Because I can’t seem to find the time to sit down and write a real update – here’s a few pics to tide you over!

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this is last wednesday when she started to go downhill. Hard to tell from the picture but she was just very puffy in her face and eyelids, and all around not a good color. but was such a good girl to lay and get the cannula (for oxygen) on – she must have known she needed it.web5 On thursday she felt a little bit better – trying to be mischievous and get a huge marshmallow out of the pantry. which she licked a little bit and then smeared all over the fridge! Eyes are still puffy, color still kind of off, but she seemed a little bit better.

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Sometimes with all the attention Kendall gets, Kaylen feels a little bit left out. Friday morning she was complaining that her eye hurt really bad, so we taped it up, everyone loved on her and kissed her owies, and what do ya know – ten minutes it was healed up enough to take the gauze off. She has been escalating this kind of behavior lately and I am not quite sure how to best handle it. I want her to understand that I love her and give her attention for things BESIDES medical issues, but then I am wondering how much of it is just normal 2 year old “put a bandaid on every little scrape I get” type of behavior. I am relatively confident it has a little more to do with her sister’s issues than just normal stuff – but, until we figure it out, i’ll just keep taping up random invisible owies and loving on her.

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Clearly on the upswing! Monday afternoon after we got all the nasty swallow study leftovers out, she wanted to play again – a very good sign that discharge is imminent! Don’t be fooled by how “chubby” she might look – that is the result of 5 bags of fluids and not nearly enough pee coming out! Her eyes still have a puffy look to them that is beyond the rest of the facial puffiness – but you know, a cute chubby picture is always nice – even if it’s not real pudge! The black and white wires/stickers are her heart telemetry monitors, the circle on her cheek is a “tendergrip” and holds her oxygen cannula in place when it’s on, and the big circle in the middle of her tummy is her tubey – that is the plastic disc (“bolster”) that sits against her tummy and gets resistance from the balloon blown up inside her tummy – the tube comes out of the middle of that for about 10 inches and ends with a large 3-pronged “port” through which we can access her Gastric tube (in tummy), Jejunal tube (intestines), and “balloon” – how we keep it inflated.

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She got this “monkey” in the ER after her chest x-ray (nothing like convincing kids they deserve a toy after every procedure – this is REALLY going to come back to haunt me with this one!) – but she wasn’t in the mood to play with it when she got it, so in an effort to calm her down I told her a story about a little kitty (because I can make WAY better kitty noises than monkey noises) – and it thereafter became her kitty. She would make her kitty “meow” noise when she wanted it, and all the nurses quickly learned that it was NOT a monkey, but it was instead a kitty. Kendall just loved that they knew who her kitty was and slept with it every nite in the hospital. who would have thought such a little stuffed animal would bring such comfort?

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Feeling better – but still so far to go. I just liked this picture of her for some reason. Maybe its her eyes, or the curly hair. I don’t know.

 

anyways – that’s all I have done for right now. Time to go start getting ready for the big daddy/daughter dance tonite! (well, i don’t have to get ready, but i have to find tights and “high-heel” shoes for the girls….should be fun!)

 

more later!

 

 

terra

This is mostly just an “as info” post for me to be able to refer back to as needed about kendall’s {first} hospital stay of ‘10. I had to laugh at myself because I was looking through my calendar yesterday and noticed that under “goals for the month”, I had written: Keep Kendall out of the hospital!

HA! I wrote that in January! I guess I was thinking that since she had gone in last year at this time, making it through February without a stay would be a good push forward. Not thinking that this is clearly smack in the middle of RSV season, spring is still weeks away, and I have really no reason to believe that she is completely out of the woods with all of her “issues”. But it did make me laugh. Guess that’s a nice checkmark in the “epic fail” category for this month’s goals!

Anyways – the decision to admit Kendall came because we do feel like there is no hard evidence that oral antibiotics are really being absorbed and/or utilized in her system. We see a SLIGHT improvement the first day she starts on them, but that is mostly with regard to her gut function. Antibiotics do tend to speed things up on a GI front – and she, with her typically very SLOW moving gut, actually benefits from this for a day or two. But as far as getting any kind of improvement on the respiratory symptoms that we typically need to put her on antibiotics for? Slim to none.

So given how long this current illness has drawn out, and the realization that it could easily be another few very long weeks of worsening respiratory function, it was not too hard to decide to go on up to the floor for some IV fluids, IV antibiotics, and IV steroids. The good stuff! It was actually a very quick process to get admitted up there (it typically takes a couple hours, and then at least an hour or so to wait for a bed). The new Tower rooms (new addition to the hospital that they were building last February when we were there!) – are very nice, much bigger, much more modern and workable for families. We were RIGHT outside the main entrance and by the nurses’ station – so it was a little bit loud for my liking – but its kind of just loud period in a hospital.

As is our usual custom – I tell the nurses where kendall’s best line sites are, and request that they take her to the procedure room while i go ten floors up and get a snack while they are putting her IV in. It is never a pretty process. This time, in spite of how hydrated i thought she was, they still bring her back to me with CLEAR signs that she has been screaming her head off for a good half hour, with bandages in four other spots besides where the IV is taped up and housed with “no-no’s”, and tell me “yeah, we had a little bit of a hard time getting a line started!”  Ya think? Like I couldn’t have guessed that from the other 4 blown sites! Anyways – bottom line is, they got one started. I didn’t hold out much hope for it – it was at the top of her foot right where it connects to her ankle, and she wanted nothing but to stand up in that crib, putting lots of pressure on the “needle” part of the IV.

But we got her started on some good Rocephin (ceftriaxone), Clindamycin, and Solumedrol (methylprednisone). She was on a pretty good loading dose of all of these, which did serve to make her a TEENSY bit wired the first nite (she got about 3 hours total of sleep from Thursday afternoon till Friday evening) – but they seemed to start making a drastic difference in her wheeziness and liquidy breathing. There was WAY too much drama that first nite over her feeds. The residents like to pretend like they are real doctors who can handle any emergency, but in reality, they are  underlings sent there to carry out the orders of the Attendings. The Attendings are who are running the show for most of the kids on the floor. Attendings are direct admitting their kids with specific orders most of the time, whereas residents get to supervise kids who get admitted from their pediatrician or from the ER. Dr. A is Kendall’s attending doctor. He knows us, he knows her, and he knows what needs to happen. So he writes orders for Kendall to get her J-feeds as necessary, at a slow rate. I hand the residents Kendall’s protocol letter for her MMA – which confuses the snot out of them. “But she’s not in metabolic crisis right now! We can’t follow this!!!!” Ok people, use your JUDGEMENT. She has an IV, start fluids. Don’t start the insulin if she isn’t hyperglycemic, don’t start the bicarb if her numbers look fine. It seriously took me till midnite to get them to understand that feeding her was OK with all of us. Then started the drama with the fact that they don’t have kendall’s formula, and why couldn’t we try a different kind, and what if they just sent a security guard to walgreen’s to get some more and are you SURE you don’t have any more that we could use tonite?

So frustrating. They NEVER have her right formula, I always have to call our HHC and beg them to make an after hours delivery so I can feed my child. Anyways – we had 8 ounces of formula, so we gave her that, and decided on pedialyte as a good alternative until the formula could be delivered. So much drama over something so stupid –because we had orders ready for IV dextrose as needed AND we were talking about 2-3 hours of no food at that point at max. Bottom line was – she would be fine if they would just make a decision and start her on SOMETHING. I hate how it’s never simple there. I swear they can act like she is the ONLY kid on the floor with a feeding pump and medical formula.

Anyways – Friday she was still pretty wired from now not sleeping and eating about half what she normally eats. I had to go down to Karissa’s party at school for Valentine’s day, and to shower and pack for the rest of our unknown length of stay. Continued improvement, some napping, but overall good stuff. Friday nite Ben and I switched shifts again, and of course he is no sooner out the door then i notice a huge crazy rash on kendall’s whole leg, and creeping rash on the other leg. No one can figure it out, and everyone just wants to go to bed, but no, we have to call the residents in again. They come up with the BRILLIANT plan to “watch it to see if it spreads, but its probably just contact dermatitis, and since she has had apneas, we can’t give her benadryl, so we just have to hope it goes away on its own”. Excellent. We’ll watch it, thanks. And by the way she is wearing her own clothes from home which have been washed in the same detergent for the past 15 months, so contact dermatitis isn’t really a viable option at this point, but fine we’ll go with that.

We finally get her settled down for the nite, or so i thought, when nurse comes in to prep her for another round of antibiotics, and discovers that the IV is blown. But instead of just making this call on her own, she calls another nurse in to confirm this. They continue to flush the line with saline, which isn’t really going into her veins as much as its just leaking everywhere – and about 4 ounces worth of flushes later, they realize they need to replace the IV. So at 1 am we get everything set back up for an IV change. By 2 she is set with a new IV, we finally have some cortisone cream for the “rash” on her legs, and we are all ready to just get some sleep. It was a long nite!

SAturday morning, Dr. A comes in and says we are going to be good to go within a few hours! We talked about why we needed to have IV abx/steroids at this point, and if that would ever improve, whether or not he felt that IVIG would help some of these recurrent pneumonias/infections, why was she having apneas, and what we could DO about it all. He basically said he doesn’t KNOW what the answers are, because we can’t say for certain which way her system will go with the underlying metabolic issues. He’d like to HOPE that she will grow out of it as her system matures, but then says that other things point to that not necessarily being a sure thing. He can say that he is almost positive her apneas (stop breathing spells) are obstructive in nature, most likely from reflux. He said that at this point her asthma is definitely being aggravated from all the reflux, but that going back on her meds won’t really help it. It was a confusing conversation – in that he knows there’s a problem, but doesn’t really know what or how to help it. I felt very…frustrated. Not so much at him, or even at the situation right then and there – but just by this constant presence of “yes there’s a problem, no, this isn’t normal, no we have no idea what to do about it other than treat symptoms as they crop up”. It frustrates me that we have been tossing around this IVIG thing for MONTHS now, and yet no one has taken the bull by the horns and ruled this in or out as a good option for kendall. No one can say for sure that she has not HAD seizures in the past or will definitely NOT have another seizure if we try to immunize her again.  And why is she still refluxing this bad that it causes her to not breathe well at nite? and why does her heart have to work so hard to keep her oxygenation up? and at what point do we worry about the crazy things her heart does do? And why can’t we ever just get an IV started easy peasy rice and cheezy in her? And WHAT IS GOING TO HAPPEN TO MY BABY!?!?!?!?!

But clearly no one has those answers. And probably never will. So we just adjust to it. Stop asking so many questions and just accept each day with whatever it brings – good or bad.

On our way out of the hospital, while waiting for discharge paperwork, kendall proceeded to throw up an entire bottle’s worth of formula, mixed with blood and mucus. I just about had a meltdown of frustration. She should NOT be able to vomit like that!!! And why was there blood in it? But the residents and the nurses were all too happy to get us out there – she challenges what they know of how babies are supposed to be and act when they are sick, so with a few simple explanations (oh – yeah, the blood is just from how hard she has to work to vomit, and the reason she vomited is because she swallowed a bunch of mucus, yeah that’s it have a great weekend!!!!), we were on our way.

I was glad to be out of there in such a short time, and yet – I feel like we almost have more questions than answers now. And I didn’t expect to get “answers” per se, but I certainly didn’t expect to have MORe questions now!

The bottom line is that while we weren’t advised to take her NPO (nil per oral, not eating by mouth) again, they did tell us to pretty severely restrict the amount of food she is taking by mouth, especially before bedtimes. Feed her in a carseat, or make her eat sitting up only, and make sure she doesn’t lay down for a half hour after meals. In essence – all the advice they give you when  you have a 3 month old baby who has reflux. Not quite sure why we’re still here with a 15 month old…but that’s where the questions come in.

so we are home, and she is sleeping well in her own bed, and the abx and steroids seem to be helping a TON. She is happy and bright eyed again. I don’t feel like I am on high alert level anymore. She gets about a fourth of what she was getting before by bottle/mouth. But she is sleeping without alarms. And breathing without coughing. For the first time since the first week of December! I am so happy that she seems to be GOOD, really and truly good for the first time in so long!

And now to just have her hold on to this goodness till we get through the rest of winter!

i am sorry the end of this post doesn’t make a whole ton of sense – i clearly should have stopped typing about an hour ago and just gone to bed!

I have a whole lot more to type and say though – but not for this post.

Sorry it was pretty rambly. hopefully it will still make sense to me someday when i need to refer back to it.

peace out, my homies.

 

t-crest

then its probably something worse!!!

I don’t even know if this post will make much sense. I am beyond tired.

We spent the nite, literally THE WHOLE NIGHT in the ER here in town last nite with Kendall Quinn. It started out when we got home from a VERY LONG DAY of driving around – grocery store, therapy, school pick up, dance class for three hours, finally back home – and I changed Kendall’s diaper to get her ready for bed and noticed a disturbing amount of reddish blood in it. It was pretty obviously urine (vs. stool), but I was willing to hope that maybe she had just been in an awkward position and just had the hershey squirts. that were tinged very red. She didn’t have a fever, wasn’t really acting sick (just extremely tired), but still, it was disturbing. Got the other girls ready for bed and continued to check on Kendall (taking her temp) every hour until i was finally ready for bed. Went in to check on her one last time and felt her soaking wet. I thought this could be good (she finally peed and its all normal) or it could be bad (it might have even more blood in it!)Well, it was kind of….worse.

Her tube had come out AGAIN. I grabbed her up and ran to our room to assess the damage and sure enough – tube won’t go back in. Stoma started to close up again and i was NEAR frantic about it but grabbed a thermometer and jammed it into the hole. She was screaming, i was in tears for making her scream and i opened up her diaper and sure enough – more blood. I just held her on the bed and cried with herblog4 for a few minutes till I realized that this wasn’t helping anyone and i had to do something. How can i thank our wonderful friend and neighbor CLC enough? she heard the panic in my voice and came running over to sit with the girls so i could run to the ER with her. Another dear dear friend met me at the ER so that I wouldn’t be alone and I cannot think what I would have done without her keeping me sane and calm and laughing throughout the entire long ordeal. She pulled chairs away from the hacking coughing flu-infested masses into the hallway so we didn’t have to expose kendall further to stuff she just can’t fight off. She made jokes about nurses with me. She claimed to have smuggled smores stuff in with her (but failed to produce when i needed one!), and she made vending machine runs (again empty handed!!!) But between those two – we were able to survive. Ben noticed around midnite that i had left a message on his phone and decided to cut his trip short and head back in the middle of the nite.

LONNNNNGGGG story short – they had to check twice if her tube was in the right place (and I had to replace it myself – they just checked it for me via x-ray, which the tech was unable to read and had to page the radiologist to come to the hospital to read both sets of x-rays). But problem one – tube out of place – check. Problem number two – bloody urine –…..lots of shrugging shoulders. They DID have enough foresight to place a line (IV) almost immediately upon exam, even though it did take four people plus two hours to get one in and started. She had scarred over her one good vein in her right hand, they blew the other good one in her hand, she has too little of veins in her left hand, and they finally called a transport team in (guys) to just come in and jab her without all the cooing and awwwing we were getting from the female nurses! They got it the first heartless try! So she had fluids, bloodwork, and catheter to catch urine to test. It was brutal to hold her down through all that plus the two sets of xrays. And all the while they had no idea what was going on. PLUS the fact that that place is crawling with flu bugs. bottom line – the doc had no idea what was causing the blood in the urine or what to do about it other than give her the fluids, tell us to call her doc first thing this morning, and to please never never bring her back to their ER because she is way too complex for them to handle. At least he was honest! (And then he offered me a job helping out the nursing staff because he said i am one of the most educated and informed patient caregivers he has ever interacted with).

Oddly enough, towards the end of our attempts to figure out what tests we could run (and yes, i was providing direction!), i asked if it could possibly be myoglobinuria (essentially a muscle protein residue that sheds in the urine when your body has started eating through muscle for energy/oxygen). I knew it was a long shot, but i remembered reading something about the reddish brown color of it in urine, and we know she has some kind of muscle/metabolic dysfunction, plus her O2 sats (how well she was retaining oxygen) were just tanked when we first checked in (meaning she was working really hard to try to keep oxygen in her blood). The doctor just shrugged and said – uhhhhh I THINK that would have shown up in her UA (urinalysis)???? Totally not convincing. i really think he didn’t even know what i was talking about because the overall effect was that i was using too big of words for him. (and i realize that this sounds like i thought he was an idiot, which i didn’t. he was truly the first ER doc we’ve ever had who GOT how complicated kendall’s history was, and i loved the care we received from him, truly.)

Anyways. So we walked out at 5:15 am after almost 7 hours in the ER with still no real answers, but at least we could feed her and we knew her kidneys were functioning ok and that she had lots of good fluids on board.

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the pieces fell together more when her doctor from the allergy/immuno clinic called back with the test results from our visit up there a few weeks ago. Basically she isn’t making antibodies to vaccines. So we have just been putting lots and lots of stress on her little system with each vaccine, with no responses from her immune system. she has no immunities to anything. Ok i take that back. she apparently made a trace amount of response to diptheria. So any of you who happen to be sick with diptheria this winter, you’re still welcome to come hang out. All you other riff-raff, you’ll have to knock on the plastic bubble we are hereby constructing around our daughter!!! (Ben says this is all payback for how much we used to laugh at the movie “Bubble Boy”…)

Anyways. A blow for sure, but not one that is completely unexpected. Our next appointment with immunology is not until november 25, but the doctor today who called with the results (kendall’s resident doc) is going to be conferring with the head doc about these results tomorrow. He MAY want to move our appointment up or have us just come in earlier than that given that now we know she is just not protected against much of what is going to be floating around at this time of year, and do we want to wait a month and play roulette with it? He may. I haven’t really thought much about what we should do or what the next step is yet. too tired.

The other good part of the convo with the doc today though is that she had me read back all our labs from last nite and she said it sounds suspiciously like myoglobinuria to her (remember that big word I asked the ER doc about??? yeah, THAT ONE!!!!) So i think that’s the party line for now. Kendall’s body is either attempting to fight off a virus OR its still working overtime from the vax a few weeks ago, but either way, its stressing her body out enough that its started eating its own muscle to stay at baseline. We are just running lots of extra fluids through her tube tonite to keep her hydrated, as that is pretty much all you can do for myoglobinuria. It just points more towards a metabolic disorder of some kind. In fact when the dear darling doctor was talking about myoglobinuria, she said in her little Snow White voice “It sounds like she might have a metabolic disorder!” I tell you it was all i could do to not go “DING DING DING!!! We have a winner! Welcome to PAGE ONE – now try to catch up with the rest of us in Chapter 83 and tell us WHICH ONE!?!?!?!?!”

I swear sometimes all these docs are going to be the reason I end up in the looney bin – and NOt my children as one would think…

But ok – enough rambling for today/tonite/wednesday…it’s just been one long day for too long now.

so that’s what i do and don’t know. more don’t than do.

hopefully i’ll make more sense again tomorrow after a LOOOOOOONNNNGGG nite of catch up sleep!

thanks for reading, praying, thinking of us.

 

love,

terra and the gang

Usually I am ok with where Kendall is at. I think sometimes I waffle between thinking of her as a “special needs child”, and thinking of her as just my baby who happens to be a little more medically involved than my others. (It’s a subtle difference, but in my heart, it’s huge).

I have long struggled to watch the beautiful children of my friends who were born weeks and even months after Kendall get to do things that she cannot, experience things that she cannot, move and express themselves in ways that she cannot. While the larger part of me recognizes that each and every baby is different, and each and every milestone is worth of celebration in ANY child, and truly, I AM happy to rejoice with them in the news of their babies walking or saying words or whathaveyou – a small part of me is just the tiniest bit sad.

While I have LOTS of HOPE that Kendall will soon catch up, and while i am SO encouraged by her progress as of late,blog2 it doesn’t make it any easier to see, in real life, the disparities between her and “normal” babies.

It hit me today at church – I went up to check on the nursery and I saw Kendall, sitting in her stroller, looking out at all the other kids walking around, sitting up and playing with toys, interacting. And i could see in her eyes that she SO BADLY wanted to be on that floor. But we don’t have a regular nursery. We set up a few mats and a carpet in the middle of a school room, with hard floors and no soft surfaces. For a baby who is constantly falling backwards with no self-help/stopping skills in place, it could be a pretty painful experience! And I waved at her and she smiled at me and bounced in her happy dance little way, and as i walked down the hallway the tears filled my eyes. How long will she be unable to play with the other kids? How long will I have to watch her sit and watch the others, holding back the tears, being strong for her?

She IS making progress and I am so very grateful for that.blog3 But EVERY SINGLE SKILL that child has, she has gained through the work of FOUR therapists, FOUR days a WEEK of intensive therapy, not including the exercises that I do with her on a daily basis. She has had to work so hard for each and every new skill she gains. She is amazing! She is an inspiration to me on a daily basis for all that she endures with a smile on her face. But that doesn’t make it any easier to realize that even though she is catching up – she still has so far to go.

And yes i do realize that this is a massive pity party post. In the grander scheme of things, we have so very much to be thankful for. And above all, we always have our hope. hope that things will continue to improve. That maybe she WILL really just grow out of all this some day. But somedays it still leaves me feeling a little…..stuck.

Stuck between “normal” and “special needs”.

And maybe it’s just that i am not quite ready to fully deal with the label of “special needs”. I know Dr. Natalie brought it up to us at her four month appointment, over 6 months ago. And i have been at various points of dealing with it over those 6 months. It’s just so hard to know where you fit without a diagnosis.  And truly, I am not sure I want a diagnosis either. I think sometimes ignorance is bliss. I just don’t know that I am prepared to deal with a diagnosis that could hard to accept. I am not even sure exactly what the docs are looking at right at this moment.

so we just continue in our “stuck” phase.

with a baby who LOOKS and ACTS pretty normal, thank God.

3938024099_5981339274 Except that she has a tube in her stomach and stitches holding her esophagus around her stomach.

And she needs twice the amount of a very specialized formula in order to survive each day.

And she cannot have a bowel movement on her own without lots of meds and lots of help from mommy.

And she endures four hours of therapy every week just to try to get her “caught up” with normal baby skills and make sure she doesn’t lose any skills she’s already gained.

And she still wears the same clothes she wore 5 months ago because she hasn’t really gained weight like she should.3940796315_a64cebaac4

And she is still in her infant seat because if I don’t have that then she can’t go to any stores with me because how do you grocery shop when you are pushing a stroller, but can’t put her in the top of the cart because she can’t sit up on her own?

And that she hasn’t made it more than 3 months without being hospitalized, and even less than that without being in the ER and even less than THAT being at one specialists office or another and still NO ONE can figure out why she just isn’t NORMAL…

So that’s where i am at.

 

Most of you just get the shortened version of

“we’re doing good!”

though, when you ask.

so i thought i’d let you know the long version just in case.

We’re good. We are good. Things could be so much worse. And God has had His hand upon us. And we are surrounded by amazing family and friends who lift us up in prayer and gather together to help care for our needs during times of not-so-good.

But sometimes we’re just a little stuck.

It has been a day.

i am not even sure where to begin with the update so i’ll just give a quick status update and then do my written processing after that…

  • Kendall’s tube is still not back in. The ER doc tried for over an hour to force incrementally larger tubes through the quickly closing stoma, and after a very LONG hour, with blood pouring out of the wound and a very worn out screaming baby, she finally gave up and left one size down from kendall’s button tube in place. She cannot eat through this tube, and has in fact been taken completely off formula for the short term.  If I thought holding her down for a shot or a lab draw or an IV was bad – holding her down to have her organs re-pierced by far exceeds them all.
  • According the ER doc, the chest x-ray and blood gases were “normal”. I’ll believe that when i see the reports in my own hand because clearly, i do not have a healthy “normal” child laying here in the hospital bed now do i? Thank God for Dr. Aljadeff who quickly corrected the ER doc and told her that if kendall was not 100% unequivocally healthy she was getting admitted. That man continues to be Kendall’s angel.
  • Once the ER doc knew kendall was coming upstairs, she pretty much stopped all care. This is when kendall went downhill. No IV’s were placed, no fluids had been given. i finally out of desperation to get SOMETHING into her made 2 ounces of formula and tried to slowly drip it into the tube that is in her stomach. This started the vomiting episodes that are continuing even now. And by vomiting, I mean yes she is actually vomiting up fluids/bile, past the fundo, and on top of anti-nausea meds.
  • By the time we got upstairs to the peds floor (aka our “home away from home”), kendall was a rag doll. Her eyes roll back into her head and she essentially passes out after every time she retches.  It took almost an hour to get an IV in, and another hour past that to get the correct IV fluids sent up from pharmacy. (I swear to you the pharmacy at this hospital must be staffed by lillputians or something because it takes forever and a DAY to get meds sent up in the little pneumatic tubes. You better know five days ago what meds your kid might need and put in a pre-order for them because goodness knows by the time they make it here your child may be dead OR all better on their own! who knows!?!?!) Anyways – ok random vent over.
  • So that’s where we are at tonite.
  • Her breathing on the monitors seems stable – except when she is choking on her vomit and turns blue.  This only happens about 7 times in an hour though so, you know, its all good.
  • We desperately need some pee though! Right now her GI tract seems to have shut down, and it appears that her kidneys are following suit. In about 40 minutes they are going to try to “bolus” fluids into her IV, which will either wake her system up and get it started again, or it will make things worse. If she could pee on her own BEFORE this, it will be more likely to help. If not – well, they aren’t telling me a whole lot about if not.
  • Her little body is very tired, very worn out.
  • Please pray for wisdom for the doctors, for answers and guidance as to how to treat whatever it is we are dealing with.
  • Thank you to everyone who has stepped up to take kids, feed dogs and ensure that church will still run smoothly tomorrow without me.
  • hopefully the morning brings better news.

 

terra

girls summer 09 355

That i apparently can’t keep myself or my kids away from it.

Just a quick update -

we are headed up to the ER at Lutheran to get a few things checked out for Kendall Quinn.
first – her tube came out at some point last nite. Yesterday afternoon I noticed a lot of reddish chunks coming back out in her “burps”, and then this morning there’s tubey just laying in her onesie! It seems like the balloon burst, and the chunks may have been the first sign that the tube was rubbing around inside her stomach. Without the balloon to hold it in place, it easily slipped out and the stoma (hole) has started to close. I was able to get a very very small tube in there (one of her old NG tubes), but there is no way her regular tube is going back in.
when I called the surgeon for help, he said it could wait till monday and he would dilate it in office and stick it back in. which is all fun and games except that there’s no way I can feed her through this tube because we really can’t check if it’s in her stomach or her intestines. if its in her stomach, great, all’s good. if its in her intestines, she can only tolerate about 1/3 of her normal amount (because your intestines aren’t meant to process food, there’s no acid in your intestines to break it down.) Anyways – so that in and of itself is freaky. Thank God she CAN take some orally – the problem is – everything she drinks plus all her electrolytes and other stomach fluids come pouring back OUT of the opening, leading to possible dehydration even quicker than if she was just not eating or drinking period.
I mentioned to the surgeon that we may end up at LG for observation anyways because of her retracting/weird breathing lately – and he basically acted like i was crazy for not already having her at the ER if she is having trouble breathing.
therein lies the crux.
she is NOT having “trouble” breathing, but some internal process is occurring whereby her body is telling her to breathe harder/deeper in order to remain somewhat stable. So, as i was already inclined to do, i did call Dr. A for his opinion.
in his words – “she goes from 60 to zero so quickly we can’t “wait and see” what’s going on, we need to know NOW”.

so up to the ER we go.
we are running a chest x-ray, some blood gases and other labs to see what’s going on. hopefully they just need to observe her for a little bit and can pop her tubey back in for good measure all right there in the ER.
If ANYTHING shows up on her CXR (xray), she’s getting admitted.

So please pray.

In an ironic twist – tomorrow would have matched our longest time out of the hospital – 86 days.

thanks for praying

t

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