Pregnancy:
Monitoring cervical mucus
What is Cervical Mucus?
There are many different types of vaginal discharge, one of
which is cervical mucus. The type of mucus your body produces
provides clues to your fertility. You can check your cervical
mucus using either your fingers or toilet paper. On days when
you're not fertile, the mucus from your cervix is either light
or sticky (about the same texture as sticky rice). During the
few days leading up to ovulation, when you're most fertile,
you'll have more discharge - clear and slippery with the
consistency of raw egg white. It should also be stretchy. You
are most fertile on the last day you notice cervical mucus of
this kind. It usually happens either the day before, or the day
of, ovulation.
The change in volume and texture of your cervical mucus is due
to the increase in estrogen levels that accompanies ovulation.
After ovulation, progesterone abruptly suppresses the peak mucus
and the mucus pattern continues with sticky mucus for a day or
two, and then returns to dryness. Clomid changes cervical mucus
patterns on an individual basis, so you might have to get used
to a new pattern in terms of buildup of mucus and
interpretations of peak mucus.
How to check your cervical mucus:
It sounds foul but it`s got to be done. There are 3 ways you can
do this: using toilet paper or your fingers across the opening
of your vagina, wearing a panty liner (which is sometimes hard
to detect) or inserting your finger into your vagina. Note its
consistency. You may also want to monitor its texture throughout
the day.