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Unexplained Infertility — What It Means & What Helps

Unexplained infertility is a diagnosis given when a couple has been trying to conceive for a reasonable length of time, every standard fertility test comes back normal — regular ovulation, open fallopian tubes, a normal semen analysis — and yet pregnancy has not happened. Crucially, "unexplained" does not mean "untreatable" — in fact, it is often very treatable. At Aansh Hospital & IVF Center, a government-registered Level-2 ART clinic (Reg. No. MH/AC/2024/15441/L2/Chandrapur/132), unexplained infertility is evaluated and managed by Dr. Shweta Agarwal (MBBS, DGO), with diagnostics and fertility treatment available in-house.

Medically reviewed by Dr. Shweta Agarwal, MBBS, DGO · Last updated June 2026
Dr. Shweta Agarwal, Founder & Lead Fertility Specialist, at Aansh Hospital & IVF Center, Chandrapur Govt. ART-registered
Dr. Shweta Agarwal MBBS, DGO · Reproductive Medicine
5,000+IVF babies
30+Years of experience
4.9★500+ reviews · Google, JustDial, Practo
94%AI embryo-analysis accuracy · Garbha.ai
ART Level 2 RegisteredGovt. of India — ART Act 2021
Dr. Shweta AgarwalMBBS, DGO · Reproductive Medicine
On-site embryology labLed by Aayush Agarwal, Ph.D.
Marathi · Hindi · EnglishChandrapur · Nagpur · Vidarbha

Medically reviewed by Dr. Shweta Agarwal, MBBS, DGO. Last updated: June 2026.

Information on this page is educational and does not replace a medical consultation. Outcomes depend on individual clinical factors.


What does "unexplained infertility" actually mean?

Unexplained infertility is a diagnosis of exclusion — it is given only after a complete fertility evaluation has come back normal and no specific cause has been identified. For the label to apply, the following are typically confirmed:

  • Ovulation is happening normally (regular cycles, confirmed on testing).
  • The fallopian tubes are open (confirmed on an HSG or laparoscopy).
  • The semen analysis is normal (count, motility, and form within normal limits).
  • There has been adequate time and frequency of trying.

If all of these are normal and conception still has not occurred, the infertility is termed "unexplained" (sometimes called idiopathic infertility). In Marathi and Hindi, this is described as कारण न समजणारे वंध्यत्व or अस्पष्ट वंध्यत्व — your doctor may use these words in consultation. The label can feel frustrating, even invalidating — but it is a real, recognised medical situation, and it comes with a genuinely hopeful set of options.


Why does unexplained infertility happen?

It happens because our current tests, while good, cannot measure everything that has to go right for a pregnancy. Conception is a long chain of finely tuned events, and standard tests check only some links in that chain. Subtle factors that routine testing may not capture include:

  • Egg quality: Standard tests assess egg quantity (ovarian reserve), not the genetic quality of individual eggs.
  • Sperm function: A semen analysis counts and grades sperm but does not fully measure their ability to fertilise an egg (such as DNA integrity).
  • Fertilisation and early embryo development: Whether egg and sperm combine well, and whether the embryo develops normally, cannot be seen without bringing them together — which is what IVF does.
  • Implantation: Subtle issues with the timing or receptivity of the uterine lining.
  • Occult (hidden) conditions: Mild endometriosis or subtle tubal problems can be missed without a laparoscopy.

In other words, "unexplained" usually means "not yet explained by the tests we routinely run" — not that there is no biological reason.


Does unexplained infertility mean nothing can be done?

No — and this is the most important point on this page. Unexplained infertility is one of the more treatable categories of infertility, precisely because the basic machinery (ovulation, tubes, sperm) is working. Treatment focuses on increasing the number of opportunities for egg and sperm to meet and, where needed, on bringing them together directly.

Many couples with unexplained infertility conceive — some with simple measures, others with assisted treatment, and some who continue trying without treatment for a defined period. The right path depends on your age, how long you have been trying, and your preferences.


How is unexplained infertility diagnosed?

The diagnosis is only valid once a thorough workup has been completed — see our fertility diagnostics page for the full assessment. Before the "unexplained" label is accepted, Dr. Shweta Agarwal ensures the evaluation is genuinely complete:

Confirming ovulation and ovarian reserve

Cycle tracking, hormonal tests, and an AMH/antral follicle count to assess reserve.

Confirming tubal patency

An HSG to confirm the tubes are open.

Confirming the semen analysis

A properly performed semen analysis, repeated if borderline.

Re-checking borderline results

Results that sit at the edge of normal are worth repeating — a "normal" that is borderline can be the real clue. AMH and other markers may be re-reviewed.

Considering laparoscopy for occult endometriosis

Where the clinical picture suggests it, a diagnostic laparoscopy can reveal mild endometriosis or subtle pelvic factors that imaging missed — and treat them at the same time.

A diagnosis of unexplained infertility made without a complete workup is not reliable; the first step is always to make sure nothing has been overlooked.


What helps with unexplained infertility?

Treatment is usually stepwise — starting with simpler approaches and moving up if needed, with the pace guided by your age and how long you have been trying. Dr. Shweta Agarwal will tailor this to you.

Step 1 — Optimising timing and lifestyle

Confirming the fertile window, optimising frequency of intercourse, and addressing lifestyle factors (weight, smoking, alcohol). For some younger couples with a short history, a defined period of continued trying with guidance is reasonable.

Step 2 — Ovulation induction with IUI

IUI (intrauterine insemination), often combined with mild ovulation induction, increases the number of eggs available and places prepared sperm directly into the uterus — improving the odds per cycle. This is a common, less intensive next step.

Step 3 — IVF / ICSI

IVF is both a treatment and a diagnostic step: by bringing egg and sperm together in the laboratory, it can reveal a previously hidden fertilisation problem. Where fertilisation is the suspected issue, ICSI (injecting a single sperm into a single egg) can overcome it. IVF is typically recommended when simpler steps have not worked, or sooner when age or duration makes time a priority.


When should we escalate treatment?

Timing matters, and it is strongly age-dependent — because egg quality declines with age, waiting has a real cost for older women. As a general guide:

  • Under 35: It is reasonable to try simpler steps (timing, IUI) for a defined period before moving to IVF.
  • 35–37: A shorter trial of simpler steps, then escalation, is usually advised.
  • 38 and older: Earlier escalation to IVF is often recommended, because time is a more significant factor.

These are general principles, not rules — Dr. Shweta Agarwal will give you a plan suited to your age, history, and wishes. The key message is: do not wait indefinitely hoping for a different result, especially as age increases. Aansh Hospital offers consultations in Marathi, Hindi, and English.


Good to know

Frequently asked questions

All my tests are normal — why am I not getting pregnant?
This is exactly what "unexplained infertility" describes, and it is more common than people realise. Standard tests check ovulation, tubes, and the semen analysis, but they cannot measure everything — subtle factors in egg quality, sperm function, fertilisation, or implantation may not show up. A normal workup is actually encouraging, because it means the basic machinery is working and the situation is often very treatable.
Does unexplained infertility mean there is no hope?
No. Unexplained infertility is one of the more treatable categories, precisely because ovulation, the tubes, and sperm are all working. Many couples conceive — some with simple measures, others with IUI or IVF. The diagnosis is about what current tests can and cannot see, not about whether pregnancy is possible.
Should we just keep trying naturally?
For some younger couples with a short history, a defined period of continued trying with guidance is reasonable. But this should be a planned decision, not indefinite waiting — especially as age increases, because egg quality declines over time. Dr. Shweta Agarwal can help you decide how long to try before considering treatment.
Do we go straight to IVF for unexplained infertility?
Not always. Treatment is usually stepwise — timing and lifestyle first, then IUI with ovulation induction, and then IVF if needed. IVF may be recommended sooner when age or duration makes time a priority, or when simpler steps have not succeeded. The pace is tailored to your situation.
Could something have been missed in our tests?
Sometimes, yes — which is why a complete and careful workup matters before accepting the "unexplained" label. Borderline results are worth repeating, and a diagnostic laparoscopy can reveal mild endometriosis that imaging missed. Making sure nothing has been overlooked is always the first step.
Do we need to travel to a metro city for unexplained infertility treatment?
No. Aansh Hospital & IVF Center is a government-registered Level-2 ART clinic (Reg. No. MH/AC/2024/15441/L2/Chandrapur/132) with in-house diagnostics and an embryology laboratory. The full workup, IUI, and IVF/ICSI are all available in Chandrapur. Visit our Chandrapur IVF center page for details.
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