Hi everyone!
I've held off on asking this question as I've been trying to lurk everywhere to see if it's already been answered. I'm active on the TTGP forum but have been a consistent lurker here as well. I'm currently on Month 14 - Cycle 6. Up until recently I've had some insanely irregular cycles. Starting in 2010, my period would disappear for months on end. I worked a very stressful job and had gone back to school. I left that job last year and my cycle started to regulate itself. I'm currently taking 2000 mg of Metformin and utilizing 2.5 mg Femara on days 4-8. This is my first Femara cycle but I've been on the Metformin for several months.
Based upon my symptoms, my doctors (I've seen two now, I also have a consult scheduled with an RE) have indicated that they believe that I have PCOS. I have irregular cycles, difficulty conceiving, and I struggle with obesity and have since I was a teenager. I've now had two day 3 blood panels and thyroid testing done and they all come back within normal range. Two doctors on two separate occasions have found this. In addition, I've had ultrasounds done on two separate occasions and no cysts have ever been found. Has anyone else struggled with this?
I still have PCOS marked on my chart even though I'm not demonstrating any indication of the disease in my hormone profiles. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
We do not have infertility insurance but I am scheduled to go to the Washington University Reproductive Endocrinology Clinic for an upcoming consult. I'm going to do the consult and see if they could work with me until I get new insurance that covers infertility in January. My obgyn is currently working with me by testing through the irregular cycle codes but I know I need to see a specialist.
Re: New to this board but not to TB, PCOS question...
Couple things you can do and they should do: 1) charting, if you haven't already, track your BBT and cycle changes, this will confirm if you are anovulatory without requiring a costly fertility work up that for you might be OOP. It may also show opportunities in your very long cycles to get busy. You can also use in addition an at home OPK-- if you get positives/ smiley faces more than one day in a row, your LH levels are high- very common with PCOS. 2) fasting glucose test, if they haven't done this, they should otherwise Metformin won't be indicated-not all PCOS patients benefit from it. 3) stop all carbs that aren't complex carbs. No white bread no soda. Nada zip zilch! These are critical to fertility for PCOS patients even with supported ART or medicated cycles.
These 3 things should provide some strong indications if it's actually PCOS. You can also consider a less costly SA for your DH to confirm that isn't an issue. (I was shocked when it was for us! I thought we only had the PCOS to deal with!!!) Mild to moderate exercise increases, I added a 30 minute walk each morning and 15 minutes during work breaks, can regulate your cycle and bring them closer without meds or better your response once on meds. There are also grants for patients who do not have fertility services covered by insurance, so Google those before sinking to much OOP. You never know!
GL and let us know if we can help further!