At my 23-wk appt my midwife told me that MFM (who did my anatomy scan) advised due to my maternal age that I have monthly growth scans from 26 weeks on, and weekly NSTs from 32 (36?) weeks on.
The midwife left it up to me...said that while there is an increased risk of fetal demise with age she didn't really think it was necessary to monitor that closely, as all seems fine and in most cases when things do go wrong there no warning signs, so the monitoring wouldn't help prevent.
I am inclined to avoid the multiple appts - if I had a medical condition then I'd do it without hesitation, but for age alone it seems excessive. However, this situation reminds me of the amnio that was offered us in this pregnancy and my first...we declined it because of the risk of miscarriage - even though we know the risk is very, very small, we would not have been able to live with ourselves if anything had happened. Similarly, if all this monitoring might possibly help prevent a tragic outcome to this pregnancy, why would we turn it down? I guess because it can also cause more stress, and that's not great for anyone either.
What do you think you'd do?
Re: Would you opt for increased monitoring due to age?
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Yes I would go for the extra monitoring. I am scared to death of having another child with IUGR..I didn't know that Jake was IUGR until I gave birth to him and my OB is sort of the opposite of yours. He is super conservative (doesn't do lots of u/s) only does doppler checks at apts..ect..
At the end with J..I would tell him that I had some decreased movement, headaches, some blood pressure issues and he kind of blew it off. And if I had pushed harder, we might have been able to know sooner that J was IUGR and only 3lbs!. Yes, in my case things ended up ok..he was totally healthy and only spent limited time in the NICU. But in most of these cases things don't turn out so great.
So, yes I would do the u/s! It shouldn't really cause any more stress, maybe if they aren't covered by your insurance and there is a money issue..but I would still pay for them OOP just to have the piece of mind..
At my 20 wk apt next week I have to talk to my OB about allowing me to get more u/s during this 30-36wk time!
This. I went for monthly growth scans because I was on Lovenox (suggested by the MFM)...even if it was excessive (which my OB thought it was), it put my mind at ease when I saw her every month.
Ditto. And if they're monitoring they may catch decreased movement/failed NST/BPP that could call for delivery and potentially save baby's life. The monitoring in and of itself isn't an intervention, and it only leads to them if there's something actually wrong. But I am very paranoid. I actually requested weekly NSTs when pregnant with Boodle and my doc said they weren't necessary...
I had the extra monitoring and would do it again. Even though most of the extra monitoring was needed because I was pre-e on bedrest, it also gave me peace of mind that everything was going good.
Plus a bonus is you get to see your LO once a month!
Of course I went and delivered at 34 weeks anyway but..
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.
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I would do it too. I measured small with DD and at 32 weeks they sent me for u/s. I had borderline low amniotic fluid, and my OB did weekly BPPs and NSTs from there on out (a few times the fluid measured better, but we still kept doing them). It was a bit of a pain, trying to get people to watch DS or having to bring him with me, but it was worth it to me to make sure all was ok.
But like most, I am a nervous nellie - it made me feel better to get all the monitoring. I would have been more stressed/nervous if I didn't get any monitoring.
Good luck deciding!
This is my natural inclination...maybe I will ask the midwife I'm going to see next week (there are 4 in the practice) what her opinion is, rather than basing my decision on what 1 of them said.
LO #1 - 1 unmedicated/self-monitored IUI w/ donor sperm.
LO #2 - 1 m/c, 2 BFNs, 4th IUI worked (unmedicated/self-monitored with new donor sperm).
Life is beautiful!
This makes a lot of sense to me...thanks for putting it that way!
LO #1 - 1 unmedicated/self-monitored IUI w/ donor sperm.
LO #2 - 1 m/c, 2 BFNs, 4th IUI worked (unmedicated/self-monitored with new donor sperm).
Life is beautiful!
Bad stories specifically related to advanced maternal age??
LO #1 - 1 unmedicated/self-monitored IUI w/ donor sperm.
LO #2 - 1 m/c, 2 BFNs, 4th IUI worked (unmedicated/self-monitored with new donor sperm).
Life is beautiful!
Yup...I won't tell you the stories, but they didn't see it coming and it was very tragic. Three stories:(
"I have four children. Two are adopted. I forget which two. -Bob Constantine
"All for Love,' a Saviour prayed 'Abba Father have Your way. Though they know not what they do...Let the Cross draw men to You...."
"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