Anonymous wrote:It's somewhat unclear if fiddling with your immune system (i.e. through steroids, intralipids or IVIG) could increase the risk for cancer. But there's probably not much risk with short-term use.
. I'm 14:36 and yes, that's correct. I get pregnant on my own but have chemical pregnancies. I tested for immune issues and found answers before considering IVF. I gather that's not always the case for people because many REs don't believe in or offer immune treatments.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:wait so you're doing intralipids, prednisone, lovenox etc and TTC naturally, not IVF? why?
Not PP, but my guess is that she gets pregnant easily but can't stay pregnant.
Anonymous wrote:wait so you're doing intralipids, prednisone, lovenox etc and TTC naturally, not IVF? why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those who see Hamersley - how early in the process did you go to her? If you got pregnant, from which week is she monitoring you?
I saw her starting around week 9 or 10 for a pregnancy confirmation/dating scan. Saw her for the NT scan a couple weeks later. Again at 18 and 20 weeks for the anatomy scan (had to do it twice). Then monthly thereafter until 34 weeks, at which point I will see her weekly. This is on top of regular OB visits since she does not deliver. (But I skip the scanning stuff with the OB since she does it better.) I have also continued to see Abbasi (just the nurse) every 2-3 weeks for blood draws so she can monitor the immune stuff. It's a lot of appointments, but hopefully worth it in the end!
Anonymous wrote:For those who see Hamersley - how early in the process did you go to her? If you got pregnant, from which week is she monitoring you?
Anonymous wrote:14:36 here. I'm working with Abbasi who is prescribing the intralipids and prednisone and Hammersley who is in charge of the Lovenox.
I'm not an IVF patient, but I'm told that if I get a BFN this month, I stop treatment, retest immune labs, adjust if necessary, and begin again on CD6 of the next cycle.
If I conceive I do another intralipid treatment immediately and then Abbasi will do repeat immune testing every 2-3 weeks to see if the targeted problems are responding to the treatments. And of course, we'll know if I'm successfully pregnant! Hammersley said she'd start with testing the Lovenox dose around 11weeks, but I might ask her to start sooner to prevent an early loss. I am not pregnant yet so I don't have an OB on the team. I will probably go to GW OBs or midwives if they'll take me.
Anonymous wrote:If you take lovenox for the duration of the pregnancy, be sure you see an MFM or OB who will do an antiXa test once a month to be sure the dosing is right and you don't have too much or too little clotting. I have had to adjust my lovenox upward from 40 mg (starting just before IUI) to 80 mg (at 30 weeks). I'm not sure why -- perhaps it's weight-based so becomes less effective as I gain weight. But especially if you are not sure you need this stuff, you want to be testing to make sure your numbers look good. I pay roughly $100/month for the lovenox and that's my copay!
Intralipids will not harm you in any way I can think of. Intralipids are not covered by my insurance. $500 per outing.
Prednisone can raise your blood sugar. You want to be on the lowest dosage needed. If you are seeing Abbasi she'll monitor your immune numbers and prednisone dose throughout the pregnancy. My copay for this is $1 a month.