How I Got All Freaked Out Over My HSC for Nothing

I had my first hysteroscopy (HSC) last month and really managed to freak myself out big time over it. I even lost sleep! I was convinced it was going to be this awful procedure because it involved a shot to numb the cervix. The conversation with the nurse went something like this:

“You’ll be getting an HSC, where they will numb your cervix, here’s some prescriptions for pain, antibiotics and anxiety.”

Immediately my anxiety shoots through the roof and I’m like, whoah, back up, tell me more about how this “numbing” will occur.

“They will give you a shot in your cervix”

I think I may have just fallen out of my chair at that moment. You’d think since I’d given myself shots in the belly for nearly two weeks with the last procedure that needles would not bother me.

But for some reason, the thought of this needle deep in my sensitive and personal area, just put me over the edge. I had managed to escape the HSG experience by having it done during the lap surgery, but I was not getting away with this one!

What the hysteroscope looks like is just scary:

Close up photo hands in latex gloves holding a modern hysteroscope for hysteroscopy

Give Me all the Meds

I demanded double the pain and anxiety meds, and they actually gave it to me. That made me feel a little better. Of course I went straight home and googled all about HSCs and really worked myself into full freak-out mode.

The dreaded day finally came and I took half my meds as instructed and brought the rest. The first half barely took the edge off my anxiety. The nurse told me to sit on the table and take the rest of the pills, but don’t get up because I might be dizzy.

I thought, Ha! As-if! I’m so wound up they probably won’t do anything.

Well they certainly did kick in and by the time to nurse got there I was like, hey do what you gotta do, let’s get this over with.

What the HSC Felt Like

There was a sort of pinchy feeling with the shot. Not a big deal at all. And then a little cramping during the procedure, but I’ve had menstrual cramps worse than that. It was over with pretty quickly. They even took a biopsy and I didn’t feel a thing.

I was given the all-clear with a healthy normal uterus. The only odd thing was she said my uterus was “small.” I didn’t really know they came in different sizes and started wondering how small is small? So, of course, I looked it up and got some answers: http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-considered-a-small-uterus.htm#didyouknowout

So there you have it. If you are scheduled for the HSC, it’s not terrible. It’s never fun to have needles and instruments all up in your personal business, but overall, it’s nothing to lose sleep over. Just ask for extra Xanax, and it goes by pretty smoothly!

 

 

A More In-Depth Review of My TTC history

My husband is in the army, so we have big gaps in our TTC attempts because he kept getting deployed. It always seems like the army is working against us and scheduling him to be out of town during the magical “fertile window.”

My TTC Timeline

I can’t remember exact dates due to it being spread out over the past 7 years, but here’s the gist of it:

2007 – surprise, I’m pregnant! 7 weeks later everything ends and I enter the murky world of fertility issues and TTC

2008-2010 – I start charting, peeing on a lot of sticks to determine ovulation and the peeing on more sticks hoping for a double line. There’s a year deployment during this time.

2011 – decide to seek help. Five minutes into consultation doc says I have endometriosis and schedules a laparoscopy and HSG to check fallopian tubes.

2011 – lap procedure confirms stage 1 endo. It’s fairly minimal, and they laser it out. HSG looks good, tubes all clear.

2012 – The start of the IUI stage. In this year we try:

Femera, Ovidrel & IUI #1= BFN

Femera, Ovidrel & IUI #2 = BFN

Follistim, Ovidrel & “timed intercourse” = BFN

2013 there’s another deployment, we try naturally for a few months upon return, then we try acupuncture, and now we are entering the current stage of desperate measures.

2014 – this time around we switch to a new doc. This results in more testing, an HSG and something called the Clomid Challenge. Apparently my ovaries didn’t really rise to the challenge because the results from all the tests was basically: you need IVF, the sooner the better. Husband’s tests all came back fine.

June 2014: started on Estradiol for this month. Instructions are to contact nurse on cycle day 1 for next step.

TTC