Anonymous wrote:Hello,
I am new to this community. A friend gave me a Clear Blue Fertility Monitor and this is my first month using it. I am also using Clomid due to irregular ovulation. I know that the manual says that I may get inaccurate information while using Clomid but I wanted to check to see if anyone else has had a similar experience. I had highs beginning on day 7 all the way through 16, days 17 & 18 I had a peak. The continued to get high readings for days 19-21 and down to low 22, 23. The friend of mine that gave the monitor to me got pregnant using it the first month and told me that she had high readings the entire month and no peak. My question is, is it a bad sign that my readings have gone down to low or does this not indicate anything?
Thanks!!
Lindsay
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't need to ovulate before day 14. I got high's days 12-14, peak days 15 and 16, then high again for 17. Sounds like your peaks are close to mine. I'm currently 21 weeks pregnant.
Keep using the monitor as it will get more precise next month (if you're not pregnant!). I suggest getting a basal body thermometer and temping along with using the monitor. Google basal temperature charts, print one out, take your temp each morning around the same time and record the numbers. It will start showing a pattern.
Your temp will raise a bit directly following ovulation then stay raised until your period starts. So, it won't help you know when to "go for it", but it will help you to be sure your cycles are healthy and also to to see if the monitor is coiniciding with the (slight) temp rise after ovulation.
Good luck!
Congratulations on your pregnancy. After how many months of using the monitor you got pregnant?
Anonymous wrote:I ovulated around day 20 with a 30 day cycle. Got pregnant. A 10 day luteal phase isn't a deal breaker.
The second time, same thing. Interestingly, I started using progesterone supplements (for fertility treatments unrelated to my luteal phase) and found it moved up my ovulation to day 15. This was all tracked by temperatures.
Anonymous wrote:You don't need to ovulate before day 14. I got high's days 12-14, peak days 15 and 16, then high again for 17. Sounds like your peaks are close to mine. I'm currently 21 weeks pregnant.
Keep using the monitor as it will get more precise next month (if you're not pregnant!). I suggest getting a basal body thermometer and temping along with using the monitor. Google basal temperature charts, print one out, take your temp each morning around the same time and record the numbers. It will start showing a pattern.
Your temp will raise a bit directly following ovulation then stay raised until your period starts. So, it won't help you know when to "go for it", but it will help you to be sure your cycles are healthy and also to to see if the monitor is coiniciding with the (slight) temp rise after ovulation.
Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:1- This was the first month I used the monitor.
2- No I have never used the charting before. But, it is a good suggestion to use it and share it with my RE. I don't know if this has been the case before since I started using the monitor this month.
3- My acupuncturist looked at this data and said I ovulate late and my luteal phase is too short to support a pregnancy. She said the norm is to ovulate on day 14 or before to have a longer luteal phase. BK