Left wonderin
Not sure lol
- Joined
- Nov 7, 2012
- Messages
- 8,601
- Reaction score
- 2
Came accross this and thought it was interesting
Bella1231
Posted 02/11/2013
Hi ladies! Yes I wrote a post on this board a while ago, dont know where it is! I think I am the same, started trying for baby in March, got pregnant immediately. Then lost baby in May (mmc), took 3 months for hcg levels to drop back to normal, this was then August, so guessing was probably first time ovulating again, we tried that month, fell pregnant, then miscarried again in September. I dont know if it means if you are super fertile, then your body tries to take on every time with a pregnancy, whether its a healthy egg/sperm or not,whereas a regular woman/s body will normally dismiss it. So the way I read this is I would then experience more miscarriages than normal, if I am to always get pregnant, until that healthy combination appears. We are going to ttc again from next cycle, so will soon see if I really am super fertile or not. From BBC site:https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-19361432
"Super-fertility" may explain why some women have multiple miscarriages, according to a team of doctors.
They say the wombs of some women are too good at letting embryos implant, even those of poor quality which should be rejected.
The UK-Dutch studypublished in the journal PLoS ONEsaid the resulting pregnancies would then fail.
One expert welcomed the findings and hoped a test could be developed for identifying the condition in women.
Cells from women with normal fertility started to grow and reach out towards the high-quality embryos. Poor-quality embryos were ignored.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote
They may simply be super-fertile, as they allow embryos which would normally not survive to implant”
Prof Nick MacklonPrincess Anne Hospital
However, the cells of women who had recurrent miscarriages started to grow towards both kinds of embryo.
Prof Nick Macklon, a consultant at the Princess Anne Hospital, said: "Many affected women feel guilty that they are simply rejecting their pregnancy.
"But we have discovered it may not be because they cannot carry, [but] it is because they may simply be super-fertile, as they allow embryos which would normally not survive to implant."
He added: "When poorer embryos are allowed to implant, they may last long enough in cases of recurrent miscarriage to give a positive pregnancy test."
Bella1231
Posted 02/11/2013
Hi ladies! Yes I wrote a post on this board a while ago, dont know where it is! I think I am the same, started trying for baby in March, got pregnant immediately. Then lost baby in May (mmc), took 3 months for hcg levels to drop back to normal, this was then August, so guessing was probably first time ovulating again, we tried that month, fell pregnant, then miscarried again in September. I dont know if it means if you are super fertile, then your body tries to take on every time with a pregnancy, whether its a healthy egg/sperm or not,whereas a regular woman/s body will normally dismiss it. So the way I read this is I would then experience more miscarriages than normal, if I am to always get pregnant, until that healthy combination appears. We are going to ttc again from next cycle, so will soon see if I really am super fertile or not. From BBC site:https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-19361432
"Super-fertility" may explain why some women have multiple miscarriages, according to a team of doctors.
They say the wombs of some women are too good at letting embryos implant, even those of poor quality which should be rejected.
The UK-Dutch studypublished in the journal PLoS ONEsaid the resulting pregnancies would then fail.
One expert welcomed the findings and hoped a test could be developed for identifying the condition in women.
Cells from women with normal fertility started to grow and reach out towards the high-quality embryos. Poor-quality embryos were ignored.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote
They may simply be super-fertile, as they allow embryos which would normally not survive to implant”
Prof Nick MacklonPrincess Anne Hospital
However, the cells of women who had recurrent miscarriages started to grow towards both kinds of embryo.
Prof Nick Macklon, a consultant at the Princess Anne Hospital, said: "Many affected women feel guilty that they are simply rejecting their pregnancy.
"But we have discovered it may not be because they cannot carry, [but] it is because they may simply be super-fertile, as they allow embryos which would normally not survive to implant."
He added: "When poorer embryos are allowed to implant, they may last long enough in cases of recurrent miscarriage to give a positive pregnancy test."