieval, transfer, and the two-week wait.

Ovarian reserve concerns

Patients who mention high FSH, age-related fertility concerns, or low ovarian reserve often ask for supportive care.

PCOS and ovulation

Supportive care for PCOS patterns, ovulation concerns, and stress around cycle unpredictability.

Lining and circulation questions

Patients often ask about lining, warmth, circulation, and how Traditional Chinese Medicine views the uterine environment.

Couple treatment

Fertility affects both partners. Male factor support and couple scheduling are welcome.

Original Chicago word art from the legacy site.
Chicago roots, local fertility care.

How to contact us

Tell us where you are in the process.

A helpful first message includes age, cycle day, how long you have been trying, diagnosis if you have one, IVF/IUI dates if scheduled, and the office location you prefer. Keep it brief; we can ask follow-up questions.

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