Hello there! I’m writing to you from Florida. I have recently suffered two miscarriages. One in Oct of 2012 and one in March of this year. Both occurred at about two weeks so very early. I guess the term is chemical pregnancy when it is that early. I don't know how I know I am pregnant so early but I just know. My body is sensitive! I am 39 years old so my Dr. watches me closely and had me do the clomid challenge test to check the fsh which I think tests egg quality. Mine was 7.6. I also had a vaginal ultrasound and everything looks perfect. No fibroids or cysts. Then in March 2013 I got pregnant again and I was immediately sent for an hcg blood test. My hcg levels kept going up and down 241 to 119 over the course of three weeks and it would not leave my system completely so I ended up having to have another ultrasound that found nothing as they were worried about an ectopic pregnancy but did not find a sac or anything. I ended up taking a methotrexate shot.
Finally my levels went back to zero and 6 weeks later I did
a complete recurrent miscarriage blood panel test and they found that I
tested positive for two copies of the mthfr CT677 gene. I also was out of
range for the PAI-1 test which was 51. Everything else was normal. My Dr. put
me on foltx and a daily aspirin plus I take my prenatal vitamins and she told
me that as soon as I find out I am pregnant again I need to start administering
lovenox injections and progesterone suppositories. Right before delivery it
would change to heparin. I enjoy reading
your blog and appreciate all of your knowledgable answers. I would like to
know what your thoughts are about the regimen she has planned for me and if
there is anything else I should be doing. I am a bit nervous to try again. We
really want to have a baby!
Thank you, M. from Florida
Answer:
Hello M. from the U.S. (Florida),
The CCCT is to check for ovarian reserve (ability of the
ovary to respond to stimulation) and not egg quality. Thought you should know that.
It sounds like your Ob/Gyn doctor is well versed in the
evaluation and treatment of recurrent pregnancy loss, which makes her a little
better than the average Ob/Gyn doc. One
thing to keep in mind, however, is that you have the "age factor"
which means that your eggs are old and debilitated and therefore have a
propensity to forming abnormal embryos.
In most cases these embryos will not continue and lead to a miscarriage
(especially before 8 weeks gestational age).
The age factor is the main factor that you are trying to overcome. There is no treatment that can make eggs
better. The good news is that your
ovaries are still functioning well, and you know that you can get pregnant. Now it is just a matter of getting a perfect
egg.
The increased folic acid, low dose aspirin, low dose heparin
or lovenox and progesterone supplementation are all reasonable and acceptable
treatments for recurrent pregnancy loss. What
I would recommend is that the heparin/lovenox start immediately with the start
of your period, NOT once you become pregnant. It should already be in your system when
implantation occurs to help with increased blood flow at the implantation site,
and decrease the immune response to the embryo.
Starting after pregnancy would defeat the purpose.
Based on your age, I would agree with the above regimen,
add CoQ10 600 mg per day (found to help with egg quality in mice. No human studies yet but it can't hurt) and
strongly recommend that you consider IVF rather than continuing to try
naturally. I know that you are able
to get pregnant naturally, and it may eventually happen, but the only way to
increase your chances of success (overcome
the age factor) is to increase the number of eggs and embryos you have to
choose from. With IVF, you have a better
chance of finding the perfect egg. I
explain it to my patients with the following analogy: imagine that you have a
bucket of blue balls and a few red balls. There are mostly blue balls and only
4-5 red balls. The red balls represent
your good quality eggs and the blue balls the poor quality eggs. These balls are all mixed up together and you
lift the bucket above your head so that you can't see inside. Now you have several options. You can take one ball out at a time (like you
would in a naturally ovulatory cycle) whereby you will eventually get a red
ball, but you can see that it will take a long while; or you can take out a
handful of balls out at a time (like using superovulation with fertility
drugs); or you can dump out a bunch of balls at a time (like doing IVF). You can see that the latter method is the
fastest for getting to a red ball. That
is why IVF (in vitro fertilization) is the recommended treatment. With a red ball (good quality egg) not only
will you get pregnant, but you will have a successful pregnancy because a
normal embryo will develop.
Sorry for the extremely long explanation, but I hope my
answer has been clear.
Good Luck,
Edward J. Ramirez,
M.D.
Executive Medical Director
The Fertility And Gynecology Center
Monterey Bay IVFwww.montereybayivf.com
Executive Medical Director
The Fertility And Gynecology Center
Monterey Bay IVFwww.montereybayivf.com
Monterey, California,
U.S.A.
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