T3 wrote:Ghost,
Thanks for the info... I'm in Springfield and the clinic in springfield seems to have pretty good success rate with fresh embryos. I also work close to the area and CT would be an hr hike which would be difficult for blood test, u/s, etc.
Their success rate with frozen embryo seems pretty low, 22%. I have 1 frozen embryo after the first IVF, if this fluid does not go away by next week, you think they can just do the frozen embryo instead? I know it's a low chance with 1 embryo, but something is better than nothing right?
I thought most people do the lupron then gonadal F and trigger with hcg. I'll have to ask my fertility doc about that and maybe do another protocall.
thanks a lot for the help.
t3
Yes, I'd use the frozen embryo before doing a fresh cycle. Frozen embryo cycles are much cheaper and safer than fresh cycles, and besides, if you are not going to use your frozen embryo, why pay the storage fees for it?
Yes. About 80-90% of cycles of ovarian stimulation in the United States use Lupron for pituitary down regulation, while using an FSH product (such as Gonal F, Follistim, Menopur, Bravelle, or Repronex) to stimulate the ovaries. In this case, you are pretty much stuck with using hCG for the trigger. This is called the long protocol or long Lupron protocol. Many clinics use this protocol for everyone out of habit, although it is dangerous for patients with many follicles.
Most of the rest of the cycles use a GnRH antagonist (such as ganirelix or Cetrotide) to suppress the pituitary, while using an FSH product to stimulate the ovaries. In this case, the trigger may be hCG or Lupron. If hCG is used, it has about the same OHSS risk as the Lupron cycle described before, but if Lupron is used for the trigger and hCg is avoided, then OHSS becomes virtually impossible.
If you are going to do a fresh transfer after a Lupron trigger, then the luteal support must be exactly like that published by the University of CT. The Lupron trigger eliminates OHSS risk because the LH surge is short-lived and is fading away about the time the eggs are retrieved. Lacking LH or hCG activity, the corpora lutea soon die and stop making the hormone responsible for OHSS (that hormone is called VEGF, and it causes vascular hyperpermeability, the reason you have fluid in your abdomen), but they also stop making estradiol and progesterone. There's the problem with a fresh transfer, and it's called luteal phase defect. Many clinics have tried Lupron triggers but had poor success because they did not adjust the luteal support to allow for the sudden loss of the corpora lutea. UConn allowed for it and gets good success rates. The eggs are fine and many clinics have found Lupron triggers work great if the embryos are frozen (or in donor cycles, where the corpora lutea in the donor are irrelevant to the recipient).
I can explain it further if you'd like.
Avoid IVF and surrogacy in Ukraine. Ukrainian centers pay shills to post here under numerous sock accounts pretending to be patients in Ukraine. Centers using such deceptive advertising cannot be trusted and should be avoided.