Okay - a new wrinkle for ya. I just got off the phone with the nurse at my doctor's office, who said my blood tests were normal (my estrogen was 30, which she said is normal but seems low to me), but I have a significantly elevated prolactin level. She said that's probably what's causing my lack of periods. She is referring me to an endocrinologist...She said I will probably have to take medication to bring it down...Can you please explain what this means, what this has to do with my period, and what this has to do with having a baby down the road? Thanks! Also, could medications be responsible for this? I am on a few for stomach and dizziness problems. Thanks.
Thank you very much for your response. You explained it a lot better than my doctor, who I think I will stop seeing after I get my blood tests and ultrasound done! By the way, I am 31. Sorry I forgot to give my age. Are these injections that you talk about painful? My husband is concerned that they could make me sick or depressed...and so am I. Thanks.
I am assuming you are about 29-30?
In order to have a bleed after taking provera, your uterine lining (endometrium) has to first have been exposed to enough estrogen so that enough lining builds up to bleed. Thus, the fact that you did not bleed means that your ovaries are not making enough progesterone since stopping the pill.
My bet is that this is not because of premature menopause, since the chances of premature ovarian failure in a 30 year old are only 1/1000 overall, and premature ovarian failure accounts for only 10% of situations when women do not have periods. With your history of anorexia, you may still have a low percent body fat and when that occurs (and even when not) the anorexia may have suppressed the signals from your hypothalamus (the part of the brain that controls ovulation). Having said this, of course it is important to make sure you are not one of the 10% who have premature ovarian failure, and the hormone tests will tell the answer.
Regarding ways for you to have a baby, if the lack of periods are due to a lack of signal from the brain, then you will not require IVF as the first choice to get pregnant. You will, however, require fertility drugs. Fertility pills like clomid sometimes work, but often not when the source of the lack of ovulation is the hypothalamus. Most often, fertility injections are needed, similar to those given for IVF. But instead of IVF you have intercourse with your husband. The idea is that there is nothing wrong with your eggs;they just are not receiving the signals they need. The fertility medicaitions provide these signals.
If it turns out that you need fertility injections to help you to ovulate because of a lack of a hypothalamic signal, make sure the drugs your fertility doctor chooses contain both FSH and LH.
I am keeping my fingers crossed that you do not have premature menopause. Once this is confirmed, the good news is that women with absent periods (not ovulating) but with eggs in their ovaries, are usually very successful with treatment.