Understanding your ovarian reserve
AMH is produced within the follicles in your ovaries. This often correlates with your ovarian reserve, or egg reserve.
By no means can AMH tell if you are less fertile in natural conception attempts.
This information is particularly valuable if you've had ovarian surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, or have only one ovary.
Hover over the curves to see age-specific AMH values in pmol/L.
* Reference data from patients who conceived naturally. Individual results should be interpreted in clinical context.
AMH should always be considered alongside your age. Normal AMH for your age doesn't guarantee fertility, as it only reflects quantity, not quality.
High AMH may indicate polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS), which can sometimes signal reduced ovulation. PCOS is diagnosed through symptoms (irregular periods, excess male hormones) and ultrasound.
Low AMH suggests lower ovarian reserve. You can still conceive naturally, but you may reach menopause earlier. If children are in your future plans, consider discussing timing with your doctor.
Pills and exposure to hormones can mask higher AMH. PCOS can mask low AMH, producing misleadingly normal results.
AMH testing is most useful when:
AMH values should be interpreted in conjunction with age, antral follicle count, and clinical context. Isolated AMH values have limited predictive value for natural fertility in regularly cycling women.
Enter your patient's age and AMH to generate a percentile-based interpretation and copyable summary.