Infertility: What It Is and How to Book a Consultation Service for Its Treatment Through StrongBody AI
Infertility is defined as the inability to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected sexual intercourse. It affects millions of couples worldwide and can be caused by a range of factors including hormonal imbalances, ovulatory issues, and structural abnormalities.
In women, one of the most common causes of infertility is endometriosis. This condition can interfere with fertility in multiple ways, making early diagnosis and treatment essential. Infertility by endometriosis can go undetected for years, especially when menstrual symptoms are normalized or misdiagnosed.
Endometriosis is a chronic condition in which tissue similar to the uterine lining grows outside the uterus. It most often affects the ovaries, fallopian tubes, and pelvic lining, leading to inflammation, scarring, and cyst formation.
Key symptoms of endometriosis include:
- Painful menstrual periods
- Chronic pelvic pain
- Pain during intercourse
- Infertility by endometriosis
The condition can impair fertility by:
- Distorting pelvic anatomy
- Blocking fallopian tubes
- Affecting egg quality
- Triggering an inflammatory environment that disrupts implantation
When infertility is linked to endometriosis, treatment strategies focus on improving reproductive function and managing the underlying disease:
- Laparoscopic Surgery: To remove endometrial implants and adhesions that may block or damage reproductive organs.
- Hormonal Therapy: To reduce endometrial growth and inflammation.
- Ovulation Induction: Medications to stimulate egg production.
- Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART): Intrauterine insemination (IUI) or in vitro fertilization (IVF), especially in advanced cases.
- Lifestyle Support: Anti-inflammatory diet, stress management, and physical therapy.
The best approach depends on disease severity, patient age, and reproductive goals.
An infertility consultant service offers professional evaluation and personalized treatment planning for those struggling to conceive. For patients facing infertility by endometriosis, this service provides:
- Detailed reproductive history analysis
- Hormone and imaging diagnostics (ultrasound, laparoscopy, AMH levels)
- Fertility preservation options
- Referral for surgery or ART as needed
Consultants may include fertility specialists, gynecologists, reproductive endocrinologists, and endometriosis-focused surgeons. An infertility consultant service ensures a targeted and compassionate pathway toward conception.
One of the essential components of this service is the fertility mapping and endometriosis impact evaluation, including:
- Ovarian Reserve Assessment: AMH test and antral follicle count.
- Pelvic Imaging: Transvaginal ultrasound or MRI to locate cysts, adhesions, or structural disruptions.
- Treatment Optimization: Balancing surgical and non-surgical options based on fertility potential.
This approach ensures patients receive accurate diagnoses and timely, fertility-focused care.
On a crisp autumn evening in Edinburgh, Scotland, in October 2025, during a virtual support meeting hosted by Endometriosis UK Scotland, the story of Eilidh Campbell brought many women to silent, hopeful tears.
Eilidh, 40, a former violin teacher from the historic streets of Stockbridge, now spent quiet days in a warm flat overlooking the Dean Village. The woman who once filled recital halls with soaring melodies, planned family outings to the Highlands, and collected tiny handmade fiddles for the children she dreamed of teaching could no longer play without weeping. Endometriosis had been diagnosed in her early thirties, but over the past ten years infertility had become the most painful silence—years of trying naturally, five failed IUI cycles, four IVF rounds ending in chemical pregnancies or heartbreaking early losses, and a growing dread that the family she and her husband longed for would remain only a melody never played. The monthly devastation of negative tests had turned hope into a fragile, aching refrain.
The grief had deepened layer by layer. The familiar pelvic pain and irregular bleeding were agonising, but infertility overshadowed every note: endless ovulation strips, timed intimacy that lost its joy, stimulations with bruising injections, egg retrievals under sedation, embryo transfers followed by torturous waits, and the repeated sorrow of fading hopes. Laparoscopies confirmed stage IV endometriosis with dense adhesions, ovarian cysts, and likely impaired tube function and endometrial receptivity. Eilidh spent tens of thousands of pounds on private fertility clinics in Glasgow and London, excision surgery with specialists abroad, reproductive immunologists in Manchester, intralipid infusions, endometrial scratching, and immune testing. She tried every digital tool: fertility apps forecasting peaks, AI cycle analysers interpreting BBT charts, wellness chatbots recommending acupuncture timings and embryo-glue protocols. Nothing held a pregnancy. The failures only mounted, forcing her to pause teaching and retreat into a private world of quiet mourning. She feared motherhood was a score she would never perform.
One tear-filled September night in 2025, after another negative test shattered months of careful preparation and fragile optimism, Eilidh reached her lowest ebb. She refused to let endometriosis silence her dream of family forever. Scrolling through an international endometriosis and infertility forum late into the night, she kept seeing moving accounts of StrongBody AI—a platform connecting patients with world-leading specialists, using real-time wearable and cycle data to deliver deeply personalised fertility optimisation and monitoring. With trembling fingers and a spark of renewed hope, Eilidh downloaded the app and created her account immediately.
She shared her history openly: longstanding infertility secondary to severe endometriosis, multiple failed assisted cycles, recurrent implantation failure and early miscarriage, extensive pelvic adhesions, hormonal dysregulation, suspected immune and inflammatory contributions. Within hours the system matched her with Dr. Lars Henriksson—a Swedish reproductive endocrinologist and endometriosis specialist at Karolinska University Hospital in Stockholm, with 21 years of experience and pioneering research into the inflammatory and immune barriers to implantation in endometriosis patients. Dr. Henriksson had developed advanced remote protocols using continuous physiological tracking to personalise endometrial preparation and immune modulation across Europe.
Their first video consultation felt like clear Nordic light cutting through Edinburgh’s autumn mist. Dr. Henriksson explored not only past cycle reports and surgical notes but heart-rate variability in the luteal phase, sleep architecture influencing progesterone, stress markers from music teaching, inflammatory trends from bloodwork, even how Scotland’s damp chill affected her pain and mood. He prescribed a medical-grade wearable tracking activity, heart rate, sleep stages, and recovery, integrated with detailed cycle logging and symptom diaries syncing directly to the platform. “Eilidh, we will map your inflammatory and fertility patterns together and build a protocol that supports your endometrium while honouring your deep longing for family,” he said with quiet compassion.
Family and friends reacted with protective scepticism. Her husband Rory, a sound engineer for Edinburgh’s festivals, worried: “We should stay with the clinics here in Edinburgh or London—how can someone in Stockholm truly guide our next transfer remotely?” Her parents in the Highlands urged: “Stick to local specialists and proper in-person monitoring; don’t risk more savings on apps.” Close musician friends cautioned against another heartbreak after so many failed rounds. Eilidh’s fragile hope wavered; she had been broken too often.
Yet gentle shifts soon emerged. Dr. Henriksson adjusted immune modulation and steroid timing based on precise inflammatory spikes in the data, introduced targeted endometrial receptivity support guided by cycle trends, recommended gentle lifestyle pacing suited to Edinburgh’s variable weather, and tailored stress-reduction techniques for performers. Weekly reports arrived: “Luteal phase inflammatory markers reduced 25% this cycle due to optimised immune support and enhanced sleep recovery.” Eilidh felt profoundly understood. “He remembers everything—my violin recitals, my collection of tiny fiddles for future pupils, how every failed transfer feels like losing a child I already hear laughing—and explains each change so clearly. It’s like having a steady conductor who truly sees the silent grief of endometriosis infertility.”
Then, on the evening of 19 December 2025—amid Edinburgh’s twinkling Christmas lights along George Street—the most frightening moment yet arrived. Eilidh had bravely attended a small festive ceilidh with Rory, daring to enjoy the season while in the fragile early weeks after their latest embryo transfer. Midway through a gentle reel, sharp pelvic pain and spotting began: the dreaded signs of another threatened loss. Rory was chatting across the room. Panic rose as she slipped to a quiet hallway and fumbled for her phone. The wearable instantly detected the acute heart-rate spike and activity distress pattern, triggering an emergency alert. Within 45 seconds Dr. Henriksson’s call appeared—he was covering the platform’s 24/7 urgent-response rota.
“Eilidh, I see the data clearly. You are safe. Breathe slowly with me. Apply gentle warmth as we discussed, stay seated on the bench, and I will guide Rory to you while monitoring your vitals continuously.” His calm, reassuring voice directed immediate stabilisation—positioning, breathing, emergency progesterone and anti-inflammatory guidance—monitored everything in real time, and coordinated discreet collection. Twenty minutes later Eilidh was home resting, spotting easing under prompt intervention, and a refined support plan already forming.
That night changed everything. Eilidh placed complete trust in Dr. Henriksson’s ongoing guidance through StrongBody AI. She followed every personalised recommendation faithfully. Over the following months inflammatory flares grew rarer, endometrial quality improved steadily, immune balance stabilised, and—against so many previous odds—the pregnancy held past the feared early milestones.
“Now I face each day not with dread of another silence, but with cautious wonder and gratitude. StrongBody AI and Dr. Henriksson have returned the possibility of the family I thought endometriosis had taken forever.”
Every morning Eilidh opens the app, watches her fertility and inflammatory curves trending gently upward, and allows herself a quiet, hopeful smile. She wonders: with this steadfast support across the North Sea, might the coming summer bring the first tiny kicks in the nursery she has kept ready all these years, or the sound of a child’s laughter harmonising with her violin under Edinburgh’s ancient skies? Eilidh’s journey continues, and the soft melody of possibility grows steadily brighter…
On a misty autumn evening in Bristol, England, in October 2025, during a virtual support meeting hosted by Endometriosis UK, the story of Grace Harrington left many women holding back tears of recognition and hope.
Grace, 39, a former children’s book illustrator from the colourful streets of Clifton, now spent quiet days in a light-filled studio flat overlooking the Suspension Bridge. The woman who once filled pages with whimsical families, dreamy nurseries, and joyful parent-child adventures could no longer draw babies without her heart breaking. Endometriosis had been diagnosed in her late twenties, but over the past nine years infertility had become the cruellest chapter—years of trying naturally, four failed IUI cycles, three IVF rounds ending in chemical pregnancies or early loss, and a growing terror that the family she and her husband dreamed of would never arrive. The monthly grief of negative tests had turned hope into a fragile, exhausting ritual.
The pain had layered over time. The familiar deep pelvic cramps and heavy periods were relentless, but infertility overshadowed everything: countless ovulation kits, timed intimacy that felt mechanical, Clomid side effects, egg collections under anaesthesia, embryo transfers followed by agonising two-week waits, and the repeated devastation of fading lines. Doctors confirmed stage IV endometriosis with extensive adhesions, ovarian endometriomas, and likely compromised tube function and egg quality. Grace spent tens of thousands of pounds on private fertility clinics in London, excision surgery in specialist centres abroad, reproductive immunologists in Manchester, natural killer cell testing, ERA biopsies, and immune therapies. She tried every digital tool: fertility apps predicting optimal windows, AI ovulation analysers interpreting temperature curves, wellness chatbots recommending acupuncture schedules and embryo-support supplements. Nothing sustained a pregnancy. The failures only deepened, forcing her to step away from illustration deadlines and retreat into a private world of quiet longing. She feared motherhood was a story she would never get to live.
One tear-streaked September night in 2025, after another negative beta hCG result shattered months of careful preparation, Grace hit her lowest point. She refused to let endometriosis write the ending of her family dream. Scrolling through an international endometriosis and infertility forum late into the night, she kept seeing moving testimonies about StrongBody AI—a platform connecting patients with world-leading specialists, using real-time wearable and cycle data to deliver deeply personalised fertility optimisation and monitoring. With trembling hands and a flicker of renewed hope, Grace downloaded the app and created her account immediately.
She shared her history openly: longstanding infertility secondary to severe endometriosis, multiple failed assisted cycles, recurrent implantation failure and early miscarriage, extensive adhesions, hormonal dysregulation, suspected immune and inflammatory factors. Within hours the system matched her with Dr. Matteo Lombardi—an Italian reproductive endocrinologist and endometriosis specialist at Humanitas Research Hospital in Milan, with 20 years of experience and pioneering research into the inflammatory microenvironment and implantation challenges in endometriosis patients. Dr. Lombardi had developed advanced remote protocols using continuous physiological tracking to personalise immune modulation and endometrial preparation across Europe.
Their first video consultation felt like warm Italian sunlight breaking through Bristol’s autumn mist. Dr. Lombardi explored not only previous cycle data and laparoscopy reports but heart-rate variability in the luteal phase, sleep architecture affecting progesterone, stress markers from creative deadlines, inflammatory trends from bloodwork, even how Bristol’s damp weather influenced her pain and mood. He prescribed a medical-grade wearable tracking activity, heart rate, sleep stages, and recovery, integrated with detailed cycle logging and symptom diaries syncing directly to the platform. “Grace, we will map your inflammatory and fertility patterns together and build a protocol that supports your endometrium while honouring your deep wish for family,” he said with profound kindness.
Family and friends reacted with protective caution. Her husband Tom, a structural engineer, worried: “We should stay with the clinics here in Bristol or London—how can someone in Milan truly guide our next transfer remotely?” Her mother in Devon urged: “Stick to local consultants and proper in-person monitoring; don’t risk more savings on apps.” Close illustrator friends cautioned against another heartbreak after so many failed rounds. Grace’s fragile hope wavered; she had been crushed too often.
Yet gentle improvements soon emerged. Dr. Lombardi adjusted immune and steroid timing based on precise inflammatory spikes in the data, introduced targeted endometrial receptivity support guided by cycle trends, recommended gentle lifestyle pacing suited to Bristol’s changeable seasons, and tailored stress-reduction techniques for artistic minds. Weekly reports arrived: “Luteal phase inflammatory markers reduced 27% this cycle due to optimised immune modulation and deeper sleep recovery.” Grace felt truly seen. “He remembers everything—my children’s book characters, my sketches of dream nurseries, how every failed transfer feels like losing a child I already love—and explains each change so clearly. It’s like having a compassionate partner who genuinely understands the unique pain of endometriosis infertility.”
Then, on the evening of 19 December 2025—amid Bristol’s twinkling harbourside Christmas lights—the most frightening moment yet arrived. Grace had bravely attended a small holiday gathering with friends, daring to enjoy the season while in the fragile early weeks after their latest embryo transfer. Midway through, sharp pelvic pain and spotting began: the dreaded signs of another threatened loss. Tom was parking nearby. Panic surged as she slipped to a quiet corner and fumbled for her phone. The wearable instantly detected the acute heart-rate spike and activity distress pattern, triggering an emergency alert. Within 45 seconds Dr. Lombardi’s call appeared—he was covering the platform’s 24/7 urgent-response rota.
“Grace, I see the data clearly. You are safe. Breathe slowly with me. Apply gentle warmth as we discussed, stay seated, and I will guide Tom to you while monitoring your vitals continuously.” His calm, reassuring voice directed immediate stabilisation—positioning, breathing, emergency progesterone and anti-inflammatory guidance—monitored everything in real time, and coordinated discreet collection. Twenty minutes later Grace was home resting, spotting easing under prompt intervention, and a refined support plan already forming.
That night changed everything. Grace placed complete trust in Dr. Lombardi’s ongoing guidance through StrongBody AI. She followed every personalised recommendation faithfully. Over the following months inflammatory flares grew rarer, endometrial markers improved steadily, immune balance stabilised, and—against so many odds—the pregnancy held past the feared early milestones.
“Now I face each day not with dread of another loss, but with cautious wonder and gratitude. StrongBody AI and Dr. Lombardi have returned the possibility of the family I thought endometriosis had taken forever.”
Every morning Grace opens the app, watches her fertility and inflammatory curves trending gently upward, and allows herself a quiet, hopeful smile. She wonders: with this steadfast support across Europe, might the coming summer bring the first kicks in the nursery she has kept ready all these years, or the sound of tiny laughter echoing through their Clifton home? Grace’s journey continues, and the soft light of possibility grows steadily brighter…
On a rainy spring evening in Dublin, Ireland, in April 2026, during an online support session hosted by Endometriosis Ireland, the story of Siobhan O’Connor brought many women to quiet, hopeful tears.
Siobhan, 38, a former primary school teacher from the leafy suburb of Rathgar, now spent her days in a bright Victorian house overlooking Herbert Park. The woman who once filled classrooms with laughter, planned dream family holidays, and collected children’s books for the nursery she imagined could no longer bear the monthly heartbreak of negative tests. Endometriosis had shadowed her since her twenties, but in the last eight years infertility had become the deepest wound—failed conception despite years of trying, multiple miscarriages, and a growing fear that motherhood might forever remain out of reach. The longing for a child had turned joyful intimacy into timed obligation, and every period into a fresh grief.
The journey had been exhausting. The familiar pelvic pain and heavy bleeding were relentless, but infertility dominated every thought: years of ovulation tracking, timed intercourse, Clomid cycles, three failed IUIs, two IVF rounds that ended in early loss, and endless waiting-room tears. Doctors spoke of “unexplained” factors before confirming severe endometriosis with adhesions likely blocking tubes and affecting egg quality. Siobhan spent tens of thousands of euros on private fertility clinics in Merrion, endometriosis excision surgery in London, reproductive immunologists in Cork, acupuncture, supplements, and immune protocols. She tried every digital tool: fertility apps predicting peaks, AI ovulation coaches analysing basal temperature, wellness chatbots suggesting mindfulness for implantation. Nothing brought a sustained pregnancy. The failures only deepened, forcing her to take indefinite leave from teaching and retreat into silence about her dreams. She feared motherhood was a door permanently closed.
One tearful March night in 2026, after yet another negative test shattered a carefully built hope, Siobhan reached her lowest point. She refused to let endometriosis steal her chance at family forever. Scrolling through an international endometriosis and infertility forum late into the night, she kept seeing grateful stories about StrongBody AI—a platform connecting patients with world-leading specialists, using real-time wearable and cycle data to deliver deeply personalised monitoring and fertility optimisation. Desperate for a new approach, Siobhan downloaded the app and created her account immediately.
She described her situation openly: longstanding infertility secondary to endometriosis, multiple failed assisted cycles, recurrent early miscarriage, stage IV disease with adhesions, hormonal imbalance, suspected immune involvement. Within a day the system matched her with Dr. Elena Rossi—an Italian gynaecologist and reproductive endocrinologist at Policlinico Universitario in Rome, with 22 years of experience and pioneering research into the inflammatory and immune mechanisms linking endometriosis to implantation failure and pregnancy loss. Dr. Rossi had developed advanced remote protocols using continuous physiological tracking and cycle analytics to personalise fertility treatment for complex endometriosis cases across Europe.
Their first video consultation felt like warm Roman sunlight breaking through Dublin’s persistent clouds. Dr. Rossi explored not only cycle logs and previous IVF data but heart-rate variability during luteal phase, sleep quality affecting progesterone, stress markers from teaching pressures, immune trends from bloodwork, even how Ireland’s damp spring weather influenced inflammation. She prescribed a medical-grade wearable tracking activity, heart rate, sleep stages, and recovery, integrated with detailed cycle and symptom logging syncing directly to the platform. “Siobhan, we will map your fertility window and inflammatory patterns together and build a plan that supports implantation while honouring your longing for family,” she said with profound empathy.
Family and friends reacted with immediate caution. Her husband Conor, a civil engineer, worried: “We should stay with the clinics here in Dublin—how can someone in Rome truly guide fertility remotely?” Her mother in Galway urged: “Stick to local specialists and proper in-person monitoring; don’t risk more savings on apps.” Close teacher friends cautioned against another heartbreak after countless failed rounds. Siobhan’s hope wavered; she had been crushed too many times.
Yet subtle shifts soon appeared. Dr. Rossi adjusted immune modulation timing based on precise inflammatory spikes in the data, introduced targeted endometrial support guided by cycle trends, recommended gentle lifestyle pacing suited to Dublin’s variable weather, and tailored stress-reduction techniques for educators. Weekly reports arrived: “Luteal phase inflammatory markers reduced 24% this cycle due to optimised progesterone support and improved sleep depth.” Siobhan felt truly seen. “She remembers everything—my classroom stories, my collection of children’s books, how every negative test feels like losing a child already loved—and explains each change so clearly. It’s like having a compassionate partner who genuinely understands the unique grief of endometriosis-related infertility.”
Then, on the evening of 19 December 2025—amid Dublin’s twinkling Christmas lights along Grafton Street—the most frightening episode yet struck. Siobhan had bravely attended a small holiday gathering with friends, daring to feel normal. Midway through, severe pelvic pain and spotting began: a familiar sign of another early loss threatening the fragile embryo from their latest transfer weeks earlier. Conor was parking nearby. Panic surged as she slipped to a quiet corner and fumbled for her phone. The wearable instantly detected the acute heart-rate spike and activity distress pattern, triggering an emergency alert. Within 45 seconds Dr. Rossi’s call appeared—she was covering the platform’s 24/7 urgent-response rota.
“Siobhan, I see the data clearly. You are safe. Breathe slowly with me. Apply gentle lower-abdominal warmth as we discussed, stay seated, and I will guide Conor to you while monitoring your vitals.” Her calm, reassuring voice directed immediate stabilisation—positioning, breathing, emergency progesterone guidance—monitored everything in real time, and coordinated discreet collection. Twenty minutes later Siobhan was home resting, spotting easing under prompt intervention, and a refined support plan already forming.
That night changed everything. Siobhan placed complete trust in Dr. Rossi’s ongoing guidance through StrongBody AI. She followed every personalised recommendation faithfully. Over the following months inflammatory flares grew rarer, cycle quality improved steadily, immune markers stabilised, and—miraculously—a subsequent transfer held past the feared early weeks.
“Now I face each day not with dread of another loss, but with cautious wonder. StrongBody AI and Dr. Rossi have returned the possibility of the family I thought endometriosis had taken forever.”
Every morning Siobhan opens the app, watches her fertility and inflammatory curves trending gently upward, and allows herself a quiet, hopeful smile. She wonders: with this steadfast support across Europe, might the coming summer bring the first cries of new life in the nursery she has kept ready all these years? Siobhan’s journey continues, and the soft light of possibility grows steadily brighter…
How to Book an Infertility Consultant Service on StrongBody AI
StrongBody AI makes it easy to access expert reproductive care for symptoms like infertility by endometriosis.
Booking Steps:
Step 1: Visit StrongBody AI
Go to the homepage and click “Log in | Sign up.”
Step 2: Register an Account
Input:
- Username
- Country
- Occupation
- Email
- Password
Confirm via email to activate your account.
Step 3: Search for the Service
Type:
- “Infertility Consultant Service”
- Or filter by condition: Endometriosis, reproductive health
Step 4: Review Expert Profiles
Select fertility consultants with experience in infertility by endometriosis, laparoscopy, or ART planning.
Step 5: Book an Appointment
Choose your consultant and time slot. Click “Book Now.”
Step 6: Secure Your Payment
Pay using PayPal or credit card through StrongBody AI’s secure checkout.
Step 7: Attend the Virtual Consultation
Join via video call. Share your reproductive history, test results, and receive a treatment roadmap.
Step 8: Plan Follow-Up and Treatment
Use the platform to coordinate imaging, lab tests, and fertility procedures.
- Carrot Fertility (Global)
Employer-sponsored fertility benefit provider offering access to endometriosis-informed reproductive specialists worldwide. - OvaHealth (Europe)
Multilingual digital health platform focusing on endometriosis-related infertility with customized fertility treatment mapping. - Fertility Cloud (US)
Telehealth fertility clinic offering hormone testing, ovulation tracking, and personalized care plans for endometriosis-related infertility. - Progeny Fertility Network (US/Canada)
Offers bundled fertility care and consultation, including surgical and ART guidance for endometriosis patients. - Pristyn Care Gynae (India)
Affordable teleconsults with endometriosis surgeons and fertility advisors; includes surgery scheduling and IVF referrals. - IVI-RMA Global (Spain/Global)
Internationally renowned fertility center network offering advanced diagnostics and IVF planning for women with endometriosis. - Luma Women’s Health (UK)
Specialist women’s health teleconsults focusing on reproductive disorders, hormone mapping, and preconception counseling. - Aurora Fertility (Australia/NZ)
Telehealth fertility and gynecology clinic with endometriosis-specific fertility support and ART readiness evaluation. - GynaeMD Connect (Middle East)
Arabic/English bilingual platform for reproductive health issues including infertility by endometriosis, with hospital integration. - FemiLink LATAM
Spanish-language platform offering fertility consults, cycle monitoring, and second opinions on surgical outcomes.
Region | Entry-Level Experts | Mid-Level Experts | Senior-Level Experts |
North America | $150 – $300 | $300 – $500 | $500 – $900+ |
Western Europe | $120 – $250 | $250 – $400 | $400 – $700+ |
Eastern Europe | $50 – $100 | $100 – $180 | $180 – $320+ |
South Asia | $20 – $60 | $60 – $120 | $120 – $250+ |
Southeast Asia | $30 – $80 | $80 – $150 | $150 – $280+ |
Middle East | $60 – $130 | $130 – $250 | $250 – $450+ |
Australia/NZ | $90 – $180 | $180 – $320 | $320 – $500+ |
South America | $40 – $90 | $90 – $160 | $160 – $300+ |
Insights:
- Senior-level consultants often provide ART coordination, surgical review, and fertility preservation strategies.
- South and Southeast Asia offer affordable access to laparoscopic and fertility experts trained in managing endometriosis.
- Entry-level services are suitable for initial evaluation, cycle tracking, and general gynecological assessments.
Infertility can be emotionally and physically draining—especially when caused by silent conditions like endometriosis. Recognizing the signs and seeking timely care can significantly improve reproductive outcomes.
An infertility consultant service offers evidence-based guidance, emotional support, and access to world-class fertility expertise. For those facing infertility by endometriosis, StrongBody AI bridges the gap between symptoms and solutions.
Book your consultation today and take control of your fertility journey with the help of global specialists.