MDL seems to be pretty tricky. It saves money, but can backfire.Brooklyngirl wrote:Hi everyone,
I had my doctor's appointment today. We went over my last disastrous cycle (microdose lupron and estrogen priming). Nothing whatsoever developed and my estrogen didn't rise at all.
He said he would consider doing another cycle with just the EPP as my AMH is 1.1 and my FSH is 3.27. However, given my age (43) and my inability to produce many eggs (at most 11, but none fertilized; I have had at most 2 embryos), he gave me only a 5% chance of success.
Donor eggs, on the other hand, give me a much greater chance of success.
Ghost, given my age and history, do you think the 5% chance of success is about right?
Ladies, any thoughts? The idea of going to donor eggs is difficult, but then again . . .
Many thanks for any advice and for previous advice.
I meant it sounds like your ovaries can produce more eggs than the average for your age group. That's a good sign.Brooklyngirl wrote:Hi Ghost,
Thank you for the reply, but can you explain? What does it mean for ovaries to be "healthy"? Does FSH have anything to do with egg quality, which seems to be my problem? Is there anything to measure that?
And yes, the RE is allowing me to make the decision. Frankly, with limited funds and a low chance, I am leaning to egg donation. THe odds are simply so much better, despite the loss of a genetic connection with any possible baby. But how great would it be for this to finally work!
Many thanks!
When the eggs don't fertilize, it's usually the eggs that are the problem, but not always. Your partner has good sperm? Did you use ICSI?Brooklyngirl wrote:Thanks for the replies.
Clearly a low FSH didn't mean much in my case. The largest number of eggs I had was 11 and not one embryo was viable. The smallest number was 4 with only one embryo. So, Ghost, FSH can't tell us much about quality, right? And there must be other factors too, like my no longer elevated TSH. Is that correct?
I haven't considered embryo donation as I would like my partner to have a genetic connection to any child that may result.
11 eggs is an excellent response in your age group. 4, not so much.Brooklyngirl wrote:Hi Ghost,
My partner has low morphology and low-ish motility and count. The RE thinks that the sperm is fine for ICSI. If we do go with donor eggs, I may ask about using some donor sperm just in case.
The RE said the manner in which the embryos failed to develop (between day 3 and day 5, the 2 embryos (out of 11 eggs) became a disorganized mass of cells) suggests that it is egg quality rather than a sperm issue. In addition, I simply don't produce a lot of eggs. My last cycle at the highest stims only netted 4 eggs.
How does this jive with such a low FSH and a decent AMH?
Thanks!
The DHEA might have something to do with declining FSH. Perhaps it improves ovarian response, or maybe it's because those extra androgens are converted into more estrogen, which would suppress the FSH.Brooklyngirl wrote:Thanks for addressing all of these questions, Ghost. Do you think the better FSH has to do with certain changes (30 lb weight loss, synthroid to get the TSH down, metformin, DHEA)?
The 11 egg cycle was over a year ago, so I assume things have gone down hill from there.
It's hard to lose the genetic connection, but I have been reading up on epigenetics, so that makes things a bit easier.
Any thoughts on what to do to make the egg donor cycle successful in terms of meds, supplements, etc?
Thanks!