We
arrived in Ann Arbor, Michigan, late last Thursday night. We started our
appointments Friday morning at 9 a.m. and they took most of the day.
Appointments included meeting with MFM, full ultrasound, echo, genetics
counseling and meeting with two of the cardiologists to discuss the fetal
intervention. It was a long day. We had the rest of the weekend to relax as
much as we could as we waited for our Monday appointments. We were able to
relax and enjoy ourselves for the most part, but the reason for being there was
never far from our hearts and minds. There were lots of times we just looked at
each other and took a deep breath. We definitely felt the weight of it all as
the day of the procedure drew closer. We were begging God that He would sustain
her life through this procedure and praying we were making the right decision
for our little girl, and if we weren’t, that He would put a stop to the
procedure somehow. We also worked on finalizing a name for our little girl. We
are getting so close!!! Though, I hate to disappoint, but her name will remain
a secret until she is born.
We were
blessed to have two of our best friends come into town Saturday morning from Ohio
and spend the day with us. We spent Saturday and part of Monday with them just
hanging out and enjoying each other’s company. Sunday Mark and I “went to
church” via the Web by watching our church’s online stream of the service. We
had lunch, saw a movie, walked downtown Ann Arbor, ate dinner and had a nice
time.
Monday
we started appointments at 1:30 p.m. We met with anesthesiology, had more
meetings with the fetal intervention team and then a blood draw for me. We were
only there for a few hours.
Some of
our other best friends drove in Monday night from Indianapolis to be with us on
Tuesday. They got into town about midnight (of course we were still wide awake
at that time), so they stopped by our room. We caught up with them until 2 a.m.
then called it quits for the night. Our wake-up call was at 5 a.m. I didn’t
mind staying up so late because (i) we hadn’t seen our friends in four months
and enjoyed catching up, and (ii) hello, I was about to have a cardiac fetal intervention
on my baby-who can sleep the night before something like this?! We “slept” from
2 a.m. to 5 a.m. (well, my hubby did, the baby and I just tossed and turned all
night).
We got
to the hospital a little before 6 a.m. Tuesday morning. I put on the stylish
hospital gown, laid in the bed and was wheeled to what was technically a
recovery room in the maternity ward. My nurse then put in an IV for a saline drip.
She placed the first one in my hand, but then the IV wasn’t dripping, so she
had to take the tape off, take the IV out and try it again. Sigh. Did I mention
I hate needles? She finally got the IV placed correctly, and the saline started
coming.
I was
hooked up to monitor any contractions. I actually was contracting according to
the monitor (I couldn’t feel anything). This may have been due to not having
been able to drink or eat anything, according to the nurse. Then, I had to take
a medicine that helped to relax my uterus. They did an ultrasound to see how
the baby was positioned even though they knew the baby could be in a totally
different spot by the time we got to the OR.
Then,
off to the OR around 7:15 a.m.. This is when Mark had to go to the waiting
room. In the OR, they placed my epidural. This is the first time I have had an
epidural. I had a spinal block during my c-section with my first daughter, but
they put it in very quickly during one of my contractions/pushing, and I didn’t
feel a thing. I did a natural VBAC with my second daughter. Getting the
epidural was awful! There was the main anesthesiologist in the OR with a
resident and a fellow. I can’t remember which one did my epidural (it was the
resident or fellow, I do remember that for sure), but it took nearly 20
minutes. They had to try at least two times. It was not fun. Finally they got
it in though. Whew. This is why I opt for natural child birthing lol! I don’t
know how long is normal to place an epidural (I thought they said it would only
be a few minutes) or how many tries is normal, but that was not fun!
They laid
me down, got me situated then started the epidural. During a fetal
intervention, they give you more than a normal epidural during labor/delivery-they
completely numbed me up to my chest. They kept testing the effectiveness and
how high the epidural had climbed up my body by scratching me with a needle on
the shoulder, then having me tell them when I felt the same amount of sensation
on my belly. When they injected enough to make me numb through most of my body,
they put oxygen in my nose, placed my catheter and started the procedure.
There
was a blue sheet up in front of me so I couldn’t see the doctors, but I could
watch the ultrasound monitor. I also brought in my iPod and had one ear piece
in on a low volume so I could zone out if needed. I went back and forth between
listening to the doctors and watching the screen to zoning out to my
Jesus-loving music. I was shaking all over, and my body seemed to only calm
down when I zoned out and got to a very relaxed state of mind. So, I zoned out,
listened to my music and prayed during most of the procedure. When I would watch
and listen, I would automatically kind of tense up and start shaking, teeth chattering,
etc.
The Procedure
They
stuck a needle through my belly and into our baby’s thigh to administer the
drugs she would need (one to take care of her pain and another to basically
paralyze her so she wouldn’t move during the surgery). Once she was not moving,
they made about a one-inch incision just in my skin on my belly (they did not
make any incision in my uterus-they only stuck the needle through my uterus).
They put the needle (similar in size to a needle they use for an amniocentesis,
pretty thin) through the incision and then went through my uterus. They went
through her chest/ribs and into her heart. They poked a hole out with the
needle, then pushed a balloon through the needle into the new hole and inflated
it three times to stretch the new hole. Then they brought the needle out. This
was all guided by watching the ultrasound monitor. My understanding is they
weren’t sure if they really got a good hole or not that time, so since the baby
and I were doing fantastic, they decided to do it again.
I
believe at this point they had to give another dose of meds to the baby because
her meds were wearing off. Of course, our baby girl was ready to roll around
and play and didn’t want to succumb to the meds, so they ended up having to do
it a couple times to get her to stop moving! Not surprising because she is very
active in my belly. Once they accomplished that task, they went in again. This
time they thought they made a better hole. They inflated the balloon another
three times, then they removed the needle and stitched me up. They watched the
baby for 15-20 minutes in the OR once they were done. Then, I went to recovery.
The
baby and I did great. The baby had one time where her heart rate dropped, but
it came right back up. They did mention there was some extra fluid around her
lungs, but they didn’t seem too worried about it. I didn’t need any extra drugs
to sedate me during the procedure-I was able to hold it together. It was
amazing how quiet and calm it was in the OR, even with a medical team of 15-20
people in there. My hubby had a cell phone they gave him, and they updated him
a couple times during the procedure. I think I was in the OR for about 2.5
hours total.
Once I
was back in the recovery room, they hooked me up to monitor contractions (there
were some), and I waited until the feeling in my body came back. I was able to
order lunch (this pregnant momma was hungry!), and I finally made it over the
last hurdle before being able to be discharged-going potty. They came up and
did an echo to take a look at the hole and see how big they were able to get it
and what the blood flow looked like. Before the procedure, they couldn’t see a
hole or any blood flow through the atrial septum. During this echo, the
cardiologist measured the new hole in her atrial septum to be 1.7mm, and she
could see some blood flowing through. The procedure was a success, but they
were disappointed to some extent. They were hoping to get the hole bigger than
what they did. The balloon inflates to 3.0mm, so that was their hope. But, as
our cardiologist at our home hospital said after she talked to the docs that
day, going from no hole and no blood flow to a hole with blood flow is great!
After
the procedure, I was a little sore. Mainly the area on my back where they poked
and prodded to get the epidural in was the most painful part of my body. It
hurt to sit against a chair, but it is better today. I have two stitches in my
belly-not painful unless I accidentally bump them against something. I have
probably about 7 other needle pricks from the IV and the needles used to administer
the meds to our baby, but those do not bother me.
It’s
funny because my head thinks I should be in more pain than I am, like I just had
a c-section or something. Hello, they just performed a cardiac fetal
intervention on my baby, I surely should be in excrutiating pain, right? You would
think, but that’s not the case. I am sore, yes. The site where they did my
epidural was a bit painful, yes. I have to be careful not to bump my stitches,
yes. In my mind though, these are so minimal when you think that our baby just
had her first heart surgery in the womb. Amazing. I am not on any pain meds. I
had to take medicine for the first 24 hours to keep me from contracting but
that was it.
I was
dismissed in the afternoon. It was weird to leave so soon after the procedure
knowing the magnitude of what just happened. But, we went back to our hotel and
hung out with our friends. After some hang out time, they all headed back home.
We went to dinner, rented a movie and went to sleep. We flew out late this
afternoon and are now home sweet home with our other two babies.
We go
back to our normal doctors here in Kansas City on Monday to take a look at how
the new hole is doing.
We are
so thankful. Thankful we didn’t give up on fetal intervention out of fear
because that would have been easy to do and totally understandable. Thankful we
had success and are celebrating this new hope for our baby. Thankful God chose
to bless our decision to do everything medically available for our daughter to
have the best chance at life. Thankful we are still pregnant with our little
miracle. Thankful for our family who took care of our girls for nearly a week.
Thankful for our friends who brought meals every night for our girls while we
were gone and even brought freezer meals for us to eat now that we are home.
Thankful for all you who are praying for us. Thankful for two great sets of friends
who came up to be with us during this procedure. Thankful we are still on this
journey. Thankful for Mott Children’s Hospital for giving our little girl a
chance with fetal intervention when the other top two hospitals said no due to
her Turner Syndrome. Thankful for a great team of doctors we were able to work
with at Motts. There is so so much to be thankful for tonight. We have done all
we can on our human end for our child. We are now going to try and slow down,
relax and enjoy these last eight weeks with our two little girls before our
world changes forever with the birth of our little one.
Our little
girl still has a long road ahead of her. This procedure, though a success and
something to be excited about, did not make her heart all better-it wasn’t a
cure by any means. It doesn’t take away the fact that she is still going to be
a sick baby when she is born, and she will probably be fighting for her life
still. She may still need immediate intervention at birth. Her lungs have
probably already been damaged in-utero. There are still so many unknowns. This
hole they just made could close right back up, and we could be in the same spot
that we were already in. We just have to wait and see. If this new hole stays
open, her chances of surviving her first surgeries are sitting at a 50/50
chance. Those aren’t great odds, but we’ll take them! They are better than the
10-20% chance before the fetal intervention.
Some
things we know for sure- (i) our God has a plan; (ii) God will prepare us for whatever
lies ahead-whether it be what we’ve been praying for or our worst fear; (iii)
God is with us through this journey; and (iv) our little girl is a fighter.
Ways to pray:
1.
The
hole in her atrial septum stays open and even gets bigger with the new blood
flowing through it.2. Her lungs to develop properly and that she will have minimal lung damage.
3. I do not go into preterm labor. I have to make it to 36 weeks for the doctors to be able to do anything for her heart. And, the bigger she is at birth, the better.
GOD is great! Thank you for the update. We are so happy things went well with the surgery. You guys are amazing! Throughout the weekend and on Tuesday I kept putting myself in your place wondering how I would handle all of this. I'm not sure I could be as strong as you guys. I am so glad ALL of you are back home safe and that things went well. See you soon.
ReplyDeleteChris, Jane, Rylie and Easton Reaves
Hi we don't know each other but I heard about your situation from Quimby. Her & I were in the hospital together as teenagers. I just got done reading all your blog entries & I am totally amazed at your courage & faith! I'm so happy that the procedure went well & I will continue to keep you all in my prayers! GOD IS GREAT!!!
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