Random investigations into food, gluten, gardening, herbs, and the supernatural
Saturday, February 8, 2014
Adrenal Status
Friday, May 3, 2013
It's been a while...
I spent so much time, in January and February, recovering from the miscarriage and from my Cymbalta withdrawal.
Truly, the worst, physically and mentally, was the Cymbalta. Emotionally, it was the miscarriage.
I truly HATED getting off that drug. It is one of the worst things I've been through. Going from high to low to wild to sleepy while my brain figured itself out... it was friggin' ridiculous.
As I may have mentioned in my prior post on the HSG, my cycle had to be forced using Provera, some 41 days post miscarriage. The next cycle, the HSG cycle, ended up being a long cycle as well. I didn't ovulate until CD27, AF showed on CD41.
And now... here I am... CD37... and still no ovulation. This is late, even for me.
This is even with an HCG TRIGGER that I took on CD14.
Nope. Body said NO. Went all Grumpy Cat on me.
Thursday, February 21, 2013
HSG Diaries
So after my miscarriage in early January, I basically said, "Fuck it" to trying to conceive naturally and called a Reproductive Endocrinologist.
I was in the next day, if you can believe that. How's that for a sign?
So she set up for a bunch of bloodwork and a hysterosalpingogram, aka HSG, concerned with the number of miscarriages I have had.
Bloodwork done... she found a pelvic infection which been treated the past few days by antibiotics...
And today was the HSG. *cue scary music*
I had read many different stories about the HSG procedure but didn't really connect to it, thinking that I'll have my own experience. I thought my tubes would be good... pain would be normal and manageable...
Let me preface this with this information before I scare the hell out of someone: I have Celiac disease and my pelvic area HATES any invasive stuff. So I'm more likely to have pain due to that. I also got slightly glutened yesterday. That adds in (very slightly) as well.
So I sit here, in pain, 10 hours post HSG, therefore my view might be skewed.
Went in... excited to find out what's going on.
I was well prepared by my RE... she told me it might hurt.
She asked me to cough... and here we go.
The catheter entering my cervix did create a bit of an automatic "jerk" reaction and then calmed. Sure, slight irritation but nothing huge.
Then the dye.
Oh. My. God.
Shoot me now.
Having that dye shoved in there... the worst cramping I have ever felt. Now, if you read my miscarriage experience, I went thru some extreme pain on January 6, causing vomiting.
This was not quite the same, but it sure as hell was close. If my miscarriage was a 10 on the scale, this was a solid 8.5, maybe 9. The "catch your breath and you better not breathe" kind of pain.
And then it disappeared. The pain disappeared so fast, within 30 seconds of a push on the syringe.
And just as I was relaxing from the shock, another shot of dye came again, and yet another shock of pain.
So painful.
So my uterus is properly shaped, and my right fallopian tube flows wonderfully.
My left tube... not so much. I know my left ovary has issues with bloodflow and I tend to ovulate from my right. So the fact that my left tube is open (NOW... christ she forced it open), but flows at like 10% the rate of my right tube.
Turns out the pain is likely from trying to force my tube open. While I appreciate the gesture, I am a bit sore down there now.
I left, more than spotting, but not in pain within a minute of the procedure being done.
And then my ibuprofen wore off.
Coughing hurts. Haha Going number 2 hurts. (Remember I got glutened)
I'll get over it. I'm just whining. I don't feel well, and haven't for the last day... catching a cold. Likely from the antibiotics I'm on. (Remember, your health is in your gut... antibiotics kill your gut, therefore kill your immune system... I'll post on that later)
Saturday, January 5, 2013
The Hopelessness of Infertility
This pregnancy that I announced in November was fatefully doomed.
I received confirmation of the miscarriage via ultrasound and blood work two days ago, after I started bleeding (like period bleeding) and my midwife couldn't find the heartbeat with the Doppler. I was to be 11 weeks along yesterday, and the baby wasn't even measuring 8 weeks. They said that the baby likely passed within just a couple days after the last sonogram, shown below, where the heart beat was happily at 174bpm and the baby was just starting to move. This is the final picture of my child while living.
Down the tubes goes my hopes and dreams for this little one... to wait for the next little soul to grace us with its presence, hopefully more permanently.
No more thinking about the anatomy scan that was going to be coming up soon... no more starting to think about a baby shower since this is my first. No more daydreaming about summer birthdays since this one was due in the middle of summer. No more dreaming about a baby girl wearing the pink tutu dress with the big bright cheeky smile inherited from her daddy. No more dreaming about an artistic baby boy who likes to draw and play baseball. No more thinking about this upcoming Halloween and what we would dress the baby up as.
I cry... but more on the inside than out. The tears fall within, borne from pain of 2 years of infertility, health issues, hard research, and death.
My soul cries, knowing that this was all planned for me to experience in this life time... and yet with all the advances in medical science, we are unable to tell why women miscarry and what the exact reason was.
So now... I sit back and wait, while my body expels the tissue naturally... knowing that I created this, and I also killed it. This is where infertility hurts the most.
Infertility strikes any woman to the core; making us feel less womanly.
The power within the woman is amazing... we have the power to create from within... and the power to kill from within.
I seek to find peace from within... and balance. I am sad, while I sit here, bleeding both from my body and from my soul, but it won't last. I will return to the strength I once was... and to know that something so small can tear down my rock solid emotional defenses...
... is heart warming and I can't wait to try again.
Saturday, December 22, 2012
The Importance of Micro-Nutrient Testing in Unexplained Infertility
This means that the couple trying to conceive get the news from their doctor that their infertility is "unexplained" which means that with those means they have utilized up to that point, they haven't found anything.
A lot of couples I'm aware of are then consequently told they will never conceive unless they go through in-vitro or intra-uterine insemination.
This is ridiculous and absolutely not true.
Let's go back to the understanding of how the human body works.
The human body is a machine. If something major is out of balance, it can throw the rest of the body out of whack as well. Compare this to your car: if it doesn't have gas, it's not going to move forward, is it?
Well, neither is your body. Your body knows innately when it has enough nutrients to handle a pregnancy. If it doesn't have enough of what it needs to create life, it won't let you... and western medicine won't be able to tell you why.
But micro-nutrient testing CAN. Testing to see where someone is at nutritionally should be one of the first things that should be done, not only in the case of infertility, but also in the case of disease. See this study which showed that vitamin B6 helped create pregnancies, and how vitamin C supplementation helped those with a luteal phase insufficiency.
Let's take a look at some of the micro nutrients that are tested in one major test that is done in the US.
In Spectra Cell Laboratory's Comprehensive Nutrient Panel, they test for the history (not just a static number of what it was at that moment) of where each vitamin is at.
| See SpectraCell Lab's Site |
With today's average American diet, the majority of us have some sort of vitamin deficiency. One of the largest deficiencies today in the population is vitamin D. While a vitamin D deficiency does not create infertility, a vitamin D deficiency can be a signal that there are other problems as well.
Therefore, this micro-nutrient panel should be run. A lot of insurance companies will cover at least part of it. The way I look at it, it's WAY cheaper than paying for in-vitro or intra-uterine insemination... and you don't have to go through the hormonal crap those ladies have to go through for those procedures, where you don't even get a 100% guarantee that you will get a baby out of it.
If you get tested and you start supplementing properly (properly is key... you should see a nutritionist if you have a number of deficiencies so that you don't throw your body out of whack even more) you could get pregnant on your own, without all those procedures.
I have a friend who has been trying for a baby for 6 years now. She writes in her own blog about her frustrations with TTC and just life in general. She has some pretty heavy duty stories.
| Serenitysomedayttc.com |
Ever since I got my nutrients tested, I have been trying to convince her and her hubby to get tested. They have a serious case of unexplained infertility... everything comes out clean for them.
Yet she's not pregnant.
So I threw the information for the SpectraCell labs at her the other day, hoping to plant a seed, and hoping that they might try it before moving into IVF or IUI and spending tens of thousands for a possibility of a baby that she could still miscarry because of her lack of good nutritional status.
If she ever does and she ends up pregnant, I promise to come back because if she can get pregnant from this, ANYBODY can.


