Submitted by Nicole on 9/28/2012
Fragile
Labor Day weekend I was quickly reminded how fragile our
lives are with Wrenn’s condition. The
reality: In the blink of an eye, things can go from perfect to tragic at any
given moment.
It all started at our GI appointment in June. The doctor looked
at her growth chart and decided that Wrenn (at 19 pounds and 26 months old)
needed more calories to gain weight. I admit, she’s not a great eater and won’t
drink a ton at one sitting but I don’t know many toddlers who eat that great in
general. Nutrition is important for
Wrenn so she can grow with those large new lungs she received two years ago.
(September 23nd) So I do take
her GI appointments very seriously.
However, sometimes after trying what the GI doctor says,
life becomes more miserable for everybody involved. He wanted Wrenn to be fed for eight hours
straight while she slept (continuous feeds) and then three additional feeds
during the day. What I found wasn’t
surprising; she stopped eating solid foods during the day and at night, and woke up
every hour because she was miserable.
At our next follow-up appointment in July we were told that
Wrenn had gained one pound from all of this, which I felt was great, but the GI
doctor got out her growth chart again and compared her to everybody else. He told me she needed higher amounts at night
and increased her volume of formula during the day as well. Wrenn didn’t agree with either plan and so
neither did Mommy. After trying this for two weeks, I cancelled our next
follow-up appointment and regrouped.
Three weeks ago, I pulled the plug. I decided to stop all G tube feeds during the
day and see how much she’d eat and drink on her own. I did keep the eight hours of feeds going at
night to make up for any lost calories during the day. She ate and drank a little more during the
day but it wasn’t the result I wanted.
So two weeks later I quit the night feeds as well. Wrenn’s therapist had said that night feeds
can greatly affect their appetite during the day and so I went all the way with
my new plan. I decided Wrenn was capable
in chewing and drinking—the two things she’d never experienced on her own was
getting hungry, and satisfying that feeling to becoming full. I felt it was time she learned this natural
course of events.
The second problem we were having was that her labs in June showed
Wrenn had very low magnesium levels and iron.
The GI doctor said she was anemic.
What I realized right away was that her new formula (not soy anymore
since she’s lactose intolerant) contained a ton of iron, where her new formula
(Neocate Jr.)—(the stuff I just quit) barely contained any iron. The GI doctor tested Wrenn’s stools and one
out of three came back positive for containing blood. (Sometimes you can’t see
this and a test is the only way to know for sure). This wasn’t a good thing and
so he introduced iron supplementation into her diet once daily.
Of course, we don’t do anything without first contacting St.
Louis to make sure the new plan works well with her rejection medications. After a few weeks, everybody was on the same
page and we went with the new program for the iron supplementation.
At first I was a bit freaked when Wrenn barely ate or drank
without those tube feeds but within three days she showed more interest and
enjoyed a few midnight snacks. I counted
the number of wet diapers and noticed her stools had changed form but still all
over the map as far as frequency and consistency.
Feeding time has always been the most challenging part with
a kid who had to learn to eat and drink at ten months old. It’s a long, frustrating process and it’s
very important that the patient, the doctor and parent be on the exact same
page. This isn’t an area that St. Louis
gets too involved in—they leave it up to us and our local GI doctor to figure
it out.
I decided in the long run that it was worth Wrenn losing a pound
or two for that first month or two to stick with the new program and see if she
starts to eat bigger meals and more often.
So far she’s not lost any weight and seems to be much happier and less
gassy without all the formula. She’s
sleeping through the night too, which hasn’t happened since we lived in St.
Louis.
When Wrenn was having issues with her prolapsed rectum we
watched her diapers very closely. It’s
not normal for toddlers to have 10 to 12 diapers a day and that was Wrenn’s
norm for a long time. Once she was on
the Flagyl, we went down to three diapers daily and it all seemed better. The GI doctor told me that when she starts
having gas pain and several diapers to call him so we can have her come in or
do the Flagyl again.
Here’s the problem—long
term use of Flagyl causes neurological issues. So it’s very important that I
know for sure that she’s in need of this drug.
Last Thursday and Friday she was up to 12 diapers a day and there was no
rhyme or reason but she was on the 7th day of eating at her own pace
with my new agenda. I was getting
worried and on Saturday morning called the GI doctor on call and asked for
Flagyl to be called in to the pharmacy.
This doctor said something to me that I had thought in the back of my
mind but had kept in the back of my
mind for obvious reasons. He said, if
Wrenn’s in need of Flagyl every couple of weeks, which isn’t the norm, she
probably has an underlying issue that is masked by the drug we’re giving
her. The scary word came up and it made
me realize how fragile our lives are with Wrenn’s condition.
“I have seen this many times, parents think their kid is
lactose intolerant and has a GI bacterial build up and what they actually have
is an intestinal cancer—which is often caused by the two drugs she takes for
rejection called Cellcept and Prograf.”
My heart stopped beating.
The doctor then asked me if the transplant team tested for cancers post
transplant and I said yes but wasn’t sure if they tested for the one to which
he was referring. You can imagine my
anxiety that this question was hovering over me on a holiday weekend. It was
going to be a long three days until Tuesday morning when I’d be able to get any
answers from the transplant team.
My family and close friends were livid that the doctor on
call (a doctor in the practice who had never seen Wrenn as his own patient)
suggested this to me on a Saturday morning but I wasn’t mad at him at all. When we signed on for Wrenn’s transplant we
went over a thick booklet with our transplant coordinator stating every single
thing that can go wrong with Wrenn post transplant. We have heard it all and it just depends what
path Wrenn is going to take. Cancer was
something I knew could happen but generally it happens with LONG term
usage. The odds are this wasn’t
Wrenn’s GI issue but again, every kid is
different and at that very moment in time, I didn’t have the answers to this
doctor's questions.
I’m almost certain my daughter was on his mind for much of
the weekend. It’s not every day you have a double lung transplant patient at
her tender age and it’s a call you don’t forget. He was very eager to call the transplant team
and did so first thing Tuesday morning.
Unable to think about anything else that morning I got in
touch with a few transplant mommies and they weren’t sure either. This is the moment that you recall what your
coordinator tells you: Worry about what
is, NOT what might be. I chanted
that all day to myself. Feeling the need
to do something I sat down and wrote a very detailed email to my transplant
coordinator, Laura. I knew it was a holiday
but prayed she’d see the panic in my words and reply, giving me something
positive thoughts to get through the weekend.
After sending that email I hugged Tanner and Wrenn and realized how fast
it could all go downhill. I spent the rest of the day not leaving their
sides. This was all part of the
rollercoaster ride I agreed to and I was doing it without a seat belt.
Even though my mind raced with good and bad thoughts I was
on edge and the day for all of us was somber. Wrenn looked so good and although I
couldn’t imagine this being a possibility, I couldn’t be certain. It was an exhausting day mentally and I was
tired so I turned in early and when I woke up on Sunday morning I had an email
from the transplant coordinator in my mailbox.
I read the email to Jason and I again started to breathe without telling
myself to do so. The test the GI doctor
on call suggested had always been negative for Wrenn and Laura said that Wrenn,
in their eyes, has been great post transplant.
It was reassurance I needed and on Monday she confirmed this with the GI
doctor. All cancer tests so far have
come back negative! J
It amazes me how level I remain when faced with things that
are so out of my control. I was so
thankful my transplant coordinator wrote me back so soon and was so grateful for her compassion concerning my fears. It is out of
character for the team to write during a weekend and well, it just shows we
have good people around us who care about our family and especially baby Wrenn.
It’s such a life lesson sometimes to experience the reality
check like I did. It’s been such a
wonderful summer and after a while you forget what you’ve been through and then
something reminds you that life can turn upside down in the blink of an
eye. Life really is a gift and I feel
God reminds me often and I am thankful for that.
We head to St. Louis for Wrenn’s two year checkup on Monday (today).
This will be the first appointment where a bronc is NOT required but is
scheduled just in case. Our day on
Monday is packed—labs, immunology doctor, Infectious disease doctor (this is
new to all transplant recipients), pulmonary doctor, transplant gastro doctor,
then after lunch she will be put under and have her PFT’s done (infant
pulmonary tests to make sure both lungs are doing well), cardio station, x-rays
and CT scans. Our day goes from 7AM to
5:30PM.
It’s scary knowing we don’t have a bronc, because we leave
wondering if her lungs are rejecting but unless they take a biopsy of the
specific spot that is rejecting, the data is skewed anyway. It’s nice knowing she might not have to have
one and put her through the risks of infections or additional complications.
On a great note, we saw the pulmonary doctor at VCU in early
August and he was very pleased with her and so we won’t see him again until
January.
June, July and August are the best months for our family and
we feel the most normal as we blend in with the world—going out in public and
doing fun things like Busch Gardens, going to dinner, playing in the pools at
the water park, Water Country USA, shopping with Mommy and playing outside in
general. We rarely mask Wrenn in the
summer because it’s not a high risk time for her but we are always aware of
good hand washing and use bottles and bottles of hand sanitizer. We change out Wrenn and Tanner’s clothes if
they’ve been playing in a germy area like a park or with other kids (which
isn’t very often) and they take showers right away.
As soon as September 1st arrives we are on high
alert. We’ll still go out to eat but
will eat outside when possible and at odd hours of the week like 4PM, not 6PM. We won’t visit too many public places and
play dates will be less often. Wrenn and
Tanner received their flu shots in mid-September and we will get our shots in
early October. Wrenn gets a booster in early January.
This summer Tanner took a hip hop class and I explained to
all the parents our situation with Wrenn and asked as I handed out my phone
number, to let me know if their child went home sick, or had been sick as a
courtesy for keeping Tanner and Wrenn safe in our crazy world of germs. Most people, I should say, ALL people we
explain our situation to are compassionate with what we have to go through and
have been wonderful in communicating. Obviously, summer isn’t high risk but as
we move forward this will be a common speech as Tanner explores his own world
with other children. Luckily, he won’t start school until next fall. That’s a whole new blog J
Wrenn is a smart little cookie. She loves to finish off
Tanner’s food. She loves fried eggs with buttered toast. She loves all fruit
and salad and still prefers water to anything else for liquid. She loves shoes,
hats and purses and is very into her baby dolls right now. She is a climber and
wants to be around me at all times of the day, helping me cook, clean, eat,
watch TV: she is my little clone.
Tanner and Wrenn are
so close and play well together. When
she takes a nap he wakes her up so they can keep playing (Grrrrr!). They wrestle, play the Wii together, dance,
sing, chase one another around the house, jump on the bed, giggle in the backseat
of the car and fight over TV shows. They
melt my heart every day and I am soooooo lucky that I get to watch them as they
continue to grow close.
There was one day in June I didn’t have a sitter available
and I had to take Tanner with me to get Wrenn’s labs drawn. He was sitting in the seat next to Wrenn and
the two nurses tried to cover Wrenn so he wouldn’t see but he heard her cry and
knew something wasn’t much fun for his little sister. It was the time they had a hard time drawing
blood and so that made it even worse for all of us. When she was all done he came over to Wrenn
and said, “Are you okay Wrenn?” And he
rubbed her head. Clearly, he was in tune to her pain and it put tears in my
eyes. Now when I mention I have to take
Wrenn in for monthly labs he says, ‘That hurts Wrenn.” SIGH!!!
Although, we’ve been lucky.
Wrenn usually needs labs drawn once a month and they are so good at this
lab we go to that it’s just one prick and she’s done. She doesn’t even cry anymore. She spends so much time in the doctor offices
that her favorite toy to pass along the time is playing with the latex
gloves. So when we finish drawing blood
she asked for a glove as her reward. The
lab said they could only give her a stuffed toy, which she threw on the floor
because she preferred the glove! LOL
Wrenn’s two year re-birth (when she received her new lungs
from that wonderful donor) was September 23rd. It is a bitter sweet day for our family and
I’m sure still is for all those who were along for our journey as we waited
daily for that one phone call. We don’t
throw a party on the anniversary of her surgery. In many ways I feel this is a
day to reflect, thank God for her good health, and remember and thank our donor
even if it’s through prayers. I also
feel in many ways that celebrating will jinx her good fortune and since I’m
very superstitious, I prefer to celebrate quietly.
I greatly appreciate the
emails we receive from our cyber family. You guys are the heart and soul of
Wrenn’s success and give our family the strength to get through the rough
days. I am so happy to say that things
are going well for Wrenn and as we gear up for her major check up Monday in St.
Louis, I hope to give you great news.
Xoxo Nicole
1 comments:
Oh MY, Nik............first I have read all about what you go through daily. You are amazing:) Such a gifted writer but mostly the BEST MOM to those 2!!! Praying all goes well for Wrenn there in St. Louis.Keep me posted!
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