Anonymous wrote:My mom had seven miscarriages before she got pregnant with my older brother. Then, expecting to go through another half dozen miscarriages when they were ready for their second child they started trying much earlier than they actually wanted to have a second child, and they accidentally got pregnant with me, first try. And that's why my older brother and I are only 22 months apart.
Anonymous wrote:Have you been able to test the embryos you lost? If you have and they're genetically normal, then look into reproductive immunology. If you haven't been able to test them or they're abnormal, then IVF will either fix your problem or help you identify your problem (i.e., whether you're losing normal embryos or if your embryos are abnormal).
Anonymous wrote:You need to see a specialist in recurrent loss. 90% of REs are happy to keep you cycling and taking your money.
Uterus
Auto immune
Clotting
Genetic disorders
Ive had a shocking amount of mis-diagnosis of a very severe C-section isthmocele, you cannot take ultrasounds at face value. I even had a "world renown" isthmocele surgeon measure adhesions as myometrium. If things are not working it is time for second and third opinions
Anonymous wrote:Hugs OP!
Hoping your RE can isolate the issue and resolve it, and hopefully without resorting to ART.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dramatically lowering my insulin levels until they were ideal, not just normal. Wasn’t on my RE’s radar. Did it through IF, low carb, circadian hygiene, sun exposure and weight training. I’m sure it also lowered the inflammation and androgen levels the embryos were exposed to. Got pregnant naturally twice after years of ivf.
But I was routinely losing healthy embryos (tested after dnc). That showed the problem was with me and the womb environment. If your embryos aren’t strong that’s a different issue
This is actually a small but crucial detail PP brings up:
Are we sure the issue is with OP? Has DH had his swimmers tested, and was there anything out of the norm in the results?
Anonymous wrote:Dramatically lowering my insulin levels until they were ideal, not just normal. Wasn’t on my RE’s radar. Did it through IF, low carb, circadian hygiene, sun exposure and weight training. I’m sure it also lowered the inflammation and androgen levels the embryos were exposed to. Got pregnant naturally twice after years of ivf.
But I was routinely losing healthy embryos (tested after dnc). That showed the problem was with me and the womb environment. If your embryos aren’t strong that’s a different issue
Anonymous wrote:Have you been able to test the embryos you lost? If you have and they're genetically normal, then look into reproductive immunology. If you haven't been able to test them or they're abnormal, then IVF will either fix your problem or help you identify your problem (i.e., whether you're losing normal embryos or if your embryos are abnormal).