I really do like elephants. They are probably my favorite thing to go see at the zoo, if I had to pick a wild animal to ride, I’d definitely go for an elephant, and I absolutely adore watching them do tricks at the circus.

And all of that is a good thing since we apparently have an elephant living in the middle of our family room. You know the one, the elephant in the room that no one addresses.

Our elephant’s name is “Complex Special Needs Child”. She is citrus-colored, and wears a pink tu-tu with purple polka dots. And for the most part she stays very much to herself, not really intruding upon my life, or the life of anyone else in the family. We all do a really super good job of ignoring her on a day to day basis. But yesterday at our GI appt in milwaukee, she was acknowledged, and that gave her the freedom to kind of go trampling through my thoughts and the room.

I knew going in to this appointment, that it was probably going to lead to some hard discussions and choices about what else to do for Kendall health-wise. We have danced around the issue of placing a “GJ tube” for Kendall’s feeding for a few months now. When it was first brought up, I was SO relieved to have avoided it. I saw it as a major step backwards when we were just starting to FINALLY have some forward momentum. It has continued to be part of what I personally consider to be “background noise” – blah blah blah GJ tube, blah blah. Last week when we were up in milwaukee for the EEG (brainwave testing), our complex care nurse stopped in to check on Kendall because of all the other issues she has been dealing with for the past few weeks. When she brought it up again, and made a note that she was going to send a note to our GI, I knew then that we were going to be barreling towards a switch sooner than later. And when Kendall started a pretty hefty amount of vomiting this past Saturday night for no real apparent reason, I knew it was not a matter of “if”, but “when”.

So at the GI appointment yesterday, when Dr. Noe came in relatively concerned about the increased vomiting, and started asking some very pointed questions (when do we notice it, is it worse at nite, what is the consistency, etc) – I could tell it was coming. He did a good job trying to ease me into it, i’ll give him style points for that much. He offered to do an endoscopy, offered taking her completely NPO (nil per oral = no more bottles or cheerios or food – only slow feeds all day long through her G-tube), and then said, “orrrrr….we could talk about the GJ”. I kind of smirked at him that since this was the third time he had brought it up that maybe I should start considering it! He told me “right – cause I like to ease most parents into it, but hey, we’re already past that point. I think it’s time”

So – end of discussion.

And here’s what the rest of the conversation basically contained:

I went in to this appointment knowing that i was frustrated. I knew it was time to start asking the harder questions about what is going on with Kendall, and what do we expect from Kendall, and how do I fix Kendall, and the bottom line is…no one really knows. Dr. N looked me in the eye after i got finished ranting about my frustrations over the fact that it’s not like I am dealing with “well, hmm, do i give her tylenol or not? it MIGHT be an ear infection or it MIGHT be her molars…” – no, it’s, well ok, here’s a semi-lethargic baby whose appetite has noticeably decreased, been sick for almost 2 straight months, is breathing real rapidly and shallowly, and her core body temp is 93 degrees rectally…..is this a medical emergency? or do we ride this one out with a few pairs of pajamas and some warm water flushed through the tube? – and he told me basically

Look, I know we don’t have the muscle biopsy back yet, but from everything I can see in her chart, we don’t have anything else working at this point BUT the mitochondrial myopathy. i think we have to all work towards that, in order to protect her better, keep her better comforted, until we DO get more solid answers. i’m going to be straight up honest with you – I do not expect Kendall to EVER be off tube feeds. She plain and simple does not have the function in her gut and intestines to support herself nutritionally by what she can handle by mouth in any given day. Especially in the case of a myopathy, we don’t ever expect to see that function increase. So our goal with Kendall isn’t to “help her be normal” – our goal with her is to keep her functioning as well as we can, for as long as we can.”

And therein lies the birth of our elephant in the room that no one wants to discuss.

The fact that Kendall is not only more complex in her special needs than I think either Ben or I have allowed ourselves to believe over this past year, coupled with the slap-in-the-face reality that Kendall may actually have mitochondrial disease. These are two things I have hardly allowed myself to even really consider over the past year. They are my little pets that I like to just tuck back into my brain somewhere and not really acknowledge them, even while I have to live with their presence. And really, the good news is that probably within the next couple weeks, I will be able to shove them back into their little hiding places, even if I was forced to take them out and look at them yesterday.

But that’s just a coping mechanism. Cause really, i get it. I know that Kendall is different and special and may have….life-shortening problems. i know that by going to the GJ, we are hoping to preserve her stomach function. But that eventually, someday, that part of the muscle will probably wear out. And someday after that, her intestines will probably start wearing out. And then, maybe some far far far away day, she will end up on TPN (nutrition through her veins). And while I hope with every ounce of my being that this ISN’T what happens for her, i know that sometimes we have to be willing to take it out and look at it, as a possibility. I think we have to come to terms with the fact that Kendall is indeed a more complex kid than we tend to treat her like. And that needs a balance. No, we don’t want to  treat her differently, or be constantly consumed with her “needs” – and yet, it will not behoove her at all for us to blithely ignore all that she does require in the name of “treating her like a regular kid”. I think it’s going to be a mindset readjustment for our family. Learning to figure out what our end goals are – protecting her energy levels as much as possible, preventing, as much as possible, any major sources of stress which would suck even more energy out of her, and trying to allow her to use her energy on an even keel so we stop seeing some of these random swings in her health.

Ok so I am kind of rambling…processing out loud. There will be plenty more of THAT in the days to come I am sure!

In as quick of a nutshell as I can – I’ll try to explain this newblog4 switch to a G-J tube. i’ll try to do a post with links tomorrow for those of you who read too much google like I do. But basically, what Kendall has now is a “G-tube” – gastrostomy tube, which drips the food directly into her stomach. It gets held in place by a balloon that we inflate with water through one of two openings on the outside. One opening is in the middle, we plug an extension tube up to that hole, and the food goes in there into her tummy. The other opening is on the side, and that’s how we fill and check the water level in the balloon to keep it in place.

blog5 The reason we need to advance to a GJ tube is to bypass her stomach  with the majority of her food. For reasons not known to us, the muscles of Kendall’s body have never quite worked right. When she was born, it was her lung muscles not allowing her to breathe right. She is in various therapies because her arm and leg and neck and trunk muscles don’t quite have the strength in them to do what they should do. And we have always known that her Gi tract (which is one big long smooth muscle from top to bottom!), doesn’t quite function like it should. And right now, her stomach part of that muscle just doesn’t seem to want to play nice with the rest of her. it just doesn’t have the energy it needs to hold in and process foods in quite the normal way. Maybe two months of sickness is just finally taking its toll – or maybe this would have happened without all of that stress. But either way, we need to find a way to ensure that MOST of her food can be properly absorbed, so she continues to gain weight, and grow, and get as much energy from her food and her meds as possible.

So to do that, we have to switch out the G-tube, for a G-J tube – gastro-jejunal tube. Meaning the food will now  go through an extension tube and drip slowly into her intestines, or jejunum – hence the name! isn’t that clever???

Anyways  – hoping that kind of explains it a little more.

We will be making a trek back up to Milwaukee next Friday, February 5th for an Upper GI study to rule out the .001% chance that Kendall’s tube just may sit too low for her be absorbing her food. Her GI doesn’t really believe that this is the issue because we would have seen the increased vomiting almost immediately after her surgery, and it would be with pretty much every feeding. Which is not the case. So once we have ruled that out, we will head over to Interventional Radiology, where they will hopefully NOT have to sedate Kendall, nor dilate her stoma too much (yes i promise that is as painful as it actually sounds), and they will insert the G-J button.

And then we can all go back to ignoring the large citrus colored elephant in the room again. For a good long while hopefully.

 

It has taken me about four hours to get this post written – and i am sure it doesn’t make a whole ton of sense – but there you have it.

 

There is a lot more that i need to get out, process, spew/vent/whine and then Praise the Lord about. But it will have to wait for another day. Preferably one after which I have had a great nite’s sleep.

Thanks for reading. And really, I know its tough to know what to say. I don’t expect you to say…anything, really, I guess. I am the queen of never knowing what to say to some people when they drop news on you that is….less than sunshiney? So I promise you – there is really no right or wrong thing to say. Something inappropriately funny always works though!

hope you all have wonderful Fridays!

 

terra

This may be a nice long one, or it could turn into something short and sweet – as if that EVER happens here on terra talking…

Kendall seems to have definitely turned the corner from the pneumonia – which is truly amazing and SUCH a relief! To kick it out with a bang, she ended up vomiting all nite long Saturday nite, and i mean a TON. Which is always just the slightest bit disturbing when she technically shouldn’t be able to puke, but, whatever. She was still a little pale and retchy all day Sunday, and by yesterday seemed to have evened out pretty nicely. Of course with all the vomit, her body temp was plummeted back down to 93.4 and it took me FOR.EV.ER. to get it back up to 96. (Is it a little sad that i was excited about getting her back UP to 96??? And that that took 12 hours and 3 layers and lots of warm water??? I hate it.)

As for me, breathing was VASTLY improved on Saturday and most of Sunday, but had definitely come back down to “work of breathing” level by yesterday afternoon. I was a little emotional about it simply because a.) I am on horse doses of other steroids currently, and those are NEVER good for one’s emotional stability, and b.) I felt like i would never get back to that good breathing I had had on the super-duper steroid. It was just not a good day. And by last nite i started just feeling super nauseated, which at first I attributed to the steroids again, but then when Ben woke up puking at 2 in the morning, i just knew it was something else.

UGH!!! So now we have both spent the morning puking and not keeping anything down and he is driving to Champaign for work and I am home alone with four kids who i do NOT want to get this illness and we have to drive up to milwaukee tomorrow for an appointment for Kendall with the GI and that means I have to find something to do with Kaylen, i am already dumping karissa off with a friend of hers from school whose parents i have never met but that is what happens when you get desperate. And overall, see i am just not in a good headspace because of these STUPID STEROIDS!!!!

Sorry – was that like the whiniest most run-on sentence you’ve ever read? I don’t mean this to be all doom and gloom, I really do try to stay positive, and see where God is taking us in times like this. But today there is just not any extra energy in me to do that.

So I ask for your prayers for us today. That whatever this stomach bug thing is, that it stays confined to me and Ben and that kendall DEFINITELY doesn’t get it. That I have the strength to continue planning for the rest of our week and the logistics involved in that. and that I get my semi-good attitude and breathing capabilities back VERY SOON!

I will quit while I am still semi-ahead here…

thanks for checking in on us!

 

terra

i promise there is!

I haven’t updated in forever beca use I have been feeling so under the weather myself – and found out on wednesday when we went in for kendall’s checkup that apparently I have pneumonia as well. oh joyous day!

So I took Kendall in just because it didn’t seem like she was really making this big leap forward with her breathing in spite of five days on the antibiotics, as we had all hoped would happen. Tuesday afternoon she went to sleep at 4 and was literally just CONKED out. By 10 that nite I knew I had to wake her up to get her ready for bed, run a bolus feed into her, give her her meds and breathing treatments, etc. When i got her downstairs she was just a little too “listless” for my liking, although I realized that she had been sleeping pretty hard. She also felt burning up on her major joints, but the rest of her skin was freezing cold (she had been wearing two layers of clothes from head to toe). So I took her temp rectally (she is next to impossible to get any other kind of accurate temp on) – and she was 93.7. NINETY THREE DEGREES!!!!! For the record that is FIVE degrees below normal. Technically hypothermic. But I am trying to not panic too badly so I hook her up to vent and out pours 2 ounces of nasty bile – almost double what we get during her bad tummy  times. Basically it just meant that her intestines had gone to sleep for a while too, and were backing up bile into her tummy. If she could throw up, I bet she would have. As it was, it had leaked up and around her tube in her tummy and made a nice little rash where it had touched. So i tried wrapping her up and rubbing her to warm her up a little bit, and took her temp again. I got a 94.3 that time, which is still a crappy temp, but figured that maybe we were headed in the right direction. I tried to check her blood sugars just because so many other weird things were going on with her – but after poking her in three different places, i STILL couldn’t get enough blood out to check, and i was done poking her. I cannot describe the miniscule amount of blood you need to run an accucheck – and she just wasn’t bleeding. Again – a sign that things just weren’t going right. Add to all of this that she was still breathing like Chewbacca on a bender and I was just about to collapse with frustration. So we settled in on the couch for a nice co-nebulizer treatment for both of us, and I bundled her back up for bed. She woke up Wednesday morning with a temp of 95.2, but it was 9:30 by then, and i had to go WAKE her up for therapy. She had diarrhea pretty bad, and we weighed her and discovered that she has not gained any weight in the past month. Now overall, this isn’t worrisome. Her average weight still works out to being a pretty good gain, and its not like she fell back off the charts at all or anything. But to me, knowing how crappy of a month she has had, it was one more sign that her body is working VERY hard to fight this thing off, using up every single calorie I put into her.

So all of this combined to make for an interesting morning. I really thought I would have to enact Plan B, which involved Kendall being admitted at the very least for a bag of fluids, possibly overnite for admission. i just about had a little meltdown because I can NOT for the life of me figure out WHY her body does so many weird things, and I am so tired of being the only one who pays attention to them, and feeling like I have no tools in place to know WHAT to do about them. Overwhelmed is a good word to describe it. Overwhelmed by a baby who does not follow the textbook on how to act and what to do at what time. overwhelmed by a baby who quite often overwhelms even her doctors, and having that burden put back onto ME to try to deal with and make sense of. And I was just totally DONE with that by Wednesday afternoon.

Dr. A comes in to the room and is blown away by how great Kendall looks, but after listening to her and reviewing her x-rays, agrees that we should definitely be seeing a lot more improvement by this point. He hears me coughing during this and makes me hop up on the table.  I try to tell him that its just my asthma cough in the winter from the cold air, but he has none of it. I can’t even take the deep breaths he wants me to take as he is listening to my lungs it hurts so bad. So he sits down on his stool and folds his hands in his lap and looks at me and says “ My dear, I am going to be honest with you – I have NO idea how you are still alive. you are moving zero percent air right now, and are hardly breathing. If you didn’t have two kids with you, I’d probably send you for x-rays and admit you to the floor, but since I don’t want to make you crazy, i am going to give you one chance to fix this at home. You will start antibiotics TODAY, and you will go home and lay down, TODAY, and if you are not better in 48 hours, you WILL call me and we will assess what needs to happen at that point.”  Trust me, when that man speaks, you listen.

And truthfully, having it acknowledged that I am not getting enough oxygen made SO much about the past few weeks make sense! My head always hurts, I have absolutely NO energy, I get short of breath walking up the stairs and forget hauling the laundry basket with me, unloading the dishwasher feels like I have run a marathon… and I just feel like i am drowning every hour of every day. And I know some of you will say – “why didn’t you go to the doctor earlier if you felt this bad?!?!?!”  But honestly – I get  sick every winter with asthma related illness. It usually starts a little later in the winter, but I just thought maybe with 4 kids it was going to hit earlier this year. I have been so very focused on keeping Kendall well that I haven’t really had time to analyze how badly I felt, or to think about doing anything about it.

So we upped Kendall’s antibiotic from ten days to 14 days, added in steroids, added in a preventative steroid to try to help boost up her lung strength, and started me on antibiotics also. The steroids seem to be really helping Kendall’s breathing become less labored, and she seems overall happier. Her temp came up that nite back into the 99 range, which means that her body had enough energy to try to mount its own defense against the bugs in her lungs –so that made me very happy and relieved that maybe we will finally turn the corner with her.

On the other hand, I had a relatively good morning yesterday, but have gone back downhill since that point, and am back to feeling pretty much like death slightly warmed over. The big girls are also now complaining of chest pains, tummy aches, and sore throats, as is Ben, and Kaylen continues to be her typical hurricane-ish self – so there is no rest for the weary around here. I really truly have no time to be as ill as I feel and wish there was just some magic pill I could take that would make me all better within two hours. Everything hurts and I just want to lay down and sleep for about 12 hours, but no one else is around to ensure that Kaylen doesn’t burn the house down, so I just gotta pull up the big girl panties and move forward.  I know this is a very whiney post – sorry about that. I can’t even muster the energy right now to FAKE like I am not whining.

I cannot thank you enough for those of you who have been and continue to pray for us. I know that Kendall is in a pretty good place right now, and I pray that she continues to move onward and upward with fighting this.

i do have a lot more catch up posts waiting to be posted. Well, ok, some of them still need to be written, but who is counting?

Ok i have to go try to shut my eyes for five minutes to make the room stop spinning…

hopefully next update is full of good healthy news!

 

t

In spite of the fact that I have been pretty much MIA from this beautiful place in the world wide web, we are, in fact, all still alive and kickin’!

I don’t know exactly why I have let it go for so long without blogging, except that it’s just been a whirlwind of STUFF since the beginning of the year. I do have a LOT to catch up on, and I am sure there will be lots of backdated posts popping up here and there over the next few days! I have to update about Christmas, Kendall’s medical stats for the year, some new year’s goals/resolutions type ideas floating around in my head, basic family updates, blah blah blah. I actually have taken the time to make a LIST (I know, be shocked) of all the posts I’d like to write….I just haven’t actually, you know, taken the time to make a POST.

As a quick update -

The babies have been sick with this cruddy cold stuff since the first week of December. About ten days ago we started Kaylen on antibiotics, assuming that it had at that point turned into an infection somewhere, most likely her sinuses. She also went to spend a long weekend with my dear mother, and the distance from each other (Kaylen and Kendall that is) – seemed to help both of them turn the corner finally. Kaylen has continued to improve and I think is pretty much over it (FINALLY!!!!!), and Kendall november 2009 011blog was great for a few days, then started in with the nose and horrible cough again, which quickly degraded into breathing difficulties and just lots of chest “junk”. After a horrible day driving around to 3 different clinics (none of which was close to home!), we finally found a radiologist who could interpret the x-ray results on Kendall, and sure enough, she has another pneumonia. Her pulmonologist (the great Dr. A) believes that it is bacterial, so he started her on some antibiotics (omnicef which I HATE because it turns her poop red, and then you can’t tell if she’s bleeding because the antibiotics do such a number on her GI tract, or if its just antibiotic food coloring). We will follow up with Dr. A tomorrow (Monday) via phone to check on how she’s doing and come up with further treatments/plans as necessary.

For those who don’t know – this is the 7th pneumonia Kendall has had. Each time before she has ended up being hospitalized, needing the support of IV fluids/antibiotics and the oxygen, plus round the clock nebulizer/steroid treatments. When I heard that she did definitely have the pneumonia, I thought for sure it meant we were headed for another fun inpatient stay, but her team is definitely on board with the idea that she is in a MUCH better place now than she was with her last pneumonia (in June). Also – she typically presents with aspiration pneumonia (which starts in the lower right lung), which typically turns into double bacterial pneumonia for Kendall (for God only knows what reason). This time, there was no obvious aspiration pneumonia (her left lung actually looks and sounds WAY worse than her right side), plus it was “early stage” pneumonia, so HOPEFULLY we caught it early enough and are hitting it hard enough with this medicine that we will knock it out before it really starts to affect her. I was VERY relieved to hear that it didn’t appear to be aspiration caused because that would probably just add more fuel to the GJ tube theory, as well as be somewhat indicative that her fundo wrap was not as effective as it used to be. I know that’s probably just mumbo-jumbo to most of you so here’s the simple translation": It means that her food IS going to the right place like it should, and this is just your regular, average, cold virus that settled in the lungs type of pneumonia. A “regular” old illness for once!

She has definitely needed a lot more nebulizer/breathing treatments this week than she has in a long time, and she is just a little more low-key than on regular days during her “happy hours”, but overall, I think she just might be holding her own. She Just Might Beat This One!!! I KNOW that that wouldn’t even be possible without all the prayers from you all, friends, family, random strangers…She is made stronger by all the support from each and every one of you.

And while I am cautiously optimistic that this could be the last we finally hear or see from this crazy bug that has invaded our family since December 1 – I of course have a few slight reservations. I am HOPEFUL that it is truly bacterial in nature, and not that this virus has just decided to take up permanent residence in her lungs. If it is bacterial, then the antibiotics will kill it, she will clear it, and we will be back to a good baseline level of health finally. If it is viral, well, it could just be a long few months till its warm again here! It could resolve on its own, it could just continue to zap her energy and cause the junky breathing/coughing. My second reservation is that back in ….I don’t know, one of her other times with pneumonia – May I think? – we THOUGHT we had successfully treated it with antibiotics at home, but it reared its ugly head less than 10 days later and she was back inpatient at that point. Was that time just the unresolved pneumonia or was it complicated by her other metabolic issues? Hard to say – but its still in the back of my mind.

I hate being overanalytical, and I hate being right most of the time about the things I DO overanalyze about her. For example, this most recent diagnosis. Her pediatrician (not Dr. natalie – she’s on vacation, but dr. natalie’s colleague who knows kendall’s case) – basically told me she thought kendall was fine, but would order the cxr (chest x-ray) if I really wanted one. Well, of course, I don’t really WANT one – I’d much rather have a new pair of shoes or a pedicure instead of making my child radioactive with her 982nd x-ray, but I would LIKE to have some reassurance that the crankiness/junky cough/raspy breathing/etc aren’t doing serious internal damage. And if an X-ray is how you can give me that reassurance, then order it up, doc! 4 hours later, the pediatrician was “very thankful” that she went with my instinct, as we caught it early enough to avoid (hopefully) it turning into something worse. How did I know to push for this? I do’nt know. I know that I am keenly aware of tiny changes, and I know I read too much on the internet, and I know that I tend to think too far ahead sometimes about what a + b + c COULD equal – but clearly sometimes that’s a good thing. How do I find that happy medium? Of being aware of changes, and yet not fixating on them. Of being Kendall’s voice and advocate when she doesn’t feel well, without letting medical issues run the rest of our lives. I wish I knew. Because right now, i’d love to turn it off for a few days.

i’d love to be able to stop feeling her chest to feel if she’s still rattling during her breaths, listening to her air exchange with the stethoscope, BEGGING to hear the exhalation that means she is moving air correctly.  But I can’t. Because I do still feel the rattle, and I don’t hear the exchange consistently, and her coloring just looks slightly off and I am trying to talk myself out of it being blue, and more into just…..i don’t know. any color but blue or purple. So I am trying to tell myself that I am just too tired and too overthinking and that she is fine and she will be fine and we’ll be finally out of the woods of this crappy bug with really no other outside support (meaning hospital stuff) and she will have DONE IT finally! Beaten a sickness on her own without a massive decompensation!

I will then proceed to sleep for five straight days in order to mentally recuperate from all of this heavy brain work. HA! I wish….

I know that really, we are so very lucky that Kendall IS as healthy as she is. That for the most part I do get pretty good sleep and am not up having to care for her every few hours, or depend on nursing care in order to get a few winks of shut-eye. So i’ll stop complaining now.

But that’s where things are at today, in the usual craziness of my world!

It has been a very long week this past week – felt like we were running pretty much every nite! Or at least, like “I” was running around every nite this week! Part of my blogging absence has been due to some new year’s “changes” I am attempting to implement, which include getting up well before the kids to try to tackle the housework, some exercise time, some quiet time for prayer – just in general trying to work on making me a better ME to start the days off with. This has served mostly though to just make me a very TIRED me – so most nites after all the errands are done, the cleanup of the same mess for the 874th time that day is done, and i finally collapse into the chair for a little mindless vegging out – I have no coherent thoughts left in my head!

Hopefully over the next few days we can get that rectified though!

I realize that this “quick update” has turned into about 3 pages so I am going to wrap this one up, and try to catch everything else up!

Thanks for checking in on us! Spread the word – terra is back to talking!

have a great Sunday – I hope yours is as powerful as mine has thus far been!

 

terra

If you are an astute observer (or perhaps you are a subscriber and caught this post at the end of your email delivery!) you will realize that I am posting this about 2 months late. But like I always say – it’s my record keeping place!

Without further ado – our medical review of 2009(and the 6 weeks of 2008 that she was born for!):

  • Days Spent Inpatient:  43 – 12 NICU, 2 PICU, 29 regular floor
  • Ambulance Rides: 2
  • ER Visits: 5
  • Lab Draws: WAYYYY too many to count! She averaged 3-4 a month for most of 2009, some months were way more than that if she was inpatient, and for about 2 of the months she may have only had 1 or 2!
  • Procedures/Surgeries: 6
  • Other Testing: 20 (EEGs, EKGs, ECGs, KUBs, CXRs, MRI, VCUG, UGIs)
  • Specialist Visits: ummmmm….I lost track after 25 or so.
  • Doctors Currently Involved in her Care: 10
  • Therapists Currently Involved in her Care: 8

I sincerely hope that our 2010 numbers are vastly reduced from many of these!

Her doctors:

  • Pediatrician
  • Pulmonologist
  • GI (Gastroenterology) (we saw 7 different ones this year! Oy.)
  • Immunology/Immunodeficiency (Immuno)
  • Cardiology (heart issues)
  • Nephrology (kidney issues)
  • Neurology (brain-based issues)
  • Audiology (hearing issues)
  • Genetics (trying to figure out WHAT the problem is)
  • Complex Care Pediatrician (to help coordinate this zoo!)

She receives 8 hours of therapy EVERY SINGLE WEEK. We get a lot of ” Oh but she looks so good! Look how much she can do!!!!” And yes, it IS amazing. But she never just wakes up with a new skill. She is very smart – but the message from her brain to her nerves and muscles definitely gets held up. Every thing she does was taught to her by being placed in the proper position and repeating and repeating and repeating a motion – even when she is crying from tiredness and frustration and just sheer exhaustion. We will hopefully be able to take a break from all the therapy for the summer without her losing too many skills or falling further behind. Right now she receives Physical Therapy, Developmental Therapy, Occupational Therapy, Speech/Feeding Therapy,  Family Counseling (yes this is therapy! we all get involved!), Nutrition Therapy, and Aqua Therapy.

She also has almost 30 different diagnoses that she has racked up on our way to figuring out what the REAL one is! And just because its my blog and my record and I know that I am about to lose the piece of paper in my notebook that I keep them all written down on – I am going to transfer them to here! Some of these are just things she has dealt with at one time or another, some of them describe a chronic disease process, and some of them are just genetic “catch-alls” until we know WHY she has so many that still don’t explain everything!

  1. Transient Tachypnea of Newborn/Congenital Pneumonia
  2. Failure to Thrive/Poor Growth
  3. RSV
  4. Aspiration Pneumonia (times 8!)
  5. Urosepsis (Klebsiella Enterobacter – treated via 3 weeks of abx/PICC)
  6. Hypotonia
  7. Global Developmental Delay
  8. Proprioceptive Input Disorder
  9. Dysphagia
  10. Asthma/RAD
  11. Chronic Lung Disease/Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia
  12. Motor planning dysfunction
  13. Hypertelorism
  14. Dysmorphic Facies
  15. Patent Ductus Aretriosus (congenital heart defect)
  16. transient hypogammaglobulinemia
  17. FPIES (food protein intolerances enteropathy syndrome) – food allergies
  18. Intermittent DGE (delayed gastric emptying)/Gastroparesis
  19. Hiatal Hernia
  20. Left Aortic Arch/Aberrant Right Subclavian Artery (heart weirdness)
  21. Organic Acid abnormalities
  22. Chronic Metabolic Acidosis
  23. Specific Antibody Disease (immunodeficiency)
  24. Methylmalonic Acidemia
  25. Temperature Dysregulation/Instability
  26. Autonomic Dysfunction of unknown origin
  27. Transient Arrythmia
  28. Presumed coQ10 deficiency
  29. mitochondrial dysfunction of unknown origin
  30. OVERLOAD OF CUTENESS!!!!

Ok so I added that last one just to make it a nice even number. I am sure we’ll hit 30, if not 40 easily this year. For instance – she also has some kidney and pancreatic irregularities that no one has been able to pinpoint as actual diagnoses yet – but if they don’t go away soon, I am sure they will turn into their own line item.

Overall though – through all of this – she does pretty well on a day to day basis.

She is most affected in her GI tract (from swallowing problems to vomiting/retching, to not being able to vent air well, to not digesting certain foods, to not eliminating waste very effectively at all). The GI tract issues definitely impact us EVERY day. In some way or another. Next is her developmental delay due to the hypotonia/muscle issue (which is clearly affected by something else – metabolic?). She could not sit on her own until 10.5 months, could not bear weight on her legs on her own until 14 months, still doesn’t really “crawl” as much as she scoots around in a very uncoordinated fashion (causing other muscular problems like tightness and spine curving!). In essence we have a toddler who has the motor skills of  a 9 month old. Thank God for the therapy!

She is also very affected in her lung/heart areas. We don’t know exactly what is the horse and what is the cart here – but because of the immuno issues (or lack thereof of an immune system!), she will pick up every bug floating around and have no defenses to fight it, so it ends up in her lungs, which eventually turns into pneumonia. If it’s not a bug causing it, it is aspiration from her inability to swallow well causing it. She is spot checked on her O2 “sat” (saturation) levels during the day, and is continuously monitored at nite. She typically keeps her sats up, but does so by raising her HR to crazy levels ( she can routinely have a HR above 160 while in a deep sleep if her sats start dropping). This tells us that her brain at least is doing its job – and does a lot to explain why she burns through calories like they are going out of style! She essentially circuit trains every nite – going from a low HR of 85 up to 185 and back down again and every level in between! But – it’s not an advisable way for babies to sleep, and we are hopeful that someone will be able to help us figure out how to help her sleep a little calmer at nite soon!

She will be good-good-good for days on end, and when stuff starts going downhill – its almost always some extremely strange random symptom that could be totally benign, or could signal impending metabolic failure.

She takes carnitine and miralax daily to help her overall energy levels and her GI tract try to find a happy medium, and we also have to give her a daily injection of 1ml of hydroxycobalamin into her muscle. I tell you the dose because until you have had to push 1 ml of something into someone’s muscle I don’t think you can grasp how painfully long it takes! Most diabetes needles (that I have ever seen, I am sure there are people out there who need more than 1 ml!) allow the person to inject increments of tenths of 1ml. It’s a quick short shot. Not these! She takes them like a trooper though. I know none of the other girls would endure half of what Kendall does without massive amounts of whining/bargaining/meltdowns.

So that’s that. 

That’s life with Kendall Quinn from a medical viewpoint at the beginning of 2010 and a look back on all she’s gone through in 2009!

terra

I feel like I should insert an immensely profound post here about all we have learned and been through in 2009, how happy I am to see this year go, let’s hope 2010 is better, blah blah blah.

But I just don’t have it in me tonite!

It was a good year. Because you know what? We’re all here. We’re all healthy (for the most part). We’re still a family with a good roof over our heads and good food in our fridge. We have had some tears, some scary moments, and, sure, more medical knowledge than I ever wished for, but we’ve also had some good laughs. Made some good friends. Shared oh-so-many good times.

And that’s what the year memories are really all about. this year – any year.

Hold on to the good ones, let the bad ones fall away.

And consider how very surreal it is that at midnight it will be a new day, a new month, a new year and a new decade. There is SO MUCH possibility out there! I am usually so wrapped up on this day with my “goals” and lists and “resolutions” to make change…but this year, not so much. I am not quite sure why except that i have been running around like a crazy person this week between Ben being gone in TX with my car, so I only had his car which would not fit all five of us at the same time. Yet we still had to live our lives which meant therapies, doctor visits, grocery shopping, etc – having to juggle kids. Add in Kendall deciding to throw some weird sickness crap in to the mix and I really am not even sure what end is up right now. (this may or may not be evidenced by the rambliness of this post…)

Anyways. I think 2010 will be a good year in its own way, and for its own reasons. 2009 has taught me a lot, opened my eyes, brought me to my knees, and made me realize what life is all about. I can only hope that 2010 will be just as full of growth and good things. Good even through the bad. Good that is all the more appreciated because of the bad.

And I think that’s about all I have to say about that.

Don’t worry. As soon as I have three seconds to rub together I’ll be sure to update more. there will be lots more terra-talk drivel to fill your boring January days.

Peace out.

 

the T.

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