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AMH Level Interpreter for IVF

Understand your Anti-Müllerian Hormone levels and ovarian reserve for IVF planning

Medical Disclaimer

AMH is one indicator of ovarian reserve but doesn't predict egg quality or guarantee IVF success. AMH levels should be interpreted alongside other tests (FSH, AFC, age) by your fertility specialist. Individual responses to IVF vary significantly. This tool provides general information only.

Enter Your AMH Information

Normal range: 1.0-4.0 ng/mL or 7.14-28.6 pmol/L

General AMH Ranges

Very Low:< 0.3 ng/mL
Low:0.3 - 1.0 ng/mL
Normal:1.0 - 4.0 ng/mL
High:4.0 - 6.0 ng/mL
Very High:> 6.0 ng/mL

Understanding AMH & IVF

What is AMH?

Anti-Müllerian Hormone is produced by ovarian follicles and indicates the size of your remaining egg supply. It's the best single blood test predictor of ovarian response to IVF stimulation.

AMH & IVF Response

  • <0.5 ng/mL: Poor response, 0-3 eggs typical
  • 0.5-1.0 ng/mL: Low response, 3-6 eggs typical
  • 1.0-3.5 ng/mL: Normal response, 8-15 eggs typical
  • >3.5 ng/mL: High response, 15+ eggs, OHSS risk

Important Considerations

  • • AMH doesn't predict egg quality
  • • Low AMH doesn't mean you can't conceive
  • • AMH declines with age naturally
  • • Birth control can temporarily lower AMH
  • • PCOS often causes elevated AMH
  • • Vitamin D deficiency may affect AMH

Other Important Tests

  • FSH: Day 3 FSH levels (<10 mIU/mL ideal)
  • AFC: Antral follicle count by ultrasound
  • Estradiol: Baseline estrogen levels
  • TSH: Thyroid function affects fertility

Medical Sources & References

  • • Seifer et al. (2022). "Age-specific serum anti-Müllerian hormone values." Fertility and Sterility, 95(2), 747-754.
  • • La Marca et al. (2012). "Anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) as a predictive marker in IVF." Human Reproduction Update, 16(2), 113-130.
  • • Nelson et al. (2015). "Reference range for the AMH Generation II assay." Reproductive BioMedicine Online, 31(3), 399-404.
  • • Broer et al. (2014). "AMH and AFC as predictors of excessive response in IVF." Human Reproduction, 29(6), 1083-1090.
  • • Fleming et al. (2015). "Assessing ovarian response: antral follicle count versus AMH." Reproductive BioMedicine Online, 31(4), 486-496.
  • • ASRM Practice Committee. (2020). "Testing and interpreting measures of ovarian reserve." Fertility and Sterility, 114(6), 1151-1157.