Anonymous wrote:I have been there so many times OP. A history of losses and eventually stopped getting early ultrasounds (declined to see an RE with my last successful pregnancy so I just went in at 8 weeks with my regular OB). My mantra with the early bloodwork and ultrasounds was to trust in my body (and stay off Dr Google). Eventually it worked out for me.
Best of luck. I hope it works out.
Anonymous wrote:Same happened to me. I was 6w5d - no fetal pole. Went back in a week and everything was there and even measuring a few days ahead. I am now 15w. Don't be discouraged!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same happened to me. I was 6w5d - no fetal pole. Went back in a week and everything was there and even measuring a few days ahead. I am now 15w. Don't be discouraged!
Thanks. I hope that's the case. Was your HCG also rising normally prior to the U/S?
Yes. It was doubling as normal.. I had a transvaginal ultrasound but the pole wasn't there or they couldn't find it. When I came back in a week, the doctor said that it was either too early or technician did a crappy job the first time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same happened to me. I was 6w5d - no fetal pole. Went back in a week and everything was there and even measuring a few days ahead. I am now 15w. Don't be discouraged!
Thanks. I hope that's the case. Was your HCG also rising normally prior to the U/S?
Anonymous wrote:I’m so sorry you are going through this.
Anonymous wrote:Same happened to me. I was 6w5d - no fetal pole. Went back in a week and everything was there and even measuring a few days ahead. I am now 15w. Don't be discouraged!
Anonymous wrote:I don't want to scare you unnecessarily, but with an HCG of 50,000 it's virtually inconceivable that you wouldn't see a HB if everything was normal and if your OB practice uses up to day transvaginal u/s equipment. In one NIH study of u/s technology, every patient with HCG of 10,800 had a visible HB. Now, if you're talking about an abdominal u/s or old equipment, possibly a different story... Although I'd still worry about the lack of a fetal pole post-6 weeks.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2660539