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Re: Anyone have an IUD? (long, demonstrative of the effect PCOS is having on my mental health)

From: Dona (anonymous@obgyn.net)
Sat, 10 Nov 2001 00:07:16 -0600 (CST)


Hi Jodi, I had asked my doctor in the past about having an IUD.This was about 5 years ago.I was told no because even though I did have a baby I never dialated past 1 cm and ended up with a c-section. My OBGYN had told me that it was not safe to have an IUD if you have never dialated to have a baby (I think she said to at least 5 cm) do to risk of infections.But This was 5 years ago and they have new styles of IUD's now. So this might have changed. I have read a lot about the merina coil lately that has time released loestrin in it (progesterone)...I have read that it can make your periods very light to non existant. So if your worried about not having periods this may not be for you...althoug I have also read that it keeps the uterine lining from building up as well which can be a good thing.Regular Copper IUD's can cause very heavy periods and cramping (my mom used to complain about it all the time when she had one). Have you thought about getting fitted for a diaphragm instead (or cervical cap). You will have to plan date nights..which can be fun anyway and place it on your date night a few hours before hand...and it can be left in till your ready to take it out (do not leave in for more than 24 hours!)...dosen't have to be removed right away. When I used one it was nice to have something reversable and I didn't have to stop in the middle of love making to place it (Like guys have to do with condoms). Just something to think about.Dona

http://www.epigee.org/guide/barrier.html

>At Fri, 9 Nov 2001, jodi wrote:
>I have reached the end of my rope with the birth control/PCOS
>struggle... now I'm sort of hanging at the end of the rope, swinging
>back and forth, still unable to make a decision. My brain feels that
>being off BCPs is best, letting the Met do its thing is the way to go...
>but the truth of the matter is using condoms SUCKS. Enduring the hassle
>of condoms when there's practically no chance of getting pregnant merely
>adds insult to injury. I really think my diminished sex drive has a lot
>to do with all this static in my head related to the birth control
>debate... My sex life is sooooo much better when I am on BCPs. But I
>hate thinking about what BCPs might be doing to my body, and I hate how
>BCPs mess up my moods. My doctor has told me that it's true BCPs make
>insulin resistance worse, but that that worsening is negligable compared
>to the state of IR my body is in anyway, and that that worsening will go
>away once you've been off the BCPs for a while. (I can believe this...
>I mean, women can have gestational diabetes that goes away after they
>are no longer preg, and being on BCPs is sorta like being preg...) My
>doctor has told me that BCPs are good because they put the ovaries at
>rest, inhibit cyst formation, and so on... and I definitiely like that
>aspect of it. I'm afraid of the cysts just growing and growing until my
>ovaries are so tough and thickened I'll need surgery when I decide to
>get pregnant - who knows, I might need it now? After the "how big are
>ovaries supposed to be?" question came up, I looked at the results of
>the sonogram I had last winter and YIKES, my ovaries were twice normal
>size. And they were described as echogenic - does that mean already
>thickened and scarified? Oh, if I could only take them out and look at
>them and see... And oh, of course there are the nice perks of clearer
>skin and no worsening of facial hair while on BCPs... I can see a lot
>of reasons to take the pills. The biggest reason really is pure and
>simple they make my sex life better. My bf says he doesn't mind condoms
>- it's not that he's pressuring me at all - it's just that having to use
>them really bothers ME!
>
>I really want to believe my doctor that the pill won't make me worse.
>But then I read of people saying their symptoms got worse going off the
>pill... and I know that could just be they were getting worse all along
>because they weren't treating the insulin problem as well as I am... but
>who knows? Ugh! I wish I could decide. One problem is that I don't like
>feeling suicidal, which is how I feel on nearly every pill I've tried.
>The pills that didn't make me suicidal have had the delightful side
>effects of migraines (quit that one after four days) or no periods
>(which drove me up the wall. There's nothing so unsettling as a
>pregnancy "scare" when you have PCOS. You just can't wholeheartedly
>hope that test is negative because as unready as you are to be a parent
>at that point, at LEAST you'd know you could be...)
>
>My doctor has recommended one last pill a try - Loestrin. I am
>considering giving it a whirl when I go for my gyne appt. at the end of
>this month. She also suggested maybe I try an IUD. I was under the
>impression that you can't have an IUD if you've never had a baby, but
>maybe I was wrong about that. I don't know. She said IUDs are
>considered safe now, and it WOULD allow me to see if the met was working
>and avoid using condoms. It seems so... perfect! But on the other
>hand, I have such control issues that I think it would drive me crazy
>having a form of birth control inserted in my body that i couldn't
>remove. Plus, I think IUDs are pretty expensive... I don't want to
>plop down 600 dollars for an IUD and decide three weeks later I can't
>handle it. (Last summer I plopped down 60 dollars for a tounge piercing
>and went crazy after 4 days because there was this THING lodged in my
>body I had to deal with now ... I took it out at that point, couldn't
>deal with it) I am going to ask about an IUD at my gyne. appt. though.
>Can't hurt... I just wish I could decide. I really feel like I just
>need to accept at this point that I was not intended to menstruate
>normally for whatever reason. I don't know why... but I do know that
>the more I keep stressing about this, the worse it's going to be.
>
>The other day, I was walking across campus and these two girls walked
>perpendicular to the path I was walking, and I heard one say to the
>other, "I'm so stressed out, my period is a month late!" And I almost
>spun around and said, "You think YOU have problems?" And it occurred to
>me how ridiculous I'm being. I have several small papers and one huge
>paper I am working on this term. I go to a school where it's not
>uncommon for people to literally spend three days in the computer
>cluster (they will forgo showering and sleep, guzzle mountain dew, and
>have pizzas delivered.) Normal sleeping and eating schedules are unheard
>of here. NORMAL girls aren't having periods like they ought to, and
>here I have PCOS and am stressed to the gils over both school work and
>not having periods, and I'm expecting I can have normal periods just by
>taking glucophage?
>
>I feel like a paraplegic whining over not being able to walk through
>quicksand.
>
>Good heavens. I think that at this point even if the BCP does make my
>body a little sicker, and my brain a little depressed, it will still
>protect what remains of my sanity. But the IUD option is intriguing
>nonethessless... so anyone have any epxerience with this one? And
>before anyone suggests a diaphram, that sounded like a perfect solution
>last winter. It's just that I have this allergy to spermicide...
>
>- jodi




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