I was six and a half years old when the term was coined for the first baby in the world conceived and born through IVF. The term stuck in my head since I'd heard it from the news casts in 1978. That, and the name Louise Brown. Little did I know, I would be experiencing a similar journey first hand.
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| July 27, 1978 |
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| Louise and the glass womb that incubated her first few days life |
The science behind conception outside of the womb was in it's infancy in 1969 when Dr. Edwards was fertilizing human eggs ("ova") in petri dishes. What he couldn't do was get the zygote to divide and grow properly and become an embryo. By 1970, he was joined by Dr. Steptoe and with success expanded research to involved human volunteers. They were women and their husbands that had issues of some sort with fertility. The doctors' research was based on retrieving their volunteers' eggs, fertilize them in-vitro ("in glass"), and implant them in the mothers' uteri in hopes to overcome infertility.
Yes, you are correct to think that this was very controversial in more ways than the obvious. If you want, you can read more about that here.
Needless to say, the research resulted in more failures than successes. Even up until Spring of 1976, they had failed to maintain a pregnancy more than five weeks. Just months later in the Fall of 1976, Louise's mother Lesley Brown was referred to the doctors by recommendation of her own physician for failure to conceive.
Lesley had blocked fallopian tubes which meant once she ovulated, her egg entered the tube but had no chance to meet with her husband John's sperm. In one interview it was said Lesley was desperate to do anything to have a baby. Desperate enough for someone to use unproven scientific and medical techniques to help make the hookup happen. Dr. Edwards and Dr. Steptoe were her seemingly only hope.
Hookups were easy-peasy for the docs. The part of the story that Lesley literally did not know about was their inability to get everything to chill and have the eggs make themselves at home. It was something they had never been able to do until they met her.
Interesting enough, as said by Louise herself in this interview in October 2016 with Valerie Landis of Eggsperience, her mother's strong belief she was going to have the baby may have been enough to make the pregnancy progress. She had hope. The rest is now history.
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| Proud parents Lesley and John Brown with baby Louise |
Then there's me. No uterus, no problem. Just rent a womb. It's the egg production and fetching that is going to be the challenge. We're looking at overcoming odds in territory that is often explored and challenged but has high failure rates. It's called advanced maternal age.
As of current, results of the many of diagnostic tests I've gone through in the past couple of months, my female reproductive organs aren't doing too shabby when it comes to hormone, follicle and egg production. Heck, I wouldn't expect any less considering I was almost 31 with my last birth and got pregnant waaaaaay too easily. My paternal grandmother (by chance Louise was her middle name) had 9 pregnancies, the last at age 34. But the most fertile of them all, my maternal grandmother (middle name Wilhemina if you are wondering), was pregnant 18, maybe 19 times, the last born at age 42.
To proceed with egg retrieval with Lesley Brown, the doctors followed her actual cycle and harvested one egg from her ovary. The one egg that a woman normally for each cycle, two if the ovaries are wanting to be competitive. The doctors had one chance to do this right.
Sounds a poorly laid out plan- just one egg- for a couple of docs that were diligent for years to get this right. It's like packing one pair of underwear for a week's vacation (men!). But they had tried for a few years to use stimulation techniques on their volunteers to mature more than one egg at a time, and succeeded in getting 4-6 eggs. However, the medications used to increase egg production sped up cycles in the uterus to already be at the sloughing phase (menstruation) by the time the egg matured enough to implant. The egg growth and uterine cycle were out of sync and the uterus could not support the egg. This was not a workable plan in order for Lesley to conceive and bear a child.
Obviously Dr. Edwards and Dr. Steptoe got it right because we have Louise as proof, but it was a big gamble at that day and age, as it would be now.
Today, during IVF procedures, they are able to stimulate both ovaries to produce 5, 10, 20, even 25 eggs at a time. And they can keep the uterus, should there be one, in proper hormonal sync for embryo transfer. The challenge after retrieving sufficient quantity is to assess for quality eggs.
Just as you have a blackberry bush laden with berries, there will be some berries that are ripe, some not. Some that are big and tasty, and some are small and barely palatable. Then consider if the bush has been around for several years, endured a few sprays of Round-up as well as machete hackings to cut them back. You're going to find a good bit of the berries that resemble squinty-eyed mutants but there is the chance that there will be a few good ones.
Human ovaries eggs are not much different, especially when you are asking them to do something they weren't programmed. My ovaries are along the lines of that blackberry bush that has age and environmental factors working against it. Let's not say menopause because I'm not there yet believe it or not, but things are slowing down despite a family history of super-fertility being on my side.
The plan this July is to give my ovaries a challenge of a lifetime with stimulation medications (um, injections) to see that if amongst those squinty-eyed mutants we'll find a good 5+ eggs that will pass inspection, selecting the best of the best to be transferred into my loving surrogate.
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| Birth Control, Methyfolate,Omega 3's, DHEA, CoQ10, Prenatal, Aspirin, Vitamin D3, Hawaiin bioastin astaxanthin, Zinc, Iron, Methylated B12- all ordered by the fertility specialist |
With all the negatives, you're asking if this seriously can be done. Yes it can. Because I believe. I believe in my team of doctors and embryologist. I believe in me, my strength, my health and drive that God gave me. I also know that He has granted each one of these providers their talents to make this happen.
And for Louise.... I think I was creating a double standard. After all, Sinthea isn't really a good baby name either. Like me, she grew into her name and is awfully good at living up to who she was meant to be.




I love you, sister. I know this is a labor of love and that there are many obstacles for you. You know that the mind influences the body and faith is the biggest factor for those enduring medical procedures. You have both a strong mind and a strong faith. Keep writing and encouraging.
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