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Re: New to the list, new to latest info, not new to PCOS

From: AdoptASAP (anonymous@obgyn.net)
Thu, 31 May 2001 06:32:54 -0500 (CDT)


All I can say is GET A NEW DOCTOR. Getting pregnant naturally with PCOS??? HA! That is unlikely. While many mild cases of PCOS have success, if you have a stronger version of PCOS, it is very unlikely you will concieve without treatment. Even if you do get preggers with PCOS, you need to be getting treatment because PCOSers have a high rate of miscarrages. Seek a Reproductive Endocronologist that knows their stuff on PCOS. Regardless, send information to your current doctor so hopefully she will get a clue!

>
>At Wed, 30 May 2001, Karen wrote:
>>
>>Greetings folks,
>>
>>Wanted to write to introduce myself and ask a couple of questions I've been struggling with. I am 30-years-old, stopped menstruating at 18, and subsequently jumped from doctor to doctor 'til I was finally diagnosed with PCOS six years ago. I have been on Desogen since then and always thought that was the best and only way of handling PCOS. Well, I have learned a LOT in the last few months from research online and from reading messages in this and other forums. (I should mention that two years ago I moved half way across the country, away from my wonderful doctor in New York City, and have been struggling with my current doctor, who I am now realizing probably doesn't know squat).
>>
>>My husband and I went to my OB/GYN, armed with info I had found, back in February, and she said she felt Metformin and other insulin-related drugs were too experimental and that I should stay on Desogen until we decided to have children (we expressed to her that we were planning to start soon). At the beginning of April, we went back to "start the proceedings" for trying to get pregnant (I had been on prenatal vitamins for a couple months), and I assumed I would stop taking Desogen and start taking Metformin or something else. She highly recommended that I take nothing for now (saying that whe wasn't sure if Metformin wouldn't be healthy for a baby if I became pregnant). Her notion was to wait for six months, and then if I wasn't getting pregnant we'd try Clomid. She said I should be prepared that I may not ovulate for a couple of months right away, but that hopefully I would start to and just get pregnant naturally. In any case, this plan leaves me untreated for PCOS until I ge
>t
>> pregnant.
>>
>>Well, I just don't know what to do. I am following her advice, but I don't feel really confident about it. I am so incredibly overweight that I think I should be on Metformin anyway, even if it had nothing to do with my ovaries. I have just in the last couple of years starting having problems with blood pressure, cholesterol, triglycerides, etc., which I never had problems with before. Also, my moods have been all over the place since stopping the Desogen, my skin and hair are so oily I can hardly stand it (even with 2 showers a day) and just in general I feel like I am falling apart at the seams. I am thinking I should try seeing a reproductive endocrinologist, and try to find a different OB/GYN. But, can anyone share with me what they know about safety of Metformin in pregnancy? Other medications to consider? What are the best medications when trying to get pregnant? Any other advice?
>>
>>I'm sorry this is so long. I have been searching through messages, but thought it would be best to just lay my story out there and see if anyone can offer any suggestions. Thanks in advance.
>>
>>Karen
>
>--
>Email always welcome to: sonnet_fitz@hotmail.com
>




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