Good news! I had my embryo transfer Friday, April 28th. Everything went perfectly. Scott took the entire day off work. Remind me to thank Dr. Spirtos for scheduling it at noon. 😉 I woke up that morning feeling pretty good. I made sure my hair was done, as well as my makeup. My reasoning was that I wanted to look nice for the first time out baby met its mother. Scott thought I had lost my mind.
I had some blood drawn, then met with the embryologist. Keith was very nice and positive (as usual). He updated us with how our "embabies" were doing. We still had all nine growing. There were 4 of them that were questionable. They had started degenerating and would not be viable after a freeze, so they were going to be discarded. We had three perfect ones, one that was really good, and one that was borderline. He said he was going to keep monitoring it. We asked him for his opinion on whether to transfer one or two. He gave us the pros and cons.
In the end, we decided on transferring one perfect 4AA blastocyst. We let Keith pick out hopeful winner. A embryo is graded on different aspects. Our blastocyst had many tightly compacted cells that formed an innercell mass. It also had a nice ring of cells around the outside called a trophoblast. The zone pellucida was very thin, which was a great sign.
After we met with the embryologist, I had one last ultrasound with Dr. Spirtos. He measured my lining; it was nice and thick. Then we headed down to the procedure room. Jackie got the ultrasound machine all set up after I had gotten ready. Dr. Spirtos and the embryologist came in and got things started. It was not painful, but it was very uncomfortable as I had to have a full bladder and they used an abdominal ultrasound transducer the whole time.
The transfer went perfectly. I had to lay on the table for an hour afterward...with my still full bladder. Keith came in one last time and gave us the final update on our blastocysts. He was able to freeze four of them; should this transfer not work, we have four good ones to work with in the future.
I had to go back 13 days later for my beta test. A beta test checks the level of hcg in the blood. If it is over 50, I am pregnant. If it is less than 50, I am not pregnant. Scott and I decided that we are not sharing the results with anyone for a while. If it is negative, we need to grieve this loss on our own for a while and decide what our next step is going to be. If it is positive, we want to make sure it is viable. We don't want to have to do a repeat of the last time I was pregnant and tell people that we had lost it after we had already told people we were expecting. So that being said, we aren't telling anyone until we feel the time is right for us. Scott and I appreciate all the thoughts and prayers that have been said for us. Keep saying them. This journey to becoming parents is not a sprint, but an ultra-marathon.