Hey, thanks for the video! You really covered a lot of helpful stuff. I've personally been through 6 miscarriages. You mentioned checking your hormones and finding one was off. After getting that regulated, you were able to carry a pregnancy to term. Could you share which hormone it was?
If someone has had multiple miscarriages, the chances of it being a chromosome issue is low, and progressively lower as you have more miscarriages. PGTA is meant to help find healthy, chromosomally normal blastocysts for implantation. IMO, for recurrent miscarriages it doesn't give you much return on investment. Unless, you have other risk factors for chromosome issues, or if money is no issue. IVF sadly does not solve miscarriages. If you have tried everything else it might help in 2 ways: help with timing (and maximizing) expensive treatments like IVIG and as a diagnostic tool.
Hey, thanks for the video! You really covered a lot of helpful stuff. I've personally been through 6 miscarriages. You mentioned checking your hormones and finding one was off. After getting that regulated, you were able to carry a pregnancy to term. Could you share which hormone it was?
This is soooo helpful! What helped you? I totally agree
I don’t understand why testing embryos PGTA is not helpful ? What is helpful then ? Or basically IVF makes no sense for people with miscarriages ?
If someone has had multiple miscarriages, the chances of it being a chromosome issue is low, and progressively lower as you have more miscarriages. PGTA is meant to help find healthy, chromosomally normal blastocysts for implantation. IMO, for recurrent miscarriages it doesn't give you much return on investment. Unless, you have other risk factors for chromosome issues, or if money is no issue.
IVF sadly does not solve miscarriages. If you have tried everything else it might help in 2 ways: help with timing (and maximizing) expensive treatments like IVIG and as a diagnostic tool.
Nice to see you back