Friday, March 29, 2013

Futurehuber 's Inspring Hope to Help Make This Dream a Reality


Our Story
by futurehuber


 

 
 
After being together 11 ½ years and married for just over six years, we finally decided it was time for a baby!  I had actually been ready for a little while, but the mister needed some time!  Well he got way more time than he bargained for!

I went off of birth control and we started “trying but not trying” in September of 2011.  The first few months I didn’t worry about temping, ovulation kits, etc. and I had no idea what cervical mucus was or what it meant (nor did I care to)!  We were in the la-la stages of baby making and I just tried to make sure we “had relations” around the textbook 14th day of my cycle. 

The first cycle after I went off birth control, I actually thought I was pregnant!  I even went out and bought hubby a “we’re pregnant” gift, devised a grand plan for telling him, and also got gifts for the future grandparents.  So as you can imagine, those gifts have probably gathered about 10 inches of dust sitting up on a shelf in my closet. 

The first few cycles I didn’t notice anything unusual, my periods were pretty normal for the most part.  As months passed, I started to notice my periods getting funkier and longer.  Sometimes even super short. They were all over the place!  This on top of negative pregnancy test after negative pregnancy test, I started to realize something was wrong.

However…even though I knew something was wrong…nope, no going to the doctor!  We hadn’t been trying the lovely minimum of one year yet!  Silly me for thinking I could go see a doctor for something that I knew was wrong with me.

Meanwhile I had already started to buy all of the infertility books, download all the apps, taking my temp, charting, and loaded up on ovulation kits.  I kept that up until I finally got to see my doctor at the one-year mark, and not a day later!

Before I knew it, I was making an ultrasound appointment, getting blood work done, being referred to a reproductive endocrinologist (RE), etc.  And at the same time, I was seeing dollar signs “cha-chinging” in my head as I booked each appointment and did each test.  While I was happy to have some coverage on testing/diagnosis as I know some women do not, my 50% copays were definitely starting to add up!  And this was just finding out why, not helping us to actually make a baby (which would be 100% copays!).

Soon came the diagnosis of PCOS.  I of course bawled my eyes out the second I got off the phone with the nurse.  I thought my life was over, read horribly scary things online (that I now know aren’t true or are at least rare), etc.  Little did I know this was the least of our worries.

Soon after my diagnosis, I scheduled an HSG.  It went pretty smoothly and wasn’t too painful like I had heard.  The doctor doing the HSG said at the end that my tubes looked good and they were all clear!  I embarrassingly burst into happy tears right when she said this as it was so great to get some good news for once! 

Fast forward about 30 hours later when I get a call from my regular doctor (at 8pm at night mind you??).  It went something like this: “I got the results from your HSG and now I know why you’re not getting pregnant!  You have a bicornuate uterus.” And then I heard various words such as heart-shaped, surgery, miscarriage, etc. as I tried to hold back the tears.  (And note that having a bicornuate uterus has nothing to do with conceiving, it has to do with being able to carry the baby. Nice one doc!)

Hang up the phone…straight to Google.  Oh my gosh, my life is seriously over!!  Now do I not only have the inability to get pregnant on my own, I also have problems carrying a baby once I do??  Massive amounts of crying ensues.  I’ve got my mom crying on the phone with me that night.  This is just unfair.

I discuss this diagnosis with my RE and she says my uterus can be bicornuate or septate and there is only one way to know for sure and that’s by doing a surgery called a laparoscopy (meanwhile I read about other, less-invasive alternatives to this surgery and wondered why we wouldn’t start there first?).  Again, dollar signs start flashing as I consider the cost of 50% of a surgery??  Yikes! 

I schedule the surgery appointment and just start feeling really uneasy about this decision.  Luckily thanks to the lovely ladies in The Bump community, I got the idea and the courage to ask my RE for a saline ultrasound.  Supposedly they can tell the difference between a bicornuate and septate uterus by doing this simple, in-office procedure that is similar to an HSG, but a lot less painful.  Plus it was only going to be about $150 OOP for us versus who knows what amount for the surgery!

I go in for the ultrasound and within like 10 seconds, my RE says “Well it looks good, you don’t have either one!”  What??  Are you kidding me??  I just stressed and bawled my eyes out for a month and almost had surgery for nothing??  But of course I am ecstatic to get this great news!  Now I am just back to dealing with PCOS.  RE gives me a prescription right then and there for Clomid (perfect timing in my cycle) and I am on my way to my first medicated cycle and I’m filled with hope and excitement!

Then the next day happened.  The most dreaded call of all.  Hubby’s semen analysis results are in.  Low everything.  We, ourselves, hit an all time low.  This happened at the beginning of the weekend and we barely spoke to each other all weekend.  We just didn’t know what to do with all of this bad news, all of the ups and downs.  It was exhausting. 

I will say one thing though, the timing of these results could not have been any better because just two days before (when I thought we were still dealing with the uterus issue), my thoughts were if anything else was wrong with us, that was it, I wasn’t going to do anything more.  I would have accepted that having a baby was not in the cards for us.  No more testing, no extreme measures to get pregnant, etc.  If I couldn’t ovulate and my husband didn’t have the proper sperm to get me pregnant and I didn’t have the ability to properly carry a baby, or most likely lose the baby once pregnant, this just had to mean something!  It was just not meant to be.  So I am thankful I was cleared of my possible uterine issue the day before as I would have thrown in the towel right then and there once we got the semen analysis results.

Eventually we do an IUI (artificial insemination), change RE’s, have hubby see a urologist, gave a shot at working on his swimmers via vitamins and antibiotics (per the uro), then try two more IUIs.  All of this resulted in negative pregnancy tests, slightly better swimmers (but not good enough), more tears and frustration, and an onslaught of medical bills.

After three failed IUIs and the fact that we are dealing with male infertility, we knew it was time to move on to IVF.  We just didn’t want to waste the time and money anymore.  It was time to pull out the big guns…and the checkbook (again)! 

IVF is a lot of money but we truly believe it is worth it and are willing to do whatever we can to make our dream come true.  We are so thankful for the OOP Med program for helping us make this dream a reality.  It is a wonderful program and stems from such an exceptional online community of women.  I honestly don’t know what I would do without this support during our struggle.  I look forward to “paying it forward” and donating any leftover meds I might have in order to help out other women in need. 

Thank you for reading my story and may all of your stories have a happy ending!

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