Ok, Part 2...the broken heart.
Surgery
 was imminent, as they explained to us before Liam left us, that he would 
be requiring emergency surgery.  My biggest fear is that I would be 
stuck in recovery, while my newborn child had open heart surgery.  
Thankfully, they told us he would be having surgery sometime the 
following week, that they could keep Liam's heart pumping with a 
medication....more on that in a minute.
While Liam was 
getting all settled in at the city hospital, I stayed to recover back at
 our local hospital.  The nurses let me keep my epidural in that night, 
just so I could get some rest, knowing how stressful the past 12 hours 
had been for us.  I was grateful for this.  I did have some pretty major
 tearing during labor, as they had to use the vacuum extractor to get 
Liam out, after a solid 3 hours of pushing.  Needless to say I was 
exahausted.  Then throw on a diagnosis like we had, I was physically a 
bit of a disaster!  However, God was good and put great nurses in my 
path during my recovery who encouraged me to start pumping milk.  And 
that was my focus the next 24 hours of my recovery and the next few 
months...pump my heart out for my little boy.
|  | 
| 3 days after birth, before surgery | 
Meanwhile, Liam was undergoing some testing and 
received another echocardiogram.  This gave our cardiologist, Dr. Verma,
 information to make an official diagnosis: 
Tetralogy of Fallot with 
Pulmonary Atresia. 
 This is a combination of 4 different defects, with 2 major ones that 
require immediate surgery.  Basically Liam's heart was completely absent
 of a pulmonary artery and also had a large 
VSD.  They were keeping him alive pre-surgery by giving him prostaglandin, which kept his 
PDA
 open.  The PDA usually closes within a short time after birth, but this
 was being used in Liam's heart as a bypass to his Pulmonary Artery, so 
it was imperative they keep it open.
|  | 
| One of our first family pictures | 
Liam underwent his first open  heart surgery, to place a 
BT Shunt,
 when 
  he was 5 days old.   The shunt was used to bypass the pulmonary artery
 while still providing blood flow throughout the heart.  Because the 
shunt causes oxygenated blood to mix with unoxygenated blood, Liam's O2 
saturations would be low until he was big enough for his next surgery, 
sometime around 8 month - 1 year.
|  | 
| Morning before 1st open heart surgery, October 5, 2009 | 
|  | 
| Following 1st open heart surgery...so many machines and meds. | 
|  | 
| In recovery after 1st heart surgery | 
Liam flew through surgery with little to 
no complications.  He was in  the NICU for 23 days…released on my   
original due date, October 23.   The only real complication he had was a
 paralyzed right vocal chord, which caused aspiration issues with his 
feeding.  We were discharged on NPO orders {nothing per oral} only being
 allowed to feed Liam through an NG Tube.
Our arrival 
home for the first time as a family was bittersweet.  It was 
overwhelming to be responsible for such a daunting task of caring for a 
newborn, let alone not be able to do things "normally".   For the most 
part, Liam tolerated his tube feedings fairly  well, and  we
  were able to keep him on a “normal” feeding schedule. However,  four 
months later and multiple swallow studies later, after using an 
NG tube for all feedings, we decided to have a 
G-Tube placed, as Liam's aspiration issues did not improve,
 nor did his vocal chord recover.  He had his G-Tube surgery on January 
19, 2010.
|  | 
| Going home! October 23, 2009 | 
That spring we also realized how a simple cold could 
turn into a hospital stay, something the doctors warned us about when we
 brought Liam home for the first time...that anything he caught could 
turn into a bad situation, fast, because of his heart and low O2 sats.  
Devising a schedule and plan to keep him home 24/7 {thanks to my amazing
 dad and mom for watching him day in and day out for us that first year}
 it was still not enough, as Dustin and I both had to work full time 
outside the home, and thus risked exposing ourselves to viruses and 
such.  We took him to the ER one April night due to "dusky" color and 
wheezy breathing to find out his O2 sats had diminished into the 40's 
and required immediate admission.  That was a frightening night for us. 
Although he made a full recovery, we had to reschedule his full repair 
surgery to summer because of his illness.  That "full repair" summer 
surgery was a rough one.....stay tuned for tomorrow's post!
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments