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My partner and I are going to try and have another baby. We already have a daughter but she was the one who had her. I want to have our 2nd child. My issues is my tubes may be blocked due to scar tissue (Dont know why i have scar tissue and neither does the doctor) Is it still possible to get aritfically inseminated EVEN if your tubes are closed? Or is there any other ways to get pregnant. I had surgery in Dec. to correct my irregular periods (D & C) and They also thought i had a cyst on my uterus and they took a camera and looked at it and said my uterus is fine. The only issue i have is a lot of scar tissue on my tubes.

2007-03-12 04:05:43 · 7 answers · asked by sexylilles 3 in Pregnancy & Parenting Trying to Conceive

Tess- When i had surgery in Dec. the doctor removed as much scar tissue as he could.

What is the cost of in-vitro compared to AI?

2007-03-12 04:21:38 · update #1

7 answers

If your tubes are completely blocked, then the egg/embryo would have no way of travelling from the ovary to the uterous. You'd have a better chance of getting pregnant with invitro, where the embryo wouldn't have to make the trip down the tube.

2007-03-16 16:22:37 · answer #1 · answered by Liza 6 · 0 0

I'm no fertility specialist, but you might want to try in-vitro as opposed to an intrauterine insemination. You can still use donor sperm (well, you have to, lol) but they would take a few eggs from you (it depends on how many your body releases) and fertilize them in a dish, wait to see which ones mature properly, then they would insert them into your uterus and pray that one or more implants. All this time you would be taking hormones to aid in achieving and maintaining a pregnancy.

I think there's also the possibility of having your tubes cleaned out through surgery, but I'm not sure if that's just for scar tissue or something else. This is really a question best answered by your doctor.

2007-03-12 04:15:00 · answer #2 · answered by Rebecca C 3 · 0 0

It depends on the extent of the scar tissue. If the tube is totally blocked I think the chances are slim. You may want to talk to your doctor about the possibility of having surgery to remove the scar tissue. S/he will have a better idea of what is possible. You will have to discuss all of this before you could start the insemination process anyway.

2007-03-12 04:13:30 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

IUI (without cost of donor sperm) ran about $700 per month for us, including the clomid I took and my trigger shot to get me to ovulate at the right time.

IVF cost about $7500 per cycle including meds.

IVF has a much higher success rate for women with tubal issues, but IUIs are much cheaper and less invasive.

I saw a program the other day where a woman got cryogenically frozen sperm from the office and her partner inseminated her at home, but I think that is rare and not very successful. IUIs (timed inseminations done in the office where prepared sperm are transferred through a catherter into the uterus) is more effective than a low-tech AI.

Good luck!

2007-03-13 20:32:12 · answer #4 · answered by MissM 6 · 0 0

hassle-free. As you stated, man made insemination. that's achieved in a medical sanatorium, or that's achieved merely as surely with a prepared male better half and a turkey baster (besides the actuality that man made insemination utilising technological help is usually utilized in circumstances the place there's a fertility undertaking, and the different approach i discussed would not artwork in those situations). Then, there are circumstances the place being pregnant has got here approximately in virgins who have been engaged in nonpenetrative sexual intercourse. no longer effortless, in spite of the indisputable fact that it does ensue. finally, there is parthenogenesis, the place an ovum spontaneously starts off dividing devoid of fertilization. This, in spite of the indisputable fact that, demands specific mutations and environmental factors to ensue, and has of yet no longer been documented in human beings.

2016-10-01 23:59:11 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes you can still be artificially inseminated. BUT there is still a higher chance of ectopic pregnancy so of course you will want to be closely monitored during the first trimester.

2007-03-12 04:12:14 · answer #6 · answered by mom2ace 4 · 0 0

yes if you have egg,or use some else eggs.

2007-03-16 15:24:11 · answer #7 · answered by erika h 1 · 0 0

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