mickeyboat
<font color=660099>Nothing like the cream and choc
- Joined
- Oct 14, 2003
- Messages
- 21,318
I don't post on this thread much so I am not a regular. I occasionally offer up some advice. First, find a doctor you are comfortable with. But I will say this, if I had to do it all over again I would have gone straight to IVF. It likely would have saved us tons of heartbreak and lots of money. We had unexplained infertility. We did many months of clomid alone and months of clomid and IUI. Injectables were off my radar (and my RE's as well) due to the higher risk of higher multiple births. Every month that something failed got harder and harder and for me, deepened the feelings on inadequacy about myself and increased my depression. Just something to think about. Good luck in your journey. It took us 3.5 long years to get pregnant but it was worth every painful procedure to get there.
Popping in to say I have to agree with the sentiment here. The months when we were undergoing treatment were some of the most difficult times in my life - Progestin, Clomid, ultrasound after ultrasound, failed cycles, miscarriage, ectopic pregnancy, chemical pregnancy after chemical pregnancy. We were finally able to figure out what was wrong with me (PCOS) and treat it (with Metformin), but all those months were some of the darkest times I can remember. I cried on the way home from work more times than I care to recount.
Of course finances were an issue for us. IVF was not something we could afford, and my medical insurance was paying for a portion of my treatment, so we were not ready for IVF. I was also fairly young (late 20s). But if I had been older, had the funds and had a reasonably good chance of succes, knowing what I know now, I might have jumped right to IVF back then.
Some food for thought. And some hugs to all.
