OMG! What a Day. Originally Posted October 29, 2010

So today was another exciting day in Ali land! Today, while Ali was with one of her aids (I was supposed to be having a nap) she coughed so hard that she shot her brand new MicKey right out of her tummy! It anchors in to the stomach with a little balloon full of water and to take it out you’re supposed to remove 5 mls of water but Miss Ali just coughed it out, water and all.  I didn’t even get to start my nap!

 

Since I often seem to get the crappy jobs, I had to put the darn thing back in. But it wouldn’t go in. I opened the emergency kit that I’d been given for times like this and removed the emergency tube.   It was to be put in if the regular MicKey wouldn’t go  but it wouldn’t go in either. So now I was out of ideas. You have one hour to get the G-tube back in before you risk needing to have another surgery to replace it so the pressure was on. My hour was ticking away and so I needed to get her to the hospital to have something put in there to hold the stoma open.  She was screaming like she’d been seriously hurt herself and I didn’t want to put her in the car seat because I didn’t know if she was injured or not.  So short of driving to the hospital with an infant in my lap my only option was to call 911. The ambulance arrived and the paramedics were rather dismayed to discover that we needed a G-tube installed.  Needless to say, they weren’t going to put it back for me. They did an assessment and discovered that she needed to go to the hospital but not because of the G-tube, it was because she had major chest congestion. By this time Ali had calmed down a bit and I decided to try the emergency kit again since I wasn’t going to get much help.  The emergency tube went in. I refused transport to the hospital because with the emergency tube in the stoma I could now tranport her myself. Once the paramedics left, I got really brave and I decided to try to put the mickey back in and finally I was able to put it in.  I’ve learned a valuable lesson here.  It’s very difficult to insert a G-tube when your child is upset.  They tense up their muscles and make it hard to get it in.  Later we went to see the doctor again to check on the chest congestion and the doctor felt that it has improved from yesterday so things look good!

So I never got my nap but I have now installed my first G-tube.  Our lives are so exciting!

 

Give Me a Break! Originally Posted October 28, 2010

When is  poor little Ali going to get a break?

Today I had to take Ali to the Emergency Room because she was having trouble breathing and had a horrible cough.  Last night was so scary.  She really struggled.  The poor little thing either has croup or her throat is swelling up again from when the P.E.G. got stuck and she had to stay untubated for so long.  Either way, Ali is really, really sick yet again.  She has been given steroids and we will repeat her dose again tonight and see where that leaves us. We may be headed back to the Stollery if the steroids don’t make her feel better.

Some people have the worst luck and poor Ali seems to be gifted with worse luck then anybody else I know.

Things Shouldn’t Have to be so Hard! Originally Posted October 26, 2010

I’ve been sitting here in front of the computer trying to decide if I want to write about what happened yesterday. I could just write that Ali got her MicKey (a more permanent G-tube) put in and that things are great, that would sum it up nicely. I wish it could be that easy, but for Ali nothing ever is. We just can’t catch a break.

We started off the day by getting weighed and measured.  Ali, being the little fighter that she is, showed off how well she can tolerate her feeds now by gaining 6 ounces and growing 1.5 cm this month! She remained on her curve for the second month in a row!

After getting weighed and measured we had some time to spare so we had lunch and took Ali for a little drive. She was obviously hungry but she tried so hard to be a good girl and she hardly cried at all.  She was fasting because she was undergoing anesthetic to have her P.E.G. tube replaced by a more permanent MicKey.  By the time she went into surgery she hadn’t eaten for over 12 hours.

We checked in for surgery at 1:30 and had to wait until about 3:00 for Ali’s turn. We killed the time by playing and snuggling, Ali was in a great mood for such a hungry little peanut. Jason walked down to the OR with Ali, and then when he came back we went to have a coffee. We were told to expect to be paged in 30 – 45 minutes and we were.

When we arrived back at the Day Ward we were told that Ali wasn’t back yet, she would be admitted overnight, that the Gastroenterologist and the Anaesthesiologist wanted to speak with us and that we were to wait there for them. Weird! We waited for a while and just before 5:00 we asked the nurse to call recovery to ask if Ali was there yet, at that point we found out that she was still in the OR as were her doctors. So two hours after her 30 minute surgery started she was still in there? My heart sank, I was so worried. So there we were sitting in those chairs with no idea what was going on. I can’t really describe how I felt, my baby was somewhere in the hospital in trouble and all I could do was sit and wait. I knew that it was a simple procedure and that she was with a great team of doctors but we have already learned from experience that people make mistakes . Things can go wrong in the blink of an eye. Maybe it was an overreaction but I sat there and wondered if after all that we had been through if this was how it was going to end? Eventually the Gastroenterologist came out and very quickly we established that Ali was indeed okay. He had quite a story to tell though.

They tried to pull the P.E.G. out through Ali’s stomach wall and it wouldn’t come out. It caused some bleeding so they decided to pull it up and out through her throat instead since that’s the way they put it in. It got stuck. They couldn’t pull in out and when they went to push it back down into her tummy they realized that they couldn’t do that either. It was stuck in her throat. They tried for a while to move it and I guess it soon became apparent that it wasn’t going to budge so they called an E.N.T. . He used some special equipment to remove it. Once they removed the P.E.G. they went back into Ali’s throat and stomach to look for damage. They didn’t find any but her throat began to swell and they were worried that she wouldn’t be able to breathe.  She was given steroids to reduce the swelling and remained intubated until they were sure that she was okay. Once the steroids had done the trick she was woken up and brought to the ward.

When we were finally reunited with Ali it was in the room where she almost lost her life 10 months ago. There she was all snuggled up in the exact bed where I watched her day after day struggling to survive her drug overdose. I sat there and I watched her sleep and remembered those lonely nights when I was afraid to take my eyes off of her because I thought she was going to die. I remembered how hard it was to watch her scream and cry as she underwent painful and scary procedures and I remembered sitting in the chair as the resident told me that she’d been overdosed on Digoxin.

I thought I’d come a long way since then, I thought I’d healed and that we’d all moved on but I can tell you now that there’s still a lot of healing left to do. It felt like it just happened yesterday. I thought I was going to lose her then and for a while yesterday I had the same fears and I find myself wondering when, not if it’s going to happen again. You see that’s the thing, she survived that drug overdose and the P.E.G. came out of her throat but she still has Costello Syndrome. I can lie in bed and make bargains with God every night but when I wake up in the morning it’s still going to be there. There a lot of things in my life that can be fixed with hard work, positive thinking and determination but my daughter isn’t one of them.

What I realized last night was that what I remember most about being in the hospital with Ali after she was born was looking forward to the future and putting everything behind us, to just going home and being normal again and not having to worry all the time. That never happened and I don’t think it ever will.

 

 

Happy Thanksgiving. Originally Posted October 9, 2010

It’s Thanksgiving and this year I have so much to be thankful for. I’m thankful for my family. I am thankful that I have the most beautiful little girls in the world and an amazing husband.

I think it goes without saying that I’m thankful that Ali didn’t die in December. The fact that she survived her drug overdose given everything that she was up against is nothing short of a miracle. Not a day goes by that I don’t remember how much we almost lost. I am thankful for all the friends and family that stepped up and helped us through the most difficult weeks of our lives and that continue to offer assistance now. I am thankful for the people that took care of Madi and for the people that spent hours on the phone with me during my darkest moments and for those who came to the hospital to offer support.

I think it’s amazing that so many people give of themselves for Ali and for us. I can’t believe that so many people log onto this blog and read about our girl and offer kind words of support. So I am thankful for all of you that are cheering Ali on at every step. Some day when I read all of your messages to Ali she is going to know how truly loved and cared for she is. She’s going to know that she has always been surrounded by people that care about her even though some of them have never met her and that every step of the way people are cheering her on. I’m happy that so many people take joy in the small steps that Ali makes and that people see how truly amazing she is. I am thankful for all the people that love Ali because she’s Ali and that see a beautiful little girl when they look at her regardless of any syndrome or diagnosis. Madi and Ali are the greatest gifts I’ve ever been given and I‘m so thankful that I can share Ali with all of you. Our family is blessed to have so much love and support so thank you to all of you and happy Thanksgiving.

A blog about living life one day at a time with an amazing little girl with Costello Syndrome.