Hello ladies!!!! I've posted occasionally on Multiple Loss and IF boards, but not regularly. Long story short, after 27 months of trying (and failing on many levels), the RE decided on Clomid + trigger + progesterone suppositories (aren't those fun?!). Anyway....trigger was on the 26th (2 weeks ago yesterday). I am scheduled to go in on Monday for beta, BUT I was totally impatient and haven't been feeling all that great (I've been getting random light-headed spells for no reason). So, I decided to test yesterday......POSITIVE! I was so excited, and then I started second-guessing myself. Could the HCG trigger 2 weeks ago cause a false positive now? I tested again this morning, which would be day 15 post trigger, and still POSITIVE! I want to be excited but am scared of getting too excited after everything we've been through....so, thoughts?
Could this be a false positive?
Re: False positive or no?
After 7 years trying to concieve, 3 failed IUIs and 2 failed IVFs, my third IVF was a success!
My Christmas baby turned into a turkey bird! Dillon Richard was born at 34 weeks, 5 days on November 28, 2009 after 10 weeks on bedrest for preeclampsia.
<a href="http://smg.photobucket.com/albums/v705/arriinthere/PJ/?action=view
TTC #1: IUI #2 = BFP , Betas 550 (16 dpiui), 1523 (18 dpiui)
Hypothyroid, LPD, FSH 13.0, TTC 2 yrs B4 BFP
TTC #2: FSH 23, AMA, IUI 1, 2, 3 = BFN, IVF #1 = MC
IVF #2 = BFP - Betas 194 (14dp2dt), 366 (16 dp2dt), 841 (18 dp2dt)
(vanished twin ~7 weeks)
I think your trigger should be out so, congratulations!!!
When I did my IVF cycle I tested the morning of my egg retrieval just to see if my trigger was gone or not and it was negative (5 days after the trigger shot) so I would assume, even though it's different for everyone, it has to be gone 15 days later!!
Congratulations again and keep us posted! Good luck on Monday!!
Hannah
There's a baby in there!!
CONGRATS!!!
"When it comes to sleeping, whatever your baby does is normal. If one thing has damaged parents enjoyment of their babies, it's rigid expectations about how and when the baby should sleep." ~ James McKenna, Ph.D., Mother Baby Behavioral Sleep Center, University of Notre Dame