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How it works 1) You will have to meet with a licensed psychologist
to make sure you are making the best decision for you and your family
2) The fertility specialist will examine your medical records from previous births and make sure you uterus
is in good condition to carry another pregnancy
3)
In order for your body to carry a pregnancy for another the doctor will give you hormones that are natural to your body to
prevent you body from rejecting the pregnancy
Lupron is used by both you and the intended mother to synchronize your menstrual cycles and to make sure you don’t
release any of your own eggs
Estrogen will thicken the lining of your uterus to help the embryos to stink to your uterine lining
Progesterone will help your body
to retain the pregnancy
4) You will start taking the hormones,
listed above, a couple of weeks before the embryo transfer. You will continue to take these hormones until the end of
the first trimester. At that point you body will be producing these hormones on its own and the rest of the pregnancy
is pretty much like any other pregnancy.

Embryo Transfer The embryo transfer is a simple and painless process that takes
place in the fertility specialist office. Some doctors may give you a mild sedative to make sure you are relaxed.
The embryos are drawn into a very small tube called a catheter. The catheter is gently inserted into your vagina and
directly into your uterus. The doctor gently releases the embryos into your uterus in a drop of fluid. You will
rest for a little while then go home. The first pregnancy test will be a about 10 days to two weeks and the pregnancy
is usually confirmed about 30 days after the transfer when a heart beat is detected by the doctor. Once the heart
beat is detected you are considered officially pregnant.
You will continue to see the fertility specialist until
the end of the first trimester when you can stop taking the hormones. At this point in you can begin seeing your regular
OBGYN closer to your home. Your OBGYN must be board certified and have privileges to practice at a hospital that has
at least a level 2 Neonatal Unit.
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