Hi Erin,
I had my 4th pregnancy this year and was also diagnosed as borderline
polyhydramnios. All the tests checked out OK. DD was born on 20th
Aug and is perfect and I had no problems either in pregnancy or at
delivery.( other than "midwife distress" but that's another story!!)
If no cause has been found in your case I'm sure you too will be fine.
All the best,
Diane & Lyra (3w2d)
"Erin" wrote in message
k.net...
I had an ultrasound along with my 33-week appointment on Monday. At
22
weeks I'd been diagnosed with marginal placenta previa, and
unfortunately
the midwife who told me the news had been quite scary when
explaining the
problem and also left out how common it is at that stage, and how
often it
goes away later. Anyway, the most recent ultrasound showed that I
no longer
have any sort of previa, yay! But on the heals of that news came
the
diagnosis of borderline polyhydramnios, i.e., too much amniotic
fluid.
According to the dr., I had the "lowest high score" (24 cm) for
fluid that
is diagnosed as polyhydramnios.
I know that too much amniotic fluid can indicate a bunch of
problems, but it
seems highly unlikely the baby or I have any of them. (In fact, my
official
diagnosis is "ideopathic polyhydramnios," because they can't find a
likely
cause.) For instance, GD was ruled out because I passed my glucose
tolerance
test with flying colors a few weeks ago. I've had 3 previous
ultrasounds
checking for fetal abnormalities, and the baby has never scanned as
anything
other than completely average in its weight, growth, etc. After the
initial
ultrasound, my doctor sent me for a nonstress test, where the
technician
pronounced the baby's readings as a textbook healthy.
At least this time the doctor didn't freak me out with doomsday
pronouncements on this issue -- he said that under the
circumstances, my Sea
Monkey is probably absolutely fine and we'll have a normal, safe
delivery.
He figures that I'm just one of those people who doesn't quite
conform to
the statistical norm for fluid. The annoying thing is that the
hospital
still wants me to come back every single week for scans and
nonstress tests
to monitor the situation. Also, I'm annoyed because I may have
accidentally
caused the whole idiotic situation to begin with, as I'd been
feeling sick
to my stomach the day before and was a little dehydrated from that,
and
worried that they might erroneously diagnose *too little* fluid
because of
that. So about 60 minutes before the scan I drank 16 oz. water, and
then
about 30 minutes before, I had another 16 ounces. I was kind of
floating
when they did the scan! I explained this to the doctor afterwards
and he
said that while being dehydrated can cause too little amniotic
fluid, that
drinking too much "wasn't seen as a cause" for too much amniotic
fluid!
I'm hopeful that when I go back next week my fluid score/amount will
be in
normal range, and I can force them to stop having me do all these
tests.
Has anyone else had experience with this issue?
Thanks, Erin
33 weeks, 4 days
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