Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Sticky patches and such

I had my weekly monitoring appointment today to check my hormone levels and uterine lining. By now I think you all know how much of a worrier I am. I apologize if I come off as negative or pessimistic, but I WILL find something to worry about, even though I can't stand the feeling of worrying and I hate that I annoy others around me who know that I'm worrying and I HATE hearing the words "don't worry" until I have proof that I have no need to worry :).

For those of you who do not understand all of this crazy surrogacy stuff, I'll do my best to explain just the very few basic necessary details to understand why I worry about these monitoring appointments (leading up to the embryo transfer). Every clinic is different, but most will want your uterine lining to be anywhere from 7mm-12mm thick in order to transfer embryos. Naturally, everyone's lining changes throughout their cycle, so they're constantly monitoring to see that it first thins (after a period) and then thickens. The thicker the better, usually. The estrogen is responsible for thickening a surrogate's lining. If a surrogate's lining is "too thin", they will not transfer the embryos and will have to start all over, or even worse, they will decline the surrogate and instruct intended parents to find a new one. I have seen this happen on a few occasions with surrogates who come through the agency and it is another thing I worry about (of course:) and my heart breaks for the surrogates and intended parents who experience this.

Today my lining was at .7. Please note the "." before the number 7. My first thought was "What?! That's like.......invisible!" I HAVE had just two doses of my estrogen (I inject estrogen, intramuscular, every Monday and Thursday), so I do not expect my lining to just fluffen up overnight, by any means. Last time, I was also instructed to increase my estrogen and add estrogen patches to my regime. This time, same thing, so I really hope it works again.

I'm disappointed but my fingers are tightly crossed that, come next Wednesday, my lining will have thickened quite a bit and we'll be on our way to baby baking come February 15th.

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Shots....not the ones you drink :)

So far things are trucking along as they should. I have had two monitoring appointments to check my uterine lining and ovaries. I am still bleeding, some type of blood, from my very first period about one month ago. I've had another one somewhere in there, too. I will never understand the whole "follicle" thing and why the ultrasound techs spend so much time evaluating my ovaries. I know that I have several follicles; some larger than others, which I would think would be a bad thing and that I'd ovulate......but they don't seem to be concerned. My lining is where it should be and I have been on Lupron for over 1 week now and just decreased it and started the delestrogen injections (intramuscular, those are the "butt shots") on Thursday. I have been getting headaches, but nothing too terrible. I am also trying desperately to lose the stubborn few lbs. of chub around my waist and butt that I gained from the meds the last time around. I say that I gained them from the meds.........but really I just went crazy and over-indulged over the holidays and can't get rid of it like I used to be able to. As it turns out, I no longer have the metabolism of a teenager. This sucks!

Hooray for making progress with the cycle! I am very thankful every day that we have made this step in the right direction. I appreciate all of the support and couldn't do it without each and every one of you there to cheer me along! Lets hope that February 15th is our day to make this happen :)

 

Friday, January 11, 2013

Hysteroscopy

Today I went in for the much anticipated and somewhat dreaded hysteroscopy. I inserted the cytotec to soften my cervix about 5 hours before the procedure. I was told to show up at the clinic one hour early so I could take an Ativan to "relax" me. I showed up, the pharmacist asked me if I had a ride to take me home........this was never mentioned and I assured him I would be fine. I took my Ativan and went back to the room where the nurse told me she was going to give me an injection to help with cramping. I was surprised at the mention of an injection and really began to wonder what was next. This already wasn't ANYTHING like the hysteroscopy the RE preformed (which took 30 seconds and was a piece of cake........sorry if I've mentioned that about 10 times already, I just can't get over the difference). The nurse said I had the thickest "butt skin" she'd ever experienced (thanks to all of the PIO and estrogen injections I'd been doing for all that time, I now have thick "butt skin") I sent a text to my coordinator and told her that if they came back in the room with mention of an epidural or any other type of "pain management", I was going to get the hell outta there. At the rate they were going, I felt like I was being prepped for a hysterECTOMY, not a hysterOSCOPY!

I sat in the procedure room in anticipation (very nervous) for about half an hour. The nurse told me that the doctor said it would be a quick procedure and she'd even probably wind up doing it between patients. "Great!" I thought. "I can get back to work in no time!". 

The doctor came in, inserted the speculum and said "whoa, you are not spotting, you are definitely still bleeding quite a bit". Yeah, sorry about that :(. She then proceeded to inject my cervix 4 different times with Novocaine. I actually felt the affects all the way up in my face. Strange feeling! The first two were pretty uncomfortable. After I was numbed, she started attempting to dilate my cervix and said that it was "fighting her". This......was not good. Ouch. She brought in 4 other nurses along with an ultrasound machine to guide the instruments into my cervix just to dilate it so she could fit the scope through it. Here's where I started hearing the "retroverted uterus" term again. Ah, how I remember hearing that so often during my own pregnancy. Apparently my uterus is VERY tilted and pregnancy didn't fix that for me. Damn it.

Once the scope was in, I was in so much discomfort (think labor pains), but saw that my uterus looked normal (which I wasn't expecting) and "beautiful" according to the doctor. After it was all over, I felt very relieved to know that I still have a "beautiful uterus" and hope that it will go to good use again next month, but for 40 weeks this time around :)

Oh....and as for the bloated feeling that I've been so crabby about. Now that I can't blame it on my uterus, I have to take responsibility for behaving badly during the holidays and will work harder to drop the pounds. I'm up 6 lbs. from my normal weight. Not too bad, but man is it STUBBORN!

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Round 2

I hope everyone has had a very happy and healthy New Year so far! I know I've been quiet for a while, but there hasn't been much to report on, aside from some minor frustration with my own body. I had the D&C October 31st and was told that I would needed two "normal" periods before we could start meds to prepare for another transfer. The embryo transfer is scheduled for February 15th with the assumption that I will have definitely had 2 regular periods and everything else in check by that time. It took me 9 very long weeks to get a real period after the procedure. I was SO happy to get it because I had been worried that the D&C had "ruined" me, and frankly I'm still a bit worried. The RE ordered me to have a Hysteroscopy (a relatively minor procedure where they use a scope that enters through the cervix, into the uterus, to show the walls) to ensure that there wasn't any scarring due to the D&C. This is a general precaution that this particular RE takes when a surrogate has had a D&C. I figured "piece of cake, he preformed this on me when I first went to the clinic". Well, I have to have the Hysteroscopy after my first period, but BEFORE I start medications. Seeing as I did not have a normal period until just recently, and I start meds on Monday, January 14th..........this gives me roughly one day to schedule the procedure, because I'm still bleeding from my period. Yay. So, just as the overwhelming excitement of actually starting to bleed, came about.......now is the overwhelming fear that it won't stop "in time". Ugh! I won't even begin to explain the story of how I had to track down the potential costs of the procedure so my IPs know what to expect.........that was both frustrating and comical, all at the same time. 

I will be going in on Friday of this week to get scoped out and seriously hope there isn't any scarring (or anything else, for that matter) that will be found during the procedure, which would delay everything, or worse, completely keep me from giving my intended parents their child(ren). 

I know I sound awfully pessimistic, and I can honestly say that I am a bit worried about everything. But after all that has happened, I just want everything to move along nicely this next time around, and so far it seems like there have been some unexpected roadblocks (my period coming late, the procedure needing to have been completed before meds start and I'm still bleeding, etc.) I'm sure I will feel much better after I hear that everything is "ok in here" on Friday :) If we need to delay the transfer for one more month, I will be just fine with that, knowing that it is "for the best".

So, the current plan is to fly out to La Jolla, CA on February 13th (with Terry as my companion again), go out for a nice dinner on Valentine's Day, and transfer two frozen embryos on February 15th with a full 3 days of strict bed rest to follow. 

I will know more on Friday, hopefully. After Friday's Hysteroscopy procedure, assuming my uterus looks normal, I will have an ultrasound and blood work on Monday, and assuming my ultrasound and blood work come back normal, I will start Lupron (a suppressant medication, given with insulin needles in the stomach) on Monday! 

Fingers crossed for great results over the next few days!!