Should i try ivf at 42
By the end of the flight, Amanda began to realize that the journey does not equal the destination. She asked for the names of fertility specialists in her area that can offer egg donation. Her expedited and calculated decision left no doubts as to why she attained her position in business. What is Diminished Ovarian Reserve? What does ovarian age testing NOT help with? Should You Use an Egg Donor? Click to Request an Appointment. Related Posts. Trolice Featured on Creating a Family Podcast.
Trolice featured on BecomeAPersonalTrainer. The chances of IVF success falls sharply after the age of Given that around 3. The NICE fertility guideline , which we updated last year, recommends that women under 40, who have been trying to get pregnant for 2 years, should be offered 3 full cycles of IVF. For women aged between 40 and 42, who have been trying for 2 or more years, and have not previously received IVF or shown evidence of low ovarian reserve, NICE recommends 1 full cycle of treatment.
We published our quality standard on fertility last week, which is a concise set of statements that summarise what the best possible care looks like. He did advised if I want to try Ovidrel and try for natural pregnany he said to go for it, however he said he does not believe with my results I will be successful and he thinks I am wasting my time. My question: Is it a waste of time to try fertility drugs? Would I be wasting my time begging him to try and retrieve some of my eggs?
He never even suggested that. You have seen your share of patients and I am asking you if you had a client at age 44 with these results, would you make ANY attempt to use her own eggs? You have a dilemma that is shared by many these days. I keep seeing the average age of my patients increasing. There are two factors to consider with your results.
First, the variations in results, namely the FSH levels, are natural occurrences as a woman ages. We worry when the FSH level is above 10, and especially if it is above 15 menopause is a level of 20 , because it is a sign that the ovary may not respond to stimulation well, despite normal function. In fact, you may not have any embryos to transfer at all. Of course, this can vary from cycle to cycle, as your tests have shown, and studies confirm that, because of this variation, even poor responders or low responders, still have the opportunity to become pregnant.
The difficulty is finding or getting that one good egg and as a woman ages, that one good egg becomes more and more scarce. Is there a point when my efforts are considered futile?
How long you continue will depend on you; How long can you tolerate the failures and how many times you can afford. The problem you are facing is overcoming the age effects on your eggs. As long as your ovaries still stimulate, then you have a chance. The most cycles I have ever seen was in a patient that tried with her own eggs for 13 tries.
She finally got pregnant and delivered healthy twins, and she was your age. After 42, however, pregnancies are rare so in general we do not recommend them. At that point you should go to donor eggs.
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