I know there are a lot of women on the boards that have used Lovenox, why did your doctor decide to suggest that? I am wondering why I can't just try baby asprin instead. My RE thinks this is the next step for me, I would start the daily injections on day 1 of a BFP. The unknown scares me, I am worried about major side effects to myself or the fetus.
Lifelove- I actually started Lovenox with the cycle. I have been on baby aspirin for a few months now, but after 3 unsuccessful IUIs, and 2 unsuccessful IVFs they were starting to wonder what was wrong with me. We did tons of bloodworks and even genetic testing and found out that I was homozygous for the MTHFR gene which can cause the blood to clot off once the embryo attaches. So with this FET cycle I started the Lovenox injections 5 days after the transfer. Im not going to lie they actually burn/sting pretty bad, but it only lasts a few minutes. Other than that the only side effect was bruising on my stomach, and some little knots. The only down side is the cost- and the fact that my insurance required a Prior Authorization which was a hassle. Not sure if it was the Lovenox or the other changes we made to this cycle but it looks to be working so far. Best of luck to you all!!
Thank you so much for your reply. I have one of the MTHFR mutations myself so I wonder if that plays a role in all of this. Thanks for putting my mind at ease, I don't mind bruising if that is the worst of the side effects. Glad to hear your cycle is looking good!
Lifelove- Our baby boy was born in March with me being on Lovenox. I do not have the clotting disorder, but I had three miscarriages and the doc thought it would be worth a try. I don't know if it helped or not, but we finally have our little boy.
We did have a problem with the lovenox that I want to share with you. Please know that the situation is unique, and I do believe the lovenox helped us to have our little guy. When I went for a high level ultrasound at about 12 weeks, they saw that I had a subchorionic hemorrage (it is a bleed on the placenta). My doc sent me to a high risk doctor and the bleed had already gotten really large. (It was NOT caused by the lovenox) The doctor said that I needed to stop the lovenox immediately because it was making the bleed larger. She thought that I was going to miscarry, but I didn't, I stopped the lovenox and the bleed went down. I'm sure that the situation was rare, and you need to do what your doctor suggest. I am not trying to scare you, I just want you to be aware of the possibilities.
After 7 attempts (2 negatives/3 miscarriages), we have TWO miracle boys!! If you would like to hear our story, please visit http://www.ivfsuccessstories.info. Never give up, it can happen for you!!
Thank you Brit I appreciate the honesty and stories, that is what I am looking for. I am glad to hear you went on to have a little boy. I am mostly nervous about cutting myself since I am a baker/cook I do a lot of chopping and cutting.
I don't think you should worry about that. I was on Lovenox twice, (the first time we didn't start it until after I was pregnant and we were afraid I was going to lose it- which we did) and I never had any problems with bleeding. The only time i noticed a difference was when I had the miscarriage. I bled a lot more than I did with the first one. Good luck to you! Hope everything works out!
After 7 attempts (2 negatives/3 miscarriages), we have TWO miracle boys!! If you would like to hear our story, please visit http://www.ivfsuccessstories.info. Never give up, it can happen for you!!
Lynne – I have a clotting disorder called Lupus Antigen Clotting disorder and I am currently on baby ASA and Heparin daily. Lovenox is just a more expensive version of Heparin and with Lovenox you generally inject that once a day instead of twice as I do with Heparin. The studies have shown that the combination of baby ASA and Heparin/Lovenox works better to prevent clots than baby ASA alone. So that might be why your RE puts you on both. I am a nurse and have injected Heparin and Lovenox to numerous patients and I think it is just preference or formulary coverage as to why a doctor might pick one over the other. I hope this helps!