Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I understand your frustration. I had DOR and faced these kind of repeat failures in my early 30s. The honest truth is that, with a normal sperm report, the problem is in the eggs. It’s not your fault, it’s nothing you did, it’s just that they are the much more fragile reproductive mechanism. If you succed this time, it won’t be the juice, it will be finding your one lucky egg. If it doesn’t, consider moving on to donor eggs. I’m waiting for my two DE children to wake up so I can make them pancakes and take them to school. Move beyond this process and get on with the amazing business of being a parent. Good luck to you.
Exactly all this.
After 6 retrievals (60-72 eggs; 48-58 eggs fertilizing and growing) and zero embryos to use, you need to consider the possibility that it might be the health of the eggs. Good luck to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The doctor actually suggested the 7 day thing because it will (not medical terms lol) turn the sperm over so they are the newer younger ones.
My husband eats like shit. He thinks he's the man because his sperm analysis was pretty good. But, he literally doesn't eat a vegetable. He eats meats and starches--god forbid the waiter forgets to ring in no parsley on the plate. I figure this could change things. He is two days in and says he already feels different.
We did PICSI the last retrieval and I think that helped too! What's co-culture?
Co-culture is when all the embryos develop together in one dish. Supposed to help them maintain energy for growth.
That's not what co-culture is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The doctor actually suggested the 7 day thing because it will (not medical terms lol) turn the sperm over so they are the newer younger ones.
My husband eats like shit. He thinks he's the man because his sperm analysis was pretty good. But, he literally doesn't eat a vegetable. He eats meats and starches--god forbid the waiter forgets to ring in no parsley on the plate. I figure this could change things. He is two days in and says he already feels different.
We did PICSI the last retrieval and I think that helped too! What's co-culture?
Co-culture is when all the embryos develop together in one dish. Supposed to help them maintain energy for growth.
Anonymous wrote:The doctor actually suggested the 7 day thing because it will (not medical terms lol) turn the sperm over so they are the newer younger ones.
My husband eats like shit. He thinks he's the man because his sperm analysis was pretty good. But, he literally doesn't eat a vegetable. He eats meats and starches--god forbid the waiter forgets to ring in no parsley on the plate. I figure this could change things. He is two days in and says he already feels different.
We did PICSI the last retrieval and I think that helped too! What's co-culture?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you tried PICSI and co-culture?
FWIW, I have the same problem. My RE said he doesn’t agree with the thinking that after Day 3 it’s the sperm causing the demise of the embryos. If it’s an issue with mitochondrial energy, then it seems most people focus on taking ubiquinol.
L-carnatine is also a good idea. Google "mito cocktail" for a list of mito support supplements. Whether you choose ubiquinol or CoQ10, look for a water-soluble form for better absorption.
Anonymous wrote:Have you tried PICSI and co-culture?
FWIW, I have the same problem. My RE said he doesn’t agree with the thinking that after Day 3 it’s the sperm causing the demise of the embryos. If it’s an issue with mitochondrial energy, then it seems most people focus on taking ubiquinol.