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Sam's Story

My husband and I have been trying to conceive for two years. My ob/gyn kept telling us to have intercourse on days 12-14 of my cycle, but it was not working. In September of 2006, I left work, sat at the dining room table and cried. I told my husband I did not want to try anymore, and that the stress and disappointment were too much. We cried together.

Then, in October, I had a blood spot a week before my period. I remember thinking, "This is odd,"  because that had never happened before. The next week, I bought a pregnancy test and tested. We had two lines! I ran into our bedroom shouting, "We have two lines!  We have two lines!" We celebrated and our families were ecstatic!

Three weeks later, we miscarried. The worst part was the dilation and curettage (D and C). We had to be in the maternity ward, with all of the healthy babies and healthy moms. My appointment was for 11:00, but I did not get into the operating room until 1:30. There were two emergency C-sections ahead of me. Those babies were more important to the hospital because those babies were alive. I was fine that night and the next night. But, the third day was horrible. The anesthetic wore off and I was in a lot of pain – physical and emotional.

I cried the whole month of November. I cried all the way to work and all the way home. December was good; I had been given the go-ahead to try again in January. When January came, so did the tears. I was terrified that we wouldn't be able to conceive or that we would miscarry again. As luck would have it, we got pregnant in January. At the end of the month, I began spotting again. On Super Bowl Sunday, as we were leaving church, I felt the baby come out. I saved her, and took her to my doctor's office on Monday. The tests revealed nothing conclusive – just a spontaneous abortion. (I hate that term. Why use abortion?) I cried and was angry.

At the same time, I was taking a grief counseling class for my degree. I shared my experience with my class. During a break, a woman who was a pediatric nurse came up to me and said, "I know someone who can help you. There is a doctor I work with who is a fertility specialist." She gave me his name, and I went home and looked him up on the internet. I made an appointment the following week. I consulted my ob/gyn, and she was angry with me. She said, "I do not recommend this until you have had three miscarriages." I asked her why she would want to put me through that again, and she did not have an answer.

She and my specialist began working together. She ordered 22 blood tests (all negative) and then did a hysterosalpingogram (HSG) – also fine. She faxed all of the results to my specialist and he analyzed them. He determined that all I needed was a shot, gonal-f, to keep my ovaries from releasing an egg until the follicles were mature. I had been ovualting at day ten, and he wanted my body to hold off until day twelve. I took gonal-f injections for five days.

When I returned for an ultrasound, the follicles were not quite ready, so I continued for two more days. This time, the follicles were mature, and my luteinizing hormone (LH) blood count was rising, so I was instructed to take 500 mg of ovidrel that night with intercouse and 250 mg of ovidrel the next night with intercourse. The timed intercourse was very difficult for me. I was worried that something might go wrong, and I could not relax. All that I could think about was, "We paid a lot of money. We have to do it." The second night was much better, and I was able to relax.

I am still waiting for the results of this cycle. I am concerned that because my LH was already rising, we might have missed the egg. I will not know for another week. I am excited that I have a doctor who is skilled and who knows what he is doing, but I am disappointed that I have to go through all of this.

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