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First: I decided to go ahead and keep my appointment tomorrow and continue under the delusion that yesterday was Day 1. I did eventually have enough, ahem, well, you know, going on that I think I can make a reasonable claim that yesterday had full flow, even though today it's all gone again. Whatever. Anyway, I think the point is for some reason I feel like I need to be at CD1. It's important to me to feel like I've moved on. For whatever reason, getting my period December 1 didn't make me feel like I'd moved on from the miscarriage… it felt like one step backward, because it was too soon to deal with a new IUI cycle (my hCG had only just bottomed out and I hadn't finished getting my infectious disease testing and all that re-done). Something just isn't sitting right with me.

Second: I'm not quite sure what my deal is or why I can't just get over myself like I should, but I'm really having bad days lately. And nothing is going on to make them especially bad. I just feel like I'm having a rotten day. It's obvious I'm a bit blue… but what to do about it? I don't feel depressed, per se, and I don't think this is anything but a transient feeling, so I don't see the need to go on antidepressants, but gawd I really need to get over myself.

Third: I still can't get out of my head thoughts that we'll just never achieve baby-status. Then I can't stop thinking about our foster son… we've had him for two years and it looks like we'll likely have him for the rest of his childhood and adolescence. He's three now. But… his birth monster could theoretically come back at any time and petition to have him returned to her. And I know that's her theoretical plan (though it's been her theoretical plan for a LONG time and she's never done anything about it). She hasn't seen him in over 8 months, nor has she called, written, sent a card, acknowledged his birthday, worried about him when he's sick (she wouldn't know he's sick if she doesn't call, right?), emailed, asked for a picture, or sent smoke signals in all that time. And I keep thinking about her taking him back and whenever I go down that road, I burst into tears, because MY GOD how could a woman NOT want to know everything about this sweet, precious, beautiful boy? How could a woman NOT want to know how tall he is, what his favorite food is, what his favorite color is, whether he likes dogs, if he's sick, what size he's wearing, how much his personal lexicon has expanded (exponentially, that's for sure)? How could she not spend every waking moment wondering about him? I used to feel sorry for her. I used to imagine how hard it must be to be in her position. Now I think she's selfish and cruel. She says she loves him. She says she wants him back. But she doesn't even know that he needs lactaid milk or soy milk instead of regular milk. And she doesn't know that if you don't read his stories in the right order at bedtime he won't go to bed. And she just… doesn't even appear to care.

Fourth: Tomorrow, being my Day 3 baseline ultrasound and bloodwork, also known as the day I get to resume sticking myself with a needle every night ought to feel like a step toward progress. But it doesn't feel that way. I feel like I'm now just going through the motions because I don't know what else to do with myself. Yeah, that's pretty much it.

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So I saw Yet Another Doctor (YAD) today. I like him a lot and have always appreciated his care and explanations when I’ve seen him in monitoring appointments. He is well respected and is the practice director, I believe, and quite competent. I went in thinking that anything less than agreeing to IVF immediately was unacceptable and knowing that Yet Another IUI (YAIUI) was likely going to be the answer I got. In fact, I got a compromise answer, which I think I can live with.

But I’m getting ahead of myself. I left work at 4:30 and arrived 15 minutes early for my 5pm appointment. I had failed to bring a book and they have the lousiest magazines in the waiting room there, but I had plenty of things with me to keep me busy. I wrote some notes about things I wanted to talk to the doctor about, and read some reports that I’d brought from work, making corrections as I read. My nurse came out around 5pm and told me that YAD was running quite late and he was very sorry. She couldn’t stay long enough to meet with me after the consultation, but she said she’d talked with him about me and given him some history and that he would let her know what needed to be done for my protocol in the morning and she’d call me and talk about it and mail me any forms I need. Fair enough. Mary and I work very well together via phone and mail, so I’m not worried.

At 5:25, YAD called in the patient before me. I knew he was running late, so I wasn’t concerned. I had already called my friend who was picking up J to let her know I’d be later than expected. YAD did something quite unexpected, though… he sent the other patient down to his office and stopped to introduce himself to me and apologized for running late and said it would be about 20 minutes. No problem at all. I was not stressed, but it was exceptionally nice of him to stop and tell me personally what was going on.

At 5:45 YAD came to get me and brought me back to his office. And that’s where the fun begins.

YAD had clearly reviewed my chart very carefully, because he referred back to things that I discussed with Dr. T. at my first visit with her a year and a half ago. It was nice not to have to retell the whole story. Again. He was a little surprised I’d made it so far in the pregnancy before I miscarried, but then, I’ve NEVER been on the good side of fertility odds. He talked a bit about my mother’s history of miscarriage (she had 7 or 8 known miscarriages, and since home pregnancy tests weren’t available back then, she probably had other early miscarriages that she didn’t know about). Other doctors have brushed off my suggestion that I have a clotting panel done to rule out a thrombophilia, saying that unless I’ve got recurrent miscarriages, it’s unlikely to be an issue. YAD, who I think I will soon re-name Dr. Amazing, said right off the bat that the two most common causes of recurrent miscarriage are balanced translocation and thrombophilia. Rather than getting pregnant and miscarrying again, he’d rather rule those out. Good for him.

Well, we already know that I don’t have a balanced translocation because Dr. T. ran a full karyotype on me after my first consult. But doing a clotting panel is a brilliant idea. I’m glad someone thought of it. (You know, like me, half my infertile friends, and now an actual Doctor!) Fine. So now we have a first step:

Step 1: Get bloodwork done. Again.

Now, the next question, of course, was whether he’d consider skipping straight to IVF. I’m not eager to do IVF by any stretch of the imagination. It’s no fun. I’m not looking forward to finding out just how much harder IVF doses of follistim would be on me than the IUI doses. On the other hand, I’m running out of time. Dr. Amazing (yeah, I think that will stick) listened to me and was sensitive to my concern. He reiterated what Dr. S. had said about the fact that since IUI worked, it’s really for the best to return to IUI first. Dr. S. didn’t know about the insurance factor, though, because that all came to light after I met with him. So Dr. Amazing didn’t say anything too shocking there… yes, more prudent to return to IUI. No kidding. I’m 31, can clearly get pregnant eventually via IUI, no need to put my body through all that, right? Right. It certainly can’t be said that this clinic pushes IVF as a way to raise their bottom line.

However, Dr. Amazing was quick to point out that there’s a balance between working with the slow and steady and simple approach and recognizing the practical concern which is that the clock is ticking on my coverage. Therefore, he said, I clearly can’t spend too much time on IUI. He pointed out that squeezing in two IUI cycles takes less time than two IVF cycles since they can be done back to back and IVF cycles can’t be. I voiced my concern that I’ve tended toward very long cycles (case in point: my second IUI was on cycle day 33, when typically you’d expect it around CD 14-16). And he didn’t brush me off, though he could have. He looked back at all four of my cycles and read the doses and notes about response. He remembered having met me in several monitoring appointments when things were moving at a snail’s pace. And after reviewing everything he said what he would do is start me at a higher dose than the last cycle (every cycle I’ve had has started at a progressively higher dose, so this isn’t a surprise). Since they know how I respond to tiny doses and such, he anticipates that they’ll be able to manage mydosing schedule pretty agressively and have no more than 7-14 days of injectibles before the hCG trigger. That’s a far cry from 30 days of injectibles.

The skeptic in me still wasn’t loving losing all that time with YAIUI, but I didn’t say anything. Clearly, though, he understood my anxiety about it, because he drew out a timeline. He suggested going in for pre-provera bloodwork on December 18th and assuming all is looking fine, taking Provera for five days, which would put CD1 around Christmas. Can I just tell you HOW MUCH I LOVE THIS MAN? Only five days of Provera?? That’s awesome. Normally I do 10. Not because 5 days doesn’t work for me… just because some doctors prefer 10 days, some doctors prefer 5 days. I’m not sure if Dr. Amazing noticed me doing my happy dance in my chair, but if he did, he was kind enough not to say anything about it.

Okay, so steps 2 and have come to light:

Step 2: Pre-Provera BW on December 18th.
Step 3: Provera 5 days

If CD1 happens around Xmas… worst case scenario (he did the math, I’m not going to repeat it), if I did two back to back IUIs and then started an IVF cycle, I’d be looking at an egg retrieval in mid-March. If, however, I went straight to IVF right now, I’d be looking at an egg retrieval probably in late January (maybe as late as early February). “So what you’re really losing by doing two IUIs is about six weeks.” Well, when he puts it like that, I can handle that. Six weeks I can handle. 12 weeks I cannot. He acknowledged that my per cycle odds with IVF are likely about double my per cycle odds with IUI. But he reiterated that it’s so much harder on the body that if the simple approach can work, it’s best to explore it.

For a brief second I wondered if I should simply go to another clinic who would do IVF without asking any more questions. But I realized by the time I could be seen by another clinic, do whatever preliminary things they wanted me to do and started an IVF cycle, I could be halfway into an IVF cycle at Shady Hell with the strategy that Dr. Amazing was laying out for me. And certainly, if the IUI works, well, I’ve saved myself a whole lot of trouble, expense, agony, pain, and irritation.

I asked if there would be any advantage to staying on Metformin for longer if I get pregnant again. He said in patients with no history of miscarriage, he takes them off metformin when they get a positive pregnancy test. But with a history of miscarriage, he keeps them on it through the first trimester since there may be a benefit and there doesn’t appear to be much, if any, risk. He believes, however, that the bulk of the benefit of metformin on miscarriage rates occurs before implantation… that it aids in the follicle development process, and some such voodoo and what not. He acknowledges that there’s some possible benefit to metformin in the first trimester, but thinks that metformin mostly does its job before implantation. I can understand this, but I appreciate that he gave me a serious answer. I wasn’t questioning Dr. T taking me off of it. I don’t think that was the cause of the miscarriage. But I figured it couldn’t hurt to stay on it if I get pregnant again, and he agrees. So he’s made a notation in my chart to stay on metformin for the first trimester. That works for me.

All in all, it was a positive appointment. I went into it knowing what answers I wanted, and what answers I was likely to get. I came out of it with a compromise, but also with a doctor who was truly sensitive to the practical side which has me twitching right now.

I love Dr. T and I want to stay her patient. But she’s transitioning to practicing only at the Columbia office, and that’s just too hard for me. I love her. I think she gave me excellent care. She treated me like a human being, like a person who mattered, and like a member of the decision-making team in my care. I felt like I got the same sort of vibe from Dr. Amazing. He’s lovely, really. A nice South African Jewish man. Very soft-spoken. Very clear. Very likeable. And he made me feel like I was listened to.

Okay. So Step 4, assuming steps 1-3 work out…

Step 4: Start IUI#5 Late December/Early January

I can do this.

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So I saw Yet Another Doctor (YAD) today. I like him a lot and have always appreciated his care and explanations when I've seen him in monitoring appointments. He is well respected and is the practice director, I believe, and quite competent. I went in thinking that anything less than agreeing to IVF immediately was unacceptable and knowing that Yet Another IUI (YAIUI) was likely going to be the answer I got. In fact, I got a compromise answer, which I think I can live with.

But I'm getting ahead of myself. I left work at 4:30 and arrived 15 minutes early for my 5pm appointment. I had failed to bring a book and they have the lousiest magazines in the waiting room there, but I had plenty of things with me to keep me busy. I wrote some notes about things I wanted to talk to the doctor about, and read some reports that I'd brought from work, making corrections as I read. My nurse came out around 5pm and told me that YAD was running quite late and he was very sorry. She couldn't stay long enough to meet with me after the consultation, but she said she'd talked with him about me and given him some history and that he would let her know what needed to be done for my protocol in the morning and she'd call me and talk about it and mail me any forms I need. Fair enough. Mary and I work very well together via phone and mail, so I'm not worried.

At 5:25, YAD called in the patient before me. I knew he was running late, so I wasn't concerned. I had already called my friend who was picking up J to let her know I'd be later than expected. YAD did something quite unexpected, though… he sent the other patient down to his office and stopped to introduce himself to me and apologized for running late and said it would be about 20 minutes. No problem at all. I was not stressed, but it was exceptionally nice of him to stop and tell me personally what was going on.

At 5:45 YAD came to get me and brought me back to his office. And that's where the fun begins.

YAD had clearly reviewed my chart very carefully, because he referred back to things that I discussed with Dr. T. at my first visit with her a year and a half ago. It was nice not to have to retell the whole story. Again. He was a little surprised I'd made it so far in the pregnancy before I miscarried, but then, I've NEVER been on the good side of fertility odds. He talked a bit about my mother's history of miscarriage (she had 7 or 8 known miscarriages, and since home pregnancy tests weren't available back then, she probably had other early miscarriages that she didn't know about). Other doctors have brushed off my suggestion that I have a clotting panel done to rule out a thrombophilia, saying that unless I've got recurrent miscarriages, it's unlikely to be an issue. YAD, who I think I will soon re-name Dr. Amazing, said right off the bat that the two most common causes of recurrent miscarriage are balanced translocation and thrombophilia. Rather than getting pregnant and miscarrying again, he'd rather rule those out. Good for him.

Well, we already know that I don't have a balanced translocation because Dr. T. ran a full karyotype on me after my first consult. But doing a clotting panel is a brilliant idea. I'm glad someone thought of it. (You know, like me, half my infertile friends, and now an actual Doctor!) Fine. So now we have a first step:

Step 1: Get bloodwork done. Again.

Now, the next question, of course, was whether he'd consider skipping straight to IVF. I'm not eager to do IVF by any stretch of the imagination. It's no fun. I'm not looking forward to finding out just how much harder IVF doses of follistim would be on me than the IUI doses. On the other hand, I'm running out of time. Dr. Amazing (yeah, I think that will stick) listened to me and was sensitive to my concern. He reiterated what Dr. S. had said about the fact that since IUI worked, it's really for the best to return to IUI first. Dr. S. didn't know about the insurance factor, though, because that all came to light after I met with him. So Dr. Amazing didn't say anything too shocking there… yes, more prudent to return to IUI. No kidding. I'm 31, can clearly get pregnant eventually via IUI, no need to put my body through all that, right? Right. It certainly can't be said that this clinic pushes IVF as a way to raise their bottom line.

However, Dr. Amazing was quick to point out that there's a balance between working with the slow and steady and simple approach and recognizing the practical concern which is that the clock is ticking on my coverage. Therefore, he said, I clearly can't spend too much time on IUI. He pointed out that squeezing in two IUI cycles takes less time than two IVF cycles since they can be done back to back and IVF cycles can't be. I voiced my concern that I've tended toward very long cycles (case in point: my second IUI was on cycle day 33, when typically you'd expect it around CD 14-16). And he didn't brush me off, though he could have. He looked back at all four of my cycles and read the doses and notes about response. He remembered having met me in several monitoring appointments when things were moving at a snail's pace. And after reviewing everything he said what he would do is start me at a higher dose than the last cycle (every cycle I've had has started at a progressively higher dose, so this isn't a surprise). Since they know how I respond to tiny doses and such, he anticipates that they'll be able to manage mydosing schedule pretty agressively and have no more than 7-14 days of injectibles before the hCG trigger. That's a far cry from 30 days of injectibles.

The skeptic in me still wasn't loving losing all that time with YAIUI, but I didn't say anything. Clearly, though, he understood my anxiety about it, because he drew out a timeline. He suggested going in for pre-provera bloodwork on December 18th and assuming all is looking fine, taking Provera for five days, which would put CD1 around Christmas. Can I just tell you HOW MUCH I LOVE THIS MAN? Only five days of Provera?? That's awesome. Normally I do 10. Not because 5 days doesn't work for me… just because some doctors prefer 10 days, some doctors prefer 5 days. I'm not sure if Dr. Amazing noticed me doing my happy dance in my chair, but if he did, he was kind enough not to say anything about it.

Okay, so steps 2 and have come to light:

Step 2: Pre-Provera BW on December 18th.
Step 3: Provera 5 days

If CD1 happens around Xmas… worst case scenario (he did the math, I'm not going to repeat it), if I did two back to back IUIs and then started an IVF cycle, I'd be looking at an egg retrieval in mid-March. If, however, I went straight to IVF right now, I'd be looking at an egg retrieval probably in late January (maybe as late as early February). "So what you're really losing by doing two IUIs is about six weeks." Well, when he puts it like that, I can handle that. Six weeks I can handle. 12 weeks I cannot. He acknowledged that my per cycle odds with IVF are likely about double my per cycle odds with IUI. But he reiterated that it's so much harder on the body that if the simple approach can work, it's best to explore it.

For a brief second I wondered if I should simply go to another clinic who would do IVF without asking any more questions. But I realized by the time I could be seen by another clinic, do whatever preliminary things they wanted me to do and started an IVF cycle, I could be halfway into an IVF cycle at Shady Hell with the strategy that Dr. Amazing was laying out for me. And certainly, if the IUI works, well, I've saved myself a whole lot of trouble, expense, agony, pain, and irritation.

I asked if there would be any advantage to staying on Metformin for longer if I get pregnant again. He said in patients with no history of miscarriage, he takes them off metformin when they get a positive pregnancy test. But with a history of miscarriage, he keeps them on it through the first trimester since there may be a benefit and there doesn't appear to be much, if any, risk. He believes, however, that the bulk of the benefit of metformin on miscarriage rates occurs before implantation… that it aids in the follicle development process, and some such voodoo and what not. He acknowledges that there's some possible benefit to metformin in the first trimester, but thinks that metformin mostly does its job before implantation. I can understand this, but I appreciate that he gave me a serious answer. I wasn't questioning Dr. T taking me off of it. I don't think that was the cause of the miscarriage. But I figured it couldn't hurt to stay on it if I get pregnant again, and he agrees. So he's made a notation in my chart to stay on metformin for the first trimester. That works for me.

All in all, it was a positive appointment. I went into it knowing what answers I wanted, and what answers I was likely to get. I came out of it with a compromise, but also with a doctor who was truly sensitive to the practical side which has me twitching right now.

I love Dr. T and I want to stay her patient. But she's transitioning to practicing only at the Columbia office, and that's just too hard for me. I love her. I think she gave me excellent care. She treated me like a human being, like a person who mattered, and like a member of the decision-making team in my care. I felt like I got the same sort of vibe from Dr. Amazing. He's lovely, really. A nice South African Jewish man. Very soft-spoken. Very clear. Very likeable. And he made me feel like I was listened to.

Okay. So Step 4, assuming steps 1-3 work out…

Step 4: Start IUI#5 Late December/Early January

I can do this.

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You know what? If my body wants to have stupid timing, I'm not just going to sit idly by watching time pass, listening to the tick tock that is driving me mad. Mad I tell you!

Right.

I have made an appointment with Yet Another Doctor (YAD) at Shady Hell. Dr. T is still on maternity leave for a couple weeks, so I decided not to just wait for her, but I don't especially want to go back to Dr. S. Because while he is a fine, fine doctor, I want to mix it up a bit. Plus, I'm not required to stick with one doctor. After all, as they constantly remind us, all the doctors work as a team. This is how they get around the jabs from other clinics about the "revolving door of doctors." Actually, I don't mind the team approach. It leaves me more free to shop around within the clinic.

Anyway, by some miracle, YAD has an appointment available this Thursday! I missed work all of last week, so I thought that wouldn't work for me, because I didn't want to miss yet another day of work (YADW). But he actually had a 5pm appointment available! How unbelievable! I didn't know they even stayed open that late! He must be the only one. I love him already. I mean, I liked him in the first place, having already seen him in several monitoring appointments. But now I lurve him! I don't even have to miss work conspicuously! How fortunate! Hooray.

I know it's a bit ridiculous, but I'm just completely antsy about doing yet another IUI (YAIUI). I know that since it worked once, it's likely to work again. But how many IUIs will it take to get to the point of success again? The individual cycle success rates are around 20-25% at best. There's no reason for me to believe that one more IUI will do it. But I have much better reason to believe that one or two IVFs will yield success. I'm not saying they won't fail too… I'm just saying that the individual cycle odds are much higher. And yes, they suck more, but I can live with that. I want a baby. I want one soon. Because I'm greedy and I want more than one in the long run. So no matter how young I am right now, I'm not getting any younger, and I'm only going to be older when I start this mess again (if I even can, given the current insurance situation).

So am I whining? Yeah. Have I turned into the dreaded pushy patient who doesn't sit idly by listening to the doctors? Yup. Well, that's not entirely fair. If YAD listens to me and gives me a compelling reason not to move on, I will probably listen. The thing is, I do believe that there are compelling medical reasons to stay with IUI. However, I don't think I've heard a compelling reason not to skip to IVF (with the possible exception of the increased risk of OHSS for PCOS patients, but even that's pretty minimal).

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Thing One:
OhmygodOW! My head is killing me and the worst part is that lately when the pain gets really bad, I start to clench my teeth and then I get these shooting pains in my jaw, which probably make the migraine worse, and that makes me clench harder, which makes it hurt more, which makes the migraine worse, and ohmygodow!

I know that teeth clenching is sometimes a sign of anxiety, but I'm not feeling anxiety right now. I'm good. Really. I'm just in a whole lot of pain and I would like for it to stop now, please!

Thing Two:
If my calculations are correct, I should be able to go for my pre-provera lab work on December 14th. Assuming I'm not pregnant that day (HAH!), I'll start taking provera that day, finish December 24th, and start a new IUI cycle around the first of the year. Go me!

Gosh that seems very, very, very far away.

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Thing One:
OhmygodOW! My head is killing me and the worst part is that lately when the pain gets really bad, I start to clench my teeth and then I get these shooting pains in my jaw, which probably make the migraine worse, and that makes me clench harder, which makes it hurt more, which makes the migraine worse, and ohmygodow!

I know that teeth clenching is sometimes a sign of anxiety, but I'm not feeling anxiety right now. I'm good. Really. I'm just in a whole lot of pain and I would like for it to stop now, please!

Thing Two:
If my calculations are correct, I should be able to go for my pre-provera lab work on December 14th. Assuming I'm not pregnant that day (HAH!), I'll start taking provera that day, finish December 24th, and start a new IUI cycle around the first of the year. Go me!

Gosh that seems very, very, very far away.

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I heard back from my nurse regarding how many IUIs the doctor wants me to do before moving on. I thought that at least KNOWING where the next decision point is would take off some stress.

The magic number is three. I understand why, but I'm not entirely thrilled. I know that IVF is a lot more stressful, physically. I get that it's a lot more invasive. I understand that having proven that IUI works for me, there's no medical reason not to continue trying IUIs. I even respect the fact that the clinic isn't being driven purely by the bottom line on their dollars, since they stand to make a lot more money off of me if they move to IVF. I appreciate that the best medical decision to make for a patient is the least invasive, least risky plan which still has a reasonable chance of success. And I know for me right now that's IUI.

BUT I HATE THIS.

Oh well. At least I know where the next decision point is. And by the time I'm halfway through my next IUI cycle, the first of the three being recommended, my regular RE will be back from maternity leave, because it really IS going to take THAT long to get back to a treatment cycle since my hCG refuses to go down. I'm betting I can negotiate with my regular RE more than I could negotiate with Dr. S. In part because I know her, in part because she knows me, and in part because I don't think she's particularly opposed to me moving on to IVF anyway. So maybe that will do it.

Whee!

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