Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well first of all, I think a lot of people with issues on the male side do IUI, which makes sense. Assuming all is good there, it's just an intermediate step that is much less invasive(/expensive) than IVF so, for many, seems like it's worth a try.
I have annovulatory PCOS, and my first is an iui baby - I'm not sure that it wouldn't have happened without IUI, but we wanted to maximize our chances since I was having to use drugs to get myself to ovulate every month. My first IUI worked but I had an early miscarriage; my third IUI I got pregnant with my first.
I think it's a reasonable intermediate step if you have male issues OR if you're requiring ovulation assistance (clomid, injectables) - sort of a why not do this too to maximize your shot each round. Obviously people who did not have success with it and ended up ultimately moving to IVF will look back and feel like it was a waste of time and money - but there are definitely success stories out there.
How long have you been trying?
That's a really good point in terms of people who have done IVF and are looking back. I've been trying for a year and have DOR but secondary infertility (have one kid naturally). Don't want to pay OOP for IVF quite yet and doctor said IUI is worth trying especially since I conceived/had successful pregnancy once already. Was just interested in hearing success stories since the great majority seem to be negative.
Anonymous wrote:Well first of all, I think a lot of people with issues on the male side do IUI, which makes sense. Assuming all is good there, it's just an intermediate step that is much less invasive(/expensive) than IVF so, for many, seems like it's worth a try.
I have annovulatory PCOS, and my first is an iui baby - I'm not sure that it wouldn't have happened without IUI, but we wanted to maximize our chances since I was having to use drugs to get myself to ovulate every month. My first IUI worked but I had an early miscarriage; my third IUI I got pregnant with my first.
I think it's a reasonable intermediate step if you have male issues OR if you're requiring ovulation assistance (clomid, injectables) - sort of a why not do this too to maximize your shot each round. Obviously people who did not have success with it and ended up ultimately moving to IVF will look back and feel like it was a waste of time and money - but there are definitely success stories out there.
How long have you been trying?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We tried with timed sex for 2 years (married for 5 and never used birth control) and nothing. For 3 months before the IUI we had sex daily just to make sure we weren't throwing money away and still nothing. Our first IUI succeeded. They believed I had PCOS and wasn't ovulating, so the clomid and the ovidrel trigger helped me.
Wow congrats! May I ask how old you were?
Anonymous wrote:We tried with timed sex for 2 years (married for 5 and never used birth control) and nothing. For 3 months before the IUI we had sex daily just to make sure we weren't throwing money away and still nothing. Our first IUI succeeded. They believed I had PCOS and wasn't ovulating, so the clomid and the ovidrel trigger helped me.
Anonymous wrote:Many insurance companies require you to try X number of rounds of IUI before they will pay for IVF. It's often not up to the patient or the doctor.