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Archive for the ‘my stupid body’ Category

Well, my E2 level didn’t go up as expected, which probably means those two gorgeous follicles aren’t as gorgeous as they look. Typical for me. Whatever.

My E2 level was 98.3 (down 0.7 from Tuesday, but essentially that means it’s stabilized, not that it’s gone anywhere). My P4 level was 0.75. So I’m not gearing to ovulate any second as SuperDoc had feared, and I get to stay on the Lupron through the weekend and return on Monday (Lucky Me!!). The likelihood is still that I will ultimately end up cancelling this cycle, but I guess we have to give it the old college try, right?

Of course, right.

Anonymous asked if I could try the old fashioned way since I’ve got those two follicles hanging out – there are a couple answers to that question:

1. The first is, the two follicles are both on the left side, which was the tube that was blocked in my last HSG. Assuming that wasn’t a fluke – that would preclude them being useful.
2. Assuming the blocked tube WAS a fluke, I’m not doing anything at this point that involves two follicles on purpose. If you think I’m being extreme, that’s fine, but I’m dead serious. I am petrified of ending up with twins – my perinatologist scared the crap out of me in December when I saw him and he made it clear that a twin pregnancy is not an option for me.

Tagging along with that question, Anonymous asked if, in light of this development, whether it would make sense for me to try on my own for the next cycle and see if I ovulate all on my lonesome. A few thoughts:

1. If anovulation alone were my sole problem, sure, maybe. But it’s not.
2. If I were uninsured and needed time to pull together money for a cycle, sure. But this cycle is already paid for. My portion of this cycle has already been paid for, it’s just being deferred until whenever we DO get started, so the money has already been set aside.
3. I ovulated every single month from the time my HOMs were 6 weeks old until they were about a year old. Then I started spreading out to about every 6 weeks. I used no birth control. I even did my best to, um, make the best of our… timing. I did not get pregnant in that entire time.
4. If there were something inherently healthier about getting pregnant spontaneously vs. via IVF, then sure, maybe there would be some advantage to waiting another month just to see. But aside from slightly lower birth weights in IVF babies (even singletons), there doesn’t appear to be any inherent health differences in IVF babies vs. spontaneously conceived babies. So why wait?
5. If I *am* ovulating on my own, I can just as easily TTC spontaneously later, after I don’t have insurance covering my cycles, as I can right now. So what’s the difference?
6. What SuperDoc implied to me was that it is, oddly enough, the Lupron itself responsible for my response so far. His words were that sometimes in women you get the opposite reaction to the Lupron than what you’re hoping to achieve. Note, I’m not so sure about this one, because, honestly? I sort of started tuning him out right around the time that he started making fun of me for always being opposite girl.

Anywhozit, it’s just more fun for me. A girl’s gotta get her Lupron fix somehow, right?

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Yeah, um, hello? Stupid body. Per SuperDoc, “Sometimes on Lupron you get the opposite effect that you’re hoping for… What I was afraid of last time was that you’re ovulating on your own despite the Lupron.” Meanwhile, M (Sonographer Extraordinaire) was frowning. “She’s thickening…” (referring to my endometrium, damn that endometrium!)

Seriously, how does this happen? I can’t manage to ovulate on my own without the ovary-suppressing Lupron. Now I’m using Lupron to beat my perky ovaries into submission and what happens?? Goodness!

So instead of my endometrium staying wafer thin, it has thickened by .4mm. That may not seem like a lot to you, but it’s enough to make my doctor frown and the student that was with him shrugged her shoulders in exasperation also. Oh, and my beaten-into-submission-non-perky-ovaries?

Riiiiiiiiggghhhhhtttt!!!

Two, count ’em, Two perfectly formed, gorgeous follicles. 12.4 and 14.7 mm follicles.

No numbers back on the estrogen level yet, but odds are good that it’s gone up, not down. So the answer is to trigger with the hCG shot and then re-start Lupron 9 days later and then I’ll come back for a re-check 2 weeks later. So we’re looking at about a 3 week delay. Whee!

On the other hand, did I really want another summer pregnancy anyway?

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Thrush. AGAIN.

Can I just say how truly SICK of having thrush I am? This is, I think, the third, maybe fourth, time that I’ve had it in the five months that I’ve been breastfeeding. ENOUGH IS ENOUGH. It is quite possibly the most painful, but most definitely the most unpleasant, thing I could possibly ask to experience. It hurts like hell, I’m bleeding, I cry nearly every time I nurse my babies, and pumping isn’t any more pleasant than nursing, so it’s not like I can just pump and forgo nursing for a bit.

Gah!

It’s not enough to make me stop nursing, but ohmygodpleasemakeitstopseriouslyplease!

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Thrush. AGAIN.

Can I just say how truly SICK of having thrush I am? This is, I think, the third, maybe fourth, time that I've had it in the five months that I've been breastfeeding. ENOUGH IS ENOUGH. It is quite possibly the most painful, but most definitely the most unpleasant, thing I could possibly ask to experience. It hurts like hell, I'm bleeding, I cry nearly every time I nurse my babies, and pumping isn't any more pleasant than nursing, so it's not like I can just pump and forgo nursing for a bit.

Gah!

It's not enough to make me stop nursing, but ohmygodpleasemakeitstopseriouslyplease!

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You’re pregnant with triplets? Well, you’re obviously not going to breastfeed them, you’re going to spend a fortune on formula!

I heard that a lot when I was pregnant. Over and over, I heard unsolicited opinions from people telling me that there was no way I would ever be able to breastfeed triplets. It’s not possible, they would say. I didn’t even bother trying with my twins, I would hear. Why would you even think about it? You’ll never do anything but feed them all day long if you try! the incredulous voices would cry. They’ll be preemies. You can’t breastfeed preemies, you know.

I never expected to be the militant type…certainly not about breastfeeding, and certainly not about breastfeeding triplets. But these constant, unsolicited words of discouragement absolutely convinced me that I was going to do everything I could to breastfeed my babies, at least for the first few weeks. My premature babies were going to NEED the benefit of my colostrum and my milk for as long as I could give it to them, and I knew it wouldn’t be forever, and even during my pregnancy, I mourned the loss of the ability to just KNOW that I could breastfeed with reckless abandon, but I set a modest goal. I wanted to get 3-4 weeks of exclusive breast milk into them if I could. And if I could do that, well, we’d go for 6 weeks and after that, I would give myself permission to supplement with formula, because it would be a miracle if I made it that far.

The babies did get a little bit of formula in their first few days. My colostrum was mixed with a few cc’s of preemie formula to make up for lack of volume, but they DID get my precious drops as well. In their first 3 days they received a couple ounces of formula between the three of them. TOTAL. And then I started producing enough to feed them exclusively my milk. It helped that Abby started out with 2.5 cc feeds and Ellie and Sam started out with 4cc feeds, so the demand wasn’t huge from the start. They were still getting the bulk of their nutrition through a TPN at that point while they figured out the whole suck/swallow/breathe thing.

And on Day 4, my husband asked the nurse how long it would be before I could try actually breastfeeding my babies, and she checked with the doctor and got permission for me to breastfeed them. She helped me get set up with Sam and showed me how to hold him and support him, and I fretted about whether he’d be able to latch, but he did! He didn’t latch on for very long, but he definitely knew what to do and figured it out pretty quickly. He tired very quickly, so we gave him a feeding through his gavage tube afterward, but it was miraculous. I had no idea how amazing an experience nursing my baby could be until that moment. It felt strange and awkward and perfect and amazing all at the same time. My tiny little three and a half pound baby knew what to do and he nursed like a little champ! How incredible. And then it was time for Ellie’s feeding, but she was having a harder time, so we gave her a gavage feeding while she was nursing so that she could associate a full tummy with mommy’s breast…a technique we employed a lot with her in the NICU, actually. I was shocked at how exhausted I was after nursing just two tiny babies. Abby was still too small to try to nurse, so when her turn came, I held her skin-to-skin while giving her a gavage feeding, and then I pumped afterward while gazing at my beautiful two and a half pound angel and had the best production I’d ever had before. It was amazing to see that it was all true… being around your babies really DOES improve milk supply. Who knew?

And that was my first day breastfeeding my babies. The next day, believe it or not, I was able to breastfeed all three of them, even Abby, and I breastfed them at least twice a day every day until they left the NICU and I pumped 8-12 times per day, every day. And then, on day 24, they came home. My once champion breastfeeders suddenly would not breastfeed anymore. None of them! I continued to pump 8-10 times per day, fed them expressed milk, attempted to breastfeed them at every feed, and never slept, because of the constant fight to get them to remember how to breastfeed. I thought all was lost. I developed my second clogged duct and was in misery until it resolved. And then… a few days later I woke up with painful, red, tender, swelling in my breast, a high fever, chills, flu-like symptoms… you guessed it, mastitis! The way to get through mastitis, I’m told, is to let your baby nurse as much as possible, but my babies wouldn’t help me, so I gave up for a few days and just pumped, pumped, pumped, pumped and pumped some more. And gradually, it got better, and I was able to see the light at the end of the tunnel.

I thought there was no way my babies would ever return to nursing… but on the advice of a nurse, I got some nipple shields, even though lots of people told me that nipple shields would only lead to nipple confusion. Seriously…these babies were drinking from bottles, so how much more confused could they get? And lo and behold… suddenly, Ellie was nursing. Then Sam was nursing. Only Abby remained skeptical. She would latch occasionally, but would usually scream her head off at the mere mention of breastfeeding (er, that might be a SLIGHT exaggeration). And eventually I was able to rid myself of the nipple shields all together and I had two, perfectly normal nursing babies and one baby who would not nurse, but who still received only expressed breast milk.

I called the pump my FOURTH baby, because I spent as much time with her (I named her Maggie) as I did with my three babies, in order to make sure I always had enough milk for Abby. And pump, I did. I was able to reduce to 6-8 times per day without changing the amount I was producing, since I was nursing so much, and I still got lots of snuggle time with my beautiful Abby. Even today I still try to give her the opportunity to nurse occasionally, but she still hates it. She’s got a tongue-tie, and has a really hard time latching, so it’s not shocking that she won’t nurse, but it’s a little disappointing.

My babies will be five months old next week and today, for the first time, I’m faced with the need to supplement them with formula. I’ve finished my stash of milk in the freezer. And I’m pumping like mad. But I’m producing 40-45 ounces of milk per day in addition to whatever they get via nursing directly, and the three babies together are eating 52 ounces of milk per day, so I’m falling a little bit short on the supply. I’ve tried everything… domperidone, fenugreek, blessed thistle, some weird herbal concoction, reglan, oatmeal, breast compression before and during pumping… but I just can’t produce more than I’m producing now, without adding additional pumping sessions in each day. I’m pumping about 6-7 times per day right now, and if I pump any more than that, I’ll probably lose my job.

A piece of me feels like a big, giant failure, even though I’m obviously not going to STOP breastfeeding and pumping at this point. I’m not sure when my 6 week breastfeeding goal turned into a 3 month goal, or when that 3 month goal turned into a 6 month goal, or when that 6 month goal turned into a 6-month-adjusted goal, but I know now that I’ll breastfeed as long as I can, as much as I can until they’re a year old, and then I’ll work on weaning them before moving on to my next round of fertility treatments. I’m not getting any younger, but I do want at least one more chance at this pregnancy thing. And I want my children to have lots of siblings. I had only one and he loathes me, so I’ve been determined my whole life to make sure that my children are surrounded with a big brood. They don’t all have to like each other (though that would be nice), but at least the odds are good that they’ll each find SOMEONE to love in the family.

But I digress. I do feel like I’m failing my children, though I don’t feel that way toward any other woman who feeds their babies formula. I’ve told countless mothers of multiples that they should not ever beat themselves up over their breastfeeding decisions because it’s HARD, and sometimes darned near impossible. And I know I should celebrate my five months of accomplishment, rather than focusing on my failure to continue the same pace, but I just can’t get past it. I know very few women who made it through five months of feeding triplets only breast milk… so I should be thrilled, right?

But then this morning, the first morning that I was guaranteed that the babies weren’t going to have enough of my own milk for the day, the guilt poured on. I thought it would be wise to try giving Abby a bottle of formula while there was still breastmilk in the fridge, just in case she didn’t like it. After all… what would we do if she refused it and there were no other options? So when the nanny arrived this morning, I handed her a bottle of formula (no way was I going to be the one to give her the yucky stuff). Sure enough, Abby screamed her little head off. My poor persnickety Abby wanted NOTHING to do with the formula. NOTHING. I thought maybe she just wasn’t hungry, but we gave her a bottle of breastmilk and, sure enough, she gobbled it right up. Sigh. Sam, fortunately, had no problem drinking the formula, little piggy that he is. Next week, I’ll try making 50/50 bottles and see what happens with Abby, but oh gosh, my heart was breaking knowing how much she hated the taste of the formula! I was completely failing my child! Thank heavens I tried it out while there were still options!

In a couple months, we’ll be starting them with some solids, and eventually their consumption of milk each day will go down slightly, so I may actually be able to return to being able to feed them 100% breast milk. But for now, each of them will probably get 2-4 ounces of formula each day. And I know that’s still pretty amazing on my part. And I know there’s nothing to be done, and no way for me to get around it.

And once again, I feel like a failure. Once again, I feel like my body is betraying me. It’s infertility all over again, even though I know that logically, this is the polar opposite of infertility. Somehow, I simply MUST make myself okay with supplementing, because there’s really nothing wrong with it. It won’t hurt my babies. They’ll still grow and they’ll still be healthy. I’ll still be able to fortify for the extra calories that Ellie needs. I’ll still be able to breast feed any time I’m home and feed them breast milk most of the time. 2-4 ounces per day just isn’t the end of the world, so why do I feel like the world’s worst mommy?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Also, a quick update on Ellie… at her appointment yesterday she hadn’t gained any weight, but on Wednesday we were able to convince her to start taking 120 ml bottles, so we’re hoping another week of that will be enough to boost her back toward gaining. Bigger babies need more calories to grow, of course, so hopefully that’s all that’s going on. For the moment, she is a bit of an enigma, but she’s definitely improving. She’s more alert, and smiling and cooing almost as much as Abby now. She looks good, but is still far more sleepy than the other two. We’ll go back in a week to see how she’s improved.

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You're pregnant with triplets? Well, you're obviously not going to breastfeed them, you're going to spend a fortune on formula!

I heard that a lot when I was pregnant. Over and over, I heard unsolicited opinions from people telling me that there was no way I would ever be able to breastfeed triplets. It's not possible, they would say. I didn't even bother trying with my twins, I would hear. Why would you even think about it? You'll never do anything but feed them all day long if you try! the incredulous voices would cry. They'll be preemies. You can't breastfeed preemies, you know.

I never expected to be the militant type…certainly not about breastfeeding, and certainly not about breastfeeding triplets. But these constant, unsolicited words of discouragement absolutely convinced me that I was going to do everything I could to breastfeed my babies, at least for the first few weeks. My premature babies were going to NEED the benefit of my colostrum and my milk for as long as I could give it to them, and I knew it wouldn't be forever, and even during my pregnancy, I mourned the loss of the ability to just KNOW that I could breastfeed with reckless abandon, but I set a modest goal. I wanted to get 3-4 weeks of exclusive breast milk into them if I could. And if I could do that, well, we'd go for 6 weeks and after that, I would give myself permission to supplement with formula, because it would be a miracle if I made it that far.

The babies did get a little bit of formula in their first few days. My colostrum was mixed with a few cc's of preemie formula to make up for lack of volume, but they DID get my precious drops as well. In their first 3 days they received a couple ounces of formula between the three of them. TOTAL. And then I started producing enough to feed them exclusively my milk. It helped that Abby started out with 2.5 cc feeds and Ellie and Sam started out with 4cc feeds, so the demand wasn't huge from the start. They were still getting the bulk of their nutrition through a TPN at that point while they figured out the whole suck/swallow/breathe thing.

And on Day 4, my husband asked the nurse how long it would be before I could try actually breastfeeding my babies, and she checked with the doctor and got permission for me to breastfeed them. She helped me get set up with Sam and showed me how to hold him and support him, and I fretted about whether he'd be able to latch, but he did! He didn't latch on for very long, but he definitely knew what to do and figured it out pretty quickly. He tired very quickly, so we gave him a feeding through his gavage tube afterward, but it was miraculous. I had no idea how amazing an experience nursing my baby could be until that moment. It felt strange and awkward and perfect and amazing all at the same time. My tiny little three and a half pound baby knew what to do and he nursed like a little champ! How incredible. And then it was time for Ellie's feeding, but she was having a harder time, so we gave her a gavage feeding while she was nursing so that she could associate a full tummy with mommy's breast…a technique we employed a lot with her in the NICU, actually. I was shocked at how exhausted I was after nursing just two tiny babies. Abby was still too small to try to nurse, so when her turn came, I held her skin-to-skin while giving her a gavage feeding, and then I pumped afterward while gazing at my beautiful two and a half pound angel and had the best production I'd ever had before. It was amazing to see that it was all true… being around your babies really DOES improve milk supply. Who knew?

And that was my first day breastfeeding my babies. The next day, believe it or not, I was able to breastfeed all three of them, even Abby, and I breastfed them at least twice a day every day until they left the NICU and I pumped 8-12 times per day, every day. And then, on day 24, they came home. My once champion breastfeeders suddenly would not breastfeed anymore. None of them! I continued to pump 8-10 times per day, fed them expressed milk, attempted to breastfeed them at every feed, and never slept, because of the constant fight to get them to remember how to breastfeed. I thought all was lost. I developed my second clogged duct and was in misery until it resolved. And then… a few days later I woke up with painful, red, tender, swelling in my breast, a high fever, chills, flu-like symptoms… you guessed it, mastitis! The way to get through mastitis, I'm told, is to let your baby nurse as much as possible, but my babies wouldn't help me, so I gave up for a few days and just pumped, pumped, pumped, pumped and pumped some more. And gradually, it got better, and I was able to see the light at the end of the tunnel.

I thought there was no way my babies would ever return to nursing… but on the advice of a nurse, I got some nipple shields, even though lots of people told me that nipple shields would only lead to nipple confusion. Seriously…these babies were drinking from bottles, so how much more confused could they get? And lo and behold… suddenly, Ellie was nursing. Then Sam was nursing. Only Abby remained skeptical. She would latch occasionally, but would usually scream her head off at the mere mention of breastfeeding (er, that might be a SLIGHT exaggeration). And eventually I was able to rid myself of the nipple shields all together and I had two, perfectly normal nursing babies and one baby who would not nurse, but who still received only expressed breast milk.

I called the pump my FOURTH baby, because I spent as much time with her (I named her Maggie) as I did with my three babies, in order to make sure I always had enough milk for Abby. And pump, I did. I was able to reduce to 6-8 times per day without changing the amount I was producing, since I was nursing so much, and I still got lots of snuggle time with my beautiful Abby. Even today I still try to give her the opportunity to nurse occasionally, but she still hates it. She's got a tongue-tie, and has a really hard time latching, so it's not shocking that she won't nurse, but it's a little disappointing.

My babies will be five months old next week and today, for the first time, I'm faced with the need to supplement them with formula. I've finished my stash of milk in the freezer. And I'm pumping like mad. But I'm producing 40-45 ounces of milk per day in addition to whatever they get via nursing directly, and the three babies together are eating 52 ounces of milk per day, so I'm falling a little bit short on the supply. I've tried everything… domperidone, fenugreek, blessed thistle, some weird herbal concoction, reglan, oatmeal, breast compression before and during pumping… but I just can't produce more than I'm producing now, without adding additional pumping sessions in each day. I'm pumping about 6-7 times per day right now, and if I pump any more than that, I'll probably lose my job.

A piece of me feels like a big, giant failure, even though I'm obviously not going to STOP breastfeeding and pumping at this point. I'm not sure when my 6 week breastfeeding goal turned into a 3 month goal, or when that 3 month goal turned into a 6 month goal, or when that 6 month goal turned into a 6-month-adjusted goal, but I know now that I'll breastfeed as long as I can, as much as I can until they're a year old, and then I'll work on weaning them before moving on to my next round of fertility treatments. I'm not getting any younger, but I do want at least one more chance at this pregnancy thing. And I want my children to have lots of siblings. I had only one and he loathes me, so I've been determined my whole life to make sure that my children are surrounded with a big brood. They don't all have to like each other (though that would be nice), but at least the odds are good that they'll each find SOMEONE to love in the family.

But I digress. I do feel like I'm failing my children, though I don't feel that way toward any other woman who feeds their babies formula. I've told countless mothers of multiples that they should not ever beat themselves up over their breastfeeding decisions because it's HARD, and sometimes darned near impossible. And I know I should celebrate my five months of accomplishment, rather than focusing on my failure to continue the same pace, but I just can't get past it. I know very few women who made it through five months of feeding triplets only breast milk… so I should be thrilled, right?

But then this morning, the first morning that I was guaranteed that the babies weren't going to have enough of my own milk for the day, the guilt poured on. I thought it would be wise to try giving Abby a bottle of formula while there was still breastmilk in the fridge, just in case she didn't like it. After all… what would we do if she refused it and there were no other options? So when the nanny arrived this morning, I handed her a bottle of formula (no way was I going to be the one to give her the yucky stuff). Sure enough, Abby screamed her little head off. My poor persnickety Abby wanted NOTHING to do with the formula. NOTHING. I thought maybe she just wasn't hungry, but we gave her a bottle of breastmilk and, sure enough, she gobbled it right up. Sigh. Sam, fortunately, had no problem drinking the formula, little piggy that he is. Next week, I'll try making 50/50 bottles and see what happens with Abby, but oh gosh, my heart was breaking knowing how much she hated the taste of the formula! I was completely failing my child! Thank heavens I tried it out while there were still options!

In a couple months, we'll be starting them with some solids, and eventually their consumption of milk each day will go down slightly, so I may actually be able to return to being able to feed them 100% breast milk. But for now, each of them will probably get 2-4 ounces of formula each day. And I know that's still pretty amazing on my part. And I know there's nothing to be done, and no way for me to get around it.

And once again, I feel like a failure. Once again, I feel like my body is betraying me. It's infertility all over again, even though I know that logically, this is the polar opposite of infertility. Somehow, I simply MUST make myself okay with supplementing, because there's really nothing wrong with it. It won't hurt my babies. They'll still grow and they'll still be healthy. I'll still be able to fortify for the extra calories that Ellie needs. I'll still be able to breast feed any time I'm home and feed them breast milk most of the time. 2-4 ounces per day just isn't the end of the world, so why do I feel like the world's worst mommy?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Also, a quick update on Ellie… at her appointment yesterday she hadn't gained any weight, but on Wednesday we were able to convince her to start taking 120 ml bottles, so we're hoping another week of that will be enough to boost her back toward gaining. Bigger babies need more calories to grow, of course, so hopefully that's all that's going on. For the moment, she is a bit of an enigma, but she's definitely improving. She's more alert, and smiling and cooing almost as much as Abby now. She looks good, but is still far more sleepy than the other two. We'll go back in a week to see how she's improved.

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So while I was in the hospital I was on Indocin for 24 hours. This isn’t a drug that can be taken long-term in pregnancy because it reduces the amount of amniotic fluid, which is bad (and after 31 or 32 weeks causes bigger problems), but for short term use, it works quite well as a tocolytic, as I’ve discovered a couple of times now. So, while I was in the hospital, my contractions went down to only a few per hour, which is great.

I didn’t bother to monitor the night I got home, because I figured I’d been monitored enough all day. And the next morning (Tuesday morning) I had zero contractions. This isn’t shocking, considering that I still had some Indocin in my system. (Though, honestly, I can hardly remember another time that I had zero contractions in an hour.)

Tuesday night, however, I had fifteen contractions in an hour. The Indocin, clearly, was no longer in my system. (I had my uber-husband look up the half-life of Indocin, which turns out to be 4.5 hours, so that worked out about right) So I had to give myself a demand dose of terbutaline and remonitor (shock of shocks). And I had 10 contractions. So the nurse said “Well, should I have you remonitor again, or just call the doctor?” Uh, yeah, let’s think about this. It was 10:30pm. If I remonitored, by the time I heard back from her it would be close to midnight, by which point if I still had that many contractions, they’d be calling and waking up a doctor. No thank you. So I told her to call the doctor. In an ideal world, frankly, I would have called the doctor, but for whatever reason the after-hours nurses prefer to speak to the doctors directly, so whatever. I suggested that she mention that I do have Indocin at home and ask if I could take that for another 24 hours.

Dr. R. was on call again (she was the doctor on call who admitted me on Sunday), so she knew that my fetal fibronectin on Sunday had been negative, knew what my cervical length was, and knew what the orders in the hospital had been off the top of her head, so she was okay with me taking the Indocin for 24 hours, and was otherwise unconcerned. For the record, I wasn’t concerned either. This is just what I do at this point. I contract. A lot. Often. But, admittedly, if it had kept up at that rate, there was no way I was going to get any sleep, because it was making me pretty darned uncomfortable. And so…. I went back on Indocin for 24 hours last night. Easy enough.

And this morning I had 3 contractions. And tonight? One contraction. Gee, do you think this stuff works? I think so. Shame I can’t take it continuously.

Edit: Jennifer from Arkansas asked You’ve posted about the side effects of the terbutaline (sp?) as far as how it makes you feel. What is the indocin like? Any immediate sife effects to speak of? (other than the fact that it ROCKS in taking care of the contractions!!)

Well, all drugs have a side effect profile, of course, but the short answer is that Indocin doesn’t really have any negative side effects for me. Indocin (or indomethacin) is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) like Aleve or a variety of other drugs. Normally NSAIDs are contraindicated in pregnancy, but obviously there are controlled exceptions like this one, but I wouldn’t recommend taking an NSAID just for fun while pregnant. Anywhozit, the main side effect for me is that it helps my headaches ever so slightly. It can also cause stomach pains or upset, so it’s recommended that one take it with food or Tums, which I find is helpful, but rarely remember to do. (I never found that Aleve hurt or upset my stomach, but I do find that the Indocin does a bit… which is funny because I took a LOT of Aleve before I was pregnant and the Indocin isn’t any more potent) Anywhozit, that’s pretty much it. I don’t think there are any other major side effects.

I’m also now taking the Nifedipine every day which has a few side effects itself, most notably it is a beta blocker, so it can lower blood pressure (which isn’t a bad thing, since Terbutaline raises blood pressure). The lower blood pressure can also lead to dizziness and whatnot, but that hasn’t been a problem for me. Yet.

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So while I was in the hospital I was on Indocin for 24 hours. This isn't a drug that can be taken long-term in pregnancy because it reduces the amount of amniotic fluid, which is bad (and after 31 or 32 weeks causes bigger problems), but for short term use, it works quite well as a tocolytic, as I've discovered a couple of times now. So, while I was in the hospital, my contractions went down to only a few per hour, which is great.

I didn't bother to monitor the night I got home, because I figured I'd been monitored enough all day. And the next morning (Tuesday morning) I had zero contractions. This isn't shocking, considering that I still had some Indocin in my system. (Though, honestly, I can hardly remember another time that I had zero contractions in an hour.)

Tuesday night, however, I had fifteen contractions in an hour. The Indocin, clearly, was no longer in my system. (I had my uber-husband look up the half-life of Indocin, which turns out to be 4.5 hours, so that worked out about right) So I had to give myself a demand dose of terbutaline and remonitor (shock of shocks). And I had 10 contractions. So the nurse said "Well, should I have you remonitor again, or just call the doctor?" Uh, yeah, let's think about this. It was 10:30pm. If I remonitored, by the time I heard back from her it would be close to midnight, by which point if I still had that many contractions, they'd be calling and waking up a doctor. No thank you. So I told her to call the doctor. In an ideal world, frankly, I would have called the doctor, but for whatever reason the after-hours nurses prefer to speak to the doctors directly, so whatever. I suggested that she mention that I do have Indocin at home and ask if I could take that for another 24 hours.

Dr. R. was on call again (she was the doctor on call who admitted me on Sunday), so she knew that my fetal fibronectin on Sunday had been negative, knew what my cervical length was, and knew what the orders in the hospital had been off the top of her head, so she was okay with me taking the Indocin for 24 hours, and was otherwise unconcerned. For the record, I wasn't concerned either. This is just what I do at this point. I contract. A lot. Often. But, admittedly, if it had kept up at that rate, there was no way I was going to get any sleep, because it was making me pretty darned uncomfortable. And so…. I went back on Indocin for 24 hours last night. Easy enough.

And this morning I had 3 contractions. And tonight? One contraction. Gee, do you think this stuff works? I think so. Shame I can't take it continuously.

Edit: Jennifer from Arkansas asked You've posted about the side effects of the terbutaline (sp?) as far as how it makes you feel. What is the indocin like? Any immediate sife effects to speak of? (other than the fact that it ROCKS in taking care of the contractions!!)

Well, all drugs have a side effect profile, of course, but the short answer is that Indocin doesn't really have any negative side effects for me. Indocin (or indomethacin) is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) like Aleve or a variety of other drugs. Normally NSAIDs are contraindicated in pregnancy, but obviously there are controlled exceptions like this one, but I wouldn't recommend taking an NSAID just for fun while pregnant. Anywhozit, the main side effect for me is that it helps my headaches ever so slightly. It can also cause stomach pains or upset, so it's recommended that one take it with food or Tums, which I find is helpful, but rarely remember to do. (I never found that Aleve hurt or upset my stomach, but I do find that the Indocin does a bit… which is funny because I took a LOT of Aleve before I was pregnant and the Indocin isn't any more potent) Anywhozit, that's pretty much it. I don't think there are any other major side effects.

I'm also now taking the Nifedipine every day which has a few side effects itself, most notably it is a beta blocker, so it can lower blood pressure (which isn't a bad thing, since Terbutaline raises blood pressure). The lower blood pressure can also lead to dizziness and whatnot, but that hasn't been a problem for me. Yet.

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Many thanks to my pinch-hitter husband for posting for me this morning. As he said, I was sent to the hospital for monitoring last night after my 4:30 monitoring session had 15 contractions in an hour. Suffice it to say, it was a fun day all around.

So… off to labor and delivery triage we went. Where we quickly discovered I was still having far too many contractions. The nurses were great, the hospital was boring. My doctor called after a bit to suggest some options. We settled on trying 3 doses of Nifedipine over an hour and half and if I was still over threshold after that, she’d admit me over night for observation, get me on Indocin for 24 hours, and check my cervix in the morning and probably let me go after that.

Three doses of Nifedipine later, and just as many contractions, and there was a room with my name on it. And so, my darling husband went home to get some things for me, including (bless him) a toothbrush/toothpaste which hadn’t even occurred to me, but BOY DID I LOVE HAVING THAT! And the fun began. They got me back on the monitors… three fetal monitors and a contraction monitor. Now the ironic thing about that set up is that to keep the fetal monitors in the right place, I had to be laying on my back. But that made the contractions worse. But rolling onto my side disturbed the fetal monitors too much. Finally around midnight, the nurses called my doctor and asked if they could just leave the contraction monitor only on so that I could get more comfortable and hopefully sleep. At 1:30, they came in and took off the three fetal monitors, I rolled onto my side and went to sleep. At 4am I got my second dose of Indocin. At 6am, I woke up and my day started… for the last couple hours I’d only had a couple contractions. Miracle! (Indocin works well for me…it’s just that it can’t be taken long term)

Anywhozit, around 8 I was brought the world’s most disgusting breakfast (kosher hospital food… never a good thing… ick!). and a bit before 9 I was taken down for an ultrasound and to meet with my doctor. My cervix was, at its shortest, 1.7cm… shorter than last week, but not so much shorter than it was 5 weeks ago when this whole bed rest crap started in the first place. She recommended raising the basal rate on my terbutaline pump, adding Nifedipine XR again on top of the terbutaline, and having a fetal fibronectin test done weekly along with the already-scheduled weekly cervical measurements.

She was fully prepared to let me go home and asked if I had any questions. And I said, well, I wasn’t trying to be picky or anything… but I was doing the 4x daily finger sticks for blood sugar testing because I couldn’t take the three hour test, and since I hadn’t had a single blood sugar reading out of the range of completely utterly normal, could I maybe cut back on the number of times I had to test…but I was willing to do whatever she wanted me to. She said I could just do it twice a day if I wanted, but forewarned me that as I got later into the pregnancy, they’d probably still make me return to four times a day anyway. No problem. She went off to type up the ultrasound report and then popped back in and said, “Hey, since you’re in-house right now anyway, do you want to just DO the three-hour glucola test?” Uh, YEAH! Except I’d already eaten breakfast. No problem. I had eaten breakfast at 8, so they’d do the test at 4 and I could go home after that, unless I’d feel better staying another night (NO THANK YOU).

And so… I spent the most boring day of my life in the hospital today, internet-less, bored, with limited things to read or do. But on Friday, I should know whether I have to keep finger-sticking myself! And I was home at 8pm tonight. Safe and sound. All is well, the babies are all healthy and fine. The contractions are better for the moment. And life is good because I have my precious internet back. Gawd I’m an addict. Thanks everyone for your kind thoughts. I suspect this won’t be the last time I have a visit to the hospital before this is all over, but at least this wasn’t a terribly long orientation… 🙂 I’ll try to catch up on your blogs tomorrow.

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Many thanks to my pinch-hitter husband for posting for me this morning. As he said, I was sent to the hospital for monitoring last night after my 4:30 monitoring session had 15 contractions in an hour. Suffice it to say, it was a fun day all around.

So… off to labor and delivery triage we went. Where we quickly discovered I was still having far too many contractions. The nurses were great, the hospital was boring. My doctor called after a bit to suggest some options. We settled on trying 3 doses of Nifedipine over an hour and half and if I was still over threshold after that, she'd admit me over night for observation, get me on Indocin for 24 hours, and check my cervix in the morning and probably let me go after that.

Three doses of Nifedipine later, and just as many contractions, and there was a room with my name on it. And so, my darling husband went home to get some things for me, including (bless him) a toothbrush/toothpaste which hadn't even occurred to me, but BOY DID I LOVE HAVING THAT! And the fun began. They got me back on the monitors… three fetal monitors and a contraction monitor. Now the ironic thing about that set up is that to keep the fetal monitors in the right place, I had to be laying on my back. But that made the contractions worse. But rolling onto my side disturbed the fetal monitors too much. Finally around midnight, the nurses called my doctor and asked if they could just leave the contraction monitor only on so that I could get more comfortable and hopefully sleep. At 1:30, they came in and took off the three fetal monitors, I rolled onto my side and went to sleep. At 4am I got my second dose of Indocin. At 6am, I woke up and my day started… for the last couple hours I'd only had a couple contractions. Miracle! (Indocin works well for me…it's just that it can't be taken long term)

Anywhozit, around 8 I was brought the world's most disgusting breakfast (kosher hospital food… never a good thing… ick!). and a bit before 9 I was taken down for an ultrasound and to meet with my doctor. My cervix was, at its shortest, 1.7cm… shorter than last week, but not so much shorter than it was 5 weeks ago when this whole bed rest crap started in the first place. She recommended raising the basal rate on my terbutaline pump, adding Nifedipine XR again on top of the terbutaline, and having a fetal fibronectin test done weekly along with the already-scheduled weekly cervical measurements.

She was fully prepared to let me go home and asked if I had any questions. And I said, well, I wasn't trying to be picky or anything… but I was doing the 4x daily finger sticks for blood sugar testing because I couldn't take the three hour test, and since I hadn't had a single blood sugar reading out of the range of completely utterly normal, could I maybe cut back on the number of times I had to test…but I was willing to do whatever she wanted me to. She said I could just do it twice a day if I wanted, but forewarned me that as I got later into the pregnancy, they'd probably still make me return to four times a day anyway. No problem. She went off to type up the ultrasound report and then popped back in and said, "Hey, since you're in-house right now anyway, do you want to just DO the three-hour glucola test?" Uh, YEAH! Except I'd already eaten breakfast. No problem. I had eaten breakfast at 8, so they'd do the test at 4 and I could go home after that, unless I'd feel better staying another night (NO THANK YOU).

And so… I spent the most boring day of my life in the hospital today, internet-less, bored, with limited things to read or do. But on Friday, I should know whether I have to keep finger-sticking myself! And I was home at 8pm tonight. Safe and sound. All is well, the babies are all healthy and fine. The contractions are better for the moment. And life is good because I have my precious internet back. Gawd I'm an addict. Thanks everyone for your kind thoughts. I suspect this won't be the last time I have a visit to the hospital before this is all over, but at least this wasn't a terribly long orientation… 🙂 I'll try to catch up on your blogs tomorrow.

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