Thursday, 27 August 2015

Advised to stop Clexane

I forgot to mention, the other day when I spoke with the naturopath she said she feels confident for me to stop taking the Clexane injections... She said that is because I have a good homocysteine reading. 

She told me if I want to I could take them like twice a week - just in case - so I'm going to do that. But it seems EVERYONE is confident that taking an aspirin every day will stop any blood clotting issues the MTHFR may bring on. 

Really looking forward to not having to inject myself every day - and have a constantly bruised stomach. 

Monday, 24 August 2015

More on flu/whooping cough vaccination and MTHFR

So today I had a really good chat with my naturopath about getting the flu and whooping cough vaccination while I'm pregnant in order pass the antibodies on to the baby before it is born. Here are the conclusions we came to:

I am not going to get the flu vaccination. Reasons why:

  1. In the first few months of life, I intend to stay at home, keep warm and not socialise with others or see any one who is sick. 
  2. We intend to vaccinate ourselves and grandparents against the flu. There are no other young children in the family to pass on flu. 
  3. The child will be born in summer, hence low flu time. 
  4. The flu virus changes from season to season so even if we do get flu vaccine, not all flus will be covered any way. 
  5. The biggest reason is, because the flu virus changes so often, so too does the flu vaccination. Because of this it is not tried and tested... It's a bit of an unknown quantity for people like me, people with MTHFR and prone to autism. 
  6. If the child does get the flu, chances are it will survive. 
  7. Later I spoke to the doctor about flu, she said the main reason for vaccinating is to stop the mother getting flu, not the baby. I had the flu vaccination just before getting pregnant - so I should be fine. 

I am going to get the whooping cough vaccination. Reasons why:
  1. Unlike the flu vaccination, whooping cough vaccination is a little bit more of a known quantity.  It doesn't change from season to season, hence it's more predictable. 
  2. Because I'm taking such good medication and have sorted my methylation system out, it means I should be able to process the vaccination without any problem. My naturopath says my homocysteine levels are great, and that's a good sign I'm methylating. She said if I was not methylating then she would not recommend it. 
  3. Whooping cough is pretty nasty and can be deadly for a young child. It's something you really don't want them to catch. 
  4. It's probably better I'm the one vaccinated when taking the right medication, than vaccinate a small baby who you aren't medicating. And whooping cough is something you want it vaccinated against. 
  5. The doctor also agreed that if you were to choose one vaccination, whooping cough or flu, she'd recommend whooping cough. She also said there is an out break of it here at the moment. 
It's a risk, the naturopath said she feels torn with the whooping cough debate but is confident with not to flu vaccinate.

She also said she wouldn't consider vaccinating a child at 6 weeks - it's too young. She said they should be a minimum of 3 months old, and they should be fit and healthy before it is done. 

Any ones comments or thoughts on the matter would be greatly appreciated. I've still got time to make my mind up. 

Sunday, 23 August 2015

20 week scan was perfect!

Yeah, baby is still alive and well. Heart there, brain in order, and all measurements perfect. Person scanning said baby is 1 day older than it should be.

Wonderful result.

I then spoke to the naturopath who was thrilled. We discussed vaccinations and the fact that I'll need more magnesium as the pregnancy progresses from now. She said to look out for cramping muscles and twitching eyes, a sign of low magnisium.

We had good discussion re flu and whooping cough. She said not to have flu vaccination, but was on the fence over whooping cough. I'll update my vaccination section with our discussion soon.

20 week scan today

I am feeling nervous.

Was feeling quite emotional last night, stressing that I hadn't really felt much movement over the past couple of days. Bad news flashed through my mind, and dread of today crept in. I'd been invited to a friend's place for a musical concert put on by the symphony orchestra, 1/2 way through the concert I felt kicks, including the biggest kick I've felt yet. Relief.

After the concert a friend came up to me and asked if I felt kicking during it. She said it is quite normal as the little baby can apparently hear now. Then I spoke with one of the violinists who said her baby kicked like crazy during rehearsals when she had them. Babies seem to love music. So now I'm thinking I'll take to playing Mozart during the day, surely the sound waves and rhythm will be good for it.

Oh dread, the 20 week scan. It's an hour away! :-(

Friday, 21 August 2015

I can feel kicking!

Yes, baby is kicking. I can even feel it with my hand. It started off feeling like a little muscle twitch inside my stomach, I wasn't sure if they were kicks or not. Now they are stronger, and undeniably kicks, though it hasn't been kicking too much today.

I have my 20 week scan on Monday, hopefully that goes well. Gosh, every stage of this whole process is so nerve wracking. Just imagine if I lost it now. I'd be heart broken. Big breath.

Monday, 10 August 2015

18 weeks - heart beating

Today we had our first appointment with a midwife. We filled in some hospital forms, gave personal information, and had a scan with the Doppler machine. My poor husbands face went white and dropped as the midwife searched for the heart beat, it takes a bit of finding with that thing and 10 seconds of silence felt to him like 10 minutes... The one and only time he's been present with a Doppler was when we miscarried at 17 weeks, but today the heart beat was there - Yeah! We're still on track.

Next time I see the midwives is at 30 weeks.

Next appointment is our 20 week scan. Apparently it is very detailed and takes 1 hour. Our Dr said 2 out of every hundred have some kind of issue, but from what she's seen she thinks we will be ok.

Sunday, 2 August 2015

17 weeks - OMG, it's still alive!

I just can't believe it. 17 weeks and it's still alive. Nearly brings tears to my eyes. Am beginning to think it might work this time. After nearly a decade of trying, we've never been this far.

It was 17 weeks we discovered the death last time :-(

Our doctor said everything looks completely normal. It's heart is the right beat, it's head and measurements the right size, brain developing well - everything. Baby was so big, it's now haunched over inside and they have to measure pieces of it rather than one length.

Can't believe parenthood might be an option for us.

During this time of trying my emotions have shut down, and while we've been doing nothing but IVF, special diets, injections, and visiting doctors for scans over the past six years, I haven't allowed myself to visualise a live baby at the end. Now I feel torn, it brings tears to my eyes - the feeling of allowing myself to hope is frightening. Maybe it's best to stick on autopilot and not think.

Here is the latest scan:


And this scan is too funny, it's of Baby's finger... We spent a while working out what finger it had up, for a moment we thought it was the middle one. Dr said she would have framed it and put it on the wall if that were the case. We all had a good laugh: