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Also reported in: pmol/L
A normal AMH for reproductive-age women suggests ovarian reserve sits around where we'd expect for your age. It's one of several inputs a reproductive hormone specialist uses to estimate fertility runway — the others being antral follicle count on ultrasound, FSH, and age itself. AMH does not predict egg quality; it's a quantity signal. A normal reading is quietly reassuring but not a more likely.
Anti-Müllerian Hormone is made by the very small (primordial and early-antral) follicles in the ovaries, which makes it one of the steadiest indicators of how many eggs are still in the queue. Unlike FSH, AMH doesn't fluctuate much across the menstrual cycle, so a single draw tells a reasonably honest story. A low value means fewer small follicles are present than is typical for your age bracket. Important caveats: AMH naturally declines with age — a low AMH at 42 is expected physiology, not a concern; a low AMH at 28 is a more meaningful signal. Hormonal contraception can artificially lower AMH readings, so recent birth-control use matters. A low AMH doesn't mean you can't conceive — plenty of people with low AMH conceive naturally — it just means the reproductive runway may be shorter than average.
If fertility is on your mind in the next few years, this is a good data point to bring to a reproductive hormone specialist alongside an antral follicle count (AFC) ultrasound and cycle-day-3 FSH + estradiol. If you're on or were recently on hormonal contraception, is consistent with with a repeat off-cycle. A single low AMH, on its own, is not a diagnosis.
AMH: {{value}} {{unit}} — low (ref: {{low}}–{{high}} for reproductive-age women)A normal AMH for reproductive-age women suggests ovarian reserve sits around where we'd expect for your age. It's one of several inputs a reproductive hormone specialist uses to estimate fertility runway — the others being antral follicle count on ultrasound, FSH, and age itself. AMH does not predict egg quality; it's a quantity signal. A normal reading is quietly reassuring but not a more likely.
Nothing to act on. If you are planning pregnancy in the next year or two, no urgency; if you are planning for noticeably later, a conversation with a reproductive specialist about your broader timeline is reasonable.
AMH: {{value}} {{unit}} — normal for ageAn elevated AMH reflects a larger-than-typical pool of small follicles. The strongest association is with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), where many small follicles accumulate without one being ovulated. But high AMH also shows up in healthy young women with genuinely robust ovarian reserve, so the number alone doesn't diagnose PCOS. The diagnosis requires the classic combination: irregular or absent ovulation, clinical or biochemical signs of high male-type hormones (androgens) (acne, extra body hair, elevated testosterone), and/or polycystic ovarian morphology on ultrasound. Elevated AMH in the context of regular cycles, normal male-type hormones (androgens), and no symptoms is usually just good reserve.
Interpret alongside your cycle regularity, an androgen panel (total testosterone, free testosterone, DHEA-S (a partner-hormone to cortisol), 17-OH progesterone), and potentially a pelvic ultrasound. If PCOS is confirmed, the treatment map is long and mostly lifestyle + targeted medications — not a situation, but worth a proper reproductive-endocrinology conversation.
AMH: {{value}} {{unit}} — elevated (ref: <{{high}})Upload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.