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Thanks. Flattery will get you everywhere (with me). My wife has long since given up flattering me. Sigh. That's what 20 years in on a life sentence will do...
O.K. Down to business. The fertilization/embryo development of first cycle was within the expected range and I'm not sure why they decided to change the protocol (you are not a "poor responder"). The second stimulation was way over the top. When too many follicles develop, the quality of the eggs suffers. Beyond a certain point, say 20 eggs, more is not better. I agree with the new RE. The second cycle was compromised by "overstimulation" and I'm sure the LH got a pretty high because of the number of follicles. Whether or not that had a direct effect on the eggs is difficult to tell.
Just curious, but why are you doing another fresh cycle when you have 8 frosties at the 2PN stage? I wouldn't give up hope completely on the frozen embryos. You did have good quality blastocysts for transfer (albeit nothing to freeze at the blastocyst stage) and that not bad for 41. There may be a couple of good ones in the frozen batch.
Anueploidy is an issue for you. However, by waiting until the embryos reach the blastocyst stage there is a better chance that the embryos that are transferred are "normal". Some embryos that reach the blastocyst stage are abnormal - that's one of the reasons for first trimester miscarriages. However, the first genetic "check point" is on Day 3-4 when most of the anueploid embryos stop growing. You can't tell by looking at them on Day 3, so you really don't know what your transferring on Day 3. I would continue to recommend blastocyst transfer in your case so that you at least know that the transferred embryos made it over the first genetic hurdle. Don't sweat the PGD (or lack thereof). The current technology for testing anueploidy is not very accurate and biopsying embryos on Day 3 may do more harm than good. As you might guess, I'm not a big fan of PGD for "advanced maternal age".
Its not so much the medications (or combination of medications) as the skill of the RE using the medications. If they have good success with Menopur only, they must be doing something right. No worries. A moderate stimulation is better than a low or high one. Its a Goldilocks thing. Third time is the charm?
An endometrium thickness of 10-12 is fine. However, it says nothing about what may be happening at the molecular level between the embryo and endometrium We don't know very much about this aspect of reroduction. It is a very difficult thing to study. There is no clinical test available to determine the receptivity of the endometrium.
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