Friday, November 25, 2016

Day 116

So many things have happened this week. Some good and some not so good.

Avery is home now! She's been home since Monday night and we are loving it! She is the easiest baby I've had, really. I was nervous to have to deal with her oxygen but she hasn't had any problems so far. So sleeps most of the time and when she is awake she just hangs out and looks around. I can count on one hand the amount of times she's cried and it's never for very long. 
The kids are loving on her too. Clark, Hailey, and Penny all have coughs so we have kept Avery in our room and have had to be careful about not letting them in. They are dying to get feeling better so they can hold her and play with her. 

Logan, getting some cuddles in...




Wren has a had a very bad week.

Monday night, after we headed home with Avery, Wren was very lethargic and not very responsive.

By Tuesday morning she was re-intubated and back on the ventilator. Her CO2 levels where at 103 according to her blood gas (a normal baby's is in the 40/50 range). Levels this high can result in a comma or be fatal so the ventilator was her only option. The doc put her on 3 different types of antibiotics just in case she had another infection and they collected some cultures from her ET tube and sent them to the lab. 3 different nurses, 2 nurse partitioners, and 2 doctors each attempted to place a useful IV but her veins kept blowing. After far too many failed attempts they where finally able to place one in her scalp and administer the antibiotics and pain meds. She had to be heavily sedated otherwise her oxygenation levels would drop drastically. She spent much of Tuesday night with her oxygen at 100% regardless of being on high amounts of morphine. We're are grateful she made it through.

Here she is all drugged up. My sweet baby...

  

Wednesday it was confirmed that she had pneumonia yet again. The IV in her scalp didn't last long and they were quickly running out of ways to give her the meds she needed. The docs considered giving her another PIC line like she had when she was a newborn but in the end decided a broviac catheter would be best. A broviac is when a tube is surgically placed in the neck and into one of the veins under the collarbone. The catheter is long enough to reach the large vein that goes to the heart.
They got ahold of the pediatric surgeon on call and got the catheter placed right away.

Wren, post surgery. You can see the tube coming out of the right side of her neck...


Thanks to the broviac, she quickly received all of her meds and was put on a morphine drip. By Thursday her oxygen had come down to the 40s and her CO2 was back down to the 70s which is still high but fairly normal for her. She'd retained a lot of water though and weighed about 10 oz more than she should have. She had to get a catheter to help her get some urine out and was put on hydrocortisone to hopefully help with the water retention as well.

Puffy baby...






Today (Friday) she's still hanging in there. She's been awake off and on and her pain levels aren't so bad. The antibiotics seem to be doing their job and her latest x-ray showed that her lungs are clearing a bit. She's still having some pretty significant desats here and there. She's also been having some periodic drops in her heart rate which the docs speculate are bronchospasm but could also potentially be seizures. She has an MRI scheduled for tomorrow to make sure it's not the latter.

Because of this latest episode she will almost certainly have to get a tracheotomy. I believe in miracles without question as we have seen many throughout this process so I haven't given up hope yet. We will have to wait and see what happens.

Even with all of these setbacks and trials I am grateful everyday that I get to be Mom to these sweet girls. God knew what he was doing when he sent their precious spirits to our family. I can't imagine my life without them in it.   

Sunday, November 20, 2016

Day 111

It's been a two-steps-forward, one-step-back kind of week for both girls, but we're mostly excited about the steps forward.

Last week, Wren had done so well on the steroid she received that she was able to breathe on a cannula.  Well, once the drug wore off completely out of her system this week, she finally started laboring more in her breathing to where her pressure was increased enough that they decided to put her back on the CPAP.  This was in part because a chest x-ray showed that her lungs looked a little hazy and weren't quite inflating as well as they would like.  She is on CPAP now with a  pressure of 6.0 and around 40-50% oxygen.  We hope that this is a temporary thing and that she will begin moving forward again.


















Avery was off the cannula and just breathing room air for a while, but slowly started desaturating more, and eventually needed to be back on the home-style cannula with a small amount of air (1/8 L).  Despite being back on the cannula, it still feels like she had a great week.  She consistently ate every bottle and did a great job with them since se first tried.  In fact, she has done so well this week that the doctors decided it was time to start getting her ready to go home.  (!!!)

By the end of the week, the doctors were talking about discharging her on Monday, depending on how she was looking.  To get ready for this, they wanted us to come spend a night in the NICU taking care of Avery on our own and managing all the equipment she will come home with to ensure we don't royally mess things up.  So, as I am writing, we are here tonight, in our NICU room that feels like your regular hotel room, getting ready to set up all of Avery's equipment.  There's not that much, just a Concentrator that plugs in to the wall and gives her the regular oxygen input on her cannula, a couple of oxygen tanks for when we need to move her around, and an Oximeter to monitor her saturation and heart levels.

As a final step before discharge, Avery also has to pass a car seat test, where she sits buckled into her car seat for an hour or so with monitoring equipment watching for labor of breathing, or her head slouching forward, or anything like that.  It seems like she did well on the test.  In fact, she seemed pretty bored by the whole thing and pretty much just slept.


















She was also very awake today when we first came in. 

Is Avery excited to come home, or having second thoughts?  :
























We are hopeful that Avery will get to come home this week.  Our kids are excited to spend more time with her.

Sunday, November 13, 2016

Day 104 - Upgrades

This has been a pretty significant week for our babies.  First, on Wednesday they reached 100 days in the hospital since they were born, which was a bummer realization.  Second, they passed their official due date on Friday the 11th, so they are now officially past the 40-week mark.  Third, Wren was on a ten day course of Decatron (a steroid) and was able to transition from the CPAP to a cannula -- which is HUGE progress if she's going to be avoid getting a tracheostomy -- fourth, we got moved to a new room where the cribs are closer together and we can now hold both babies at the same time (!), and fifth, Avery had a few surprises for us today when she decided it was time both to get rid of her cannula and to try out bottle feeding.  She's done great with both.  Wow!  We are feeling incredibly blessed this week to watch their small milestones that are huge to us.


Here is Wren just a few days ago, still on the CPAP with a good amount of pressure (7.0) and fairly high oxygen (~55%).  By administering the steroid, the docs were able to get her progressing again and to move not only to a cannula for less intensive oxygen support, but also on about 5.0 Liters of flow at 28% oxygen.





Wren seems to be very happy without the big old CPAP mask in her face all the time.  I think the mask made it hard to see, and it was also very noisy and had constant pressure on her face and head.  The cannula is much more comfortable and also quieter.


We got to hold the girls together for the first time on their due date.  It rocked.  They snuggled right in to each other and got back to the business of kicking each other's legs, just as they did back in the good ole' days in the womb.




Avery was looking pretty cute with her cannula just a few days ago...



...but today she decided it was time to be done.  This morning at 7:00, she pulled the cannula out on her own, and was sleeping peacefully.  The docs saw her saturation levels sitting at 99% and decided that she was telling them it was time to try breathing without the tube.  This was not on anybody's radar -- in fact, a couple of days ago it still looked like she would go home with some oxygen support -- so she's pretty much in charge here.


Avery tried a bottle yesterday, but was too sleepy to be interested in trying.  Today, they gave it another go.  She figured it out almost instantly and had none of the common problems (coughing, dribbling milk, eating too fast).  She's a natural eater.  The nurse practitioner who gave her the bottle was surprised with how well she did.  Shannon got to feed her another bottle a few hours later.  Another huge milestone!



Shannon had a glow on her face when she came home today.  I asked her how it went, and she told me simply that she was able to do some "real mom and baby stuff" like giving Wren a bath, feeding Avery a bottle, and holding both of them.  These things may be be simple, but they're monumental to us.  It's been a great week and is making us feel like maybe there's a light at the end of the tunnel.

Monday, November 7, 2016

Day 98

During the past week, Wren has been given a 10-day course of a steroid to help her progress with breathing.  As soon as they put her on the medicine, she was able to drop her oxygen needs from 60% down to 28%, the lowest I've ever seen, and has dropped her required CPAP pressure from 9.0 down to 6.0, and this should drop further to 5.0 tomorrow.  Much of this improvement is likely thanks to the steroid, but even so, it's good to finally see her progress some.  There isn't a whole lot of time for her to be able to prove to the doctors that she's not going to need a tracheostomy to come home.

Avery is also doing well on her own and has been able to drop to a cannula pressure of 1.0 Liter per minute and is holding her oxygen in the mid-30s range.  The big next step for her is to get her to feed from a bottle, but in order to coordinate the suck/swallow/breathe reflexes, she needs to be breathing stably, which includes breathing sufficiently slowly.  Right now, she breathes at a fast rate of around 80 - 100 breaths per minute, and they'd like to see that consistently drop below 80 and with lower oxygen needs in order to try the bottle.  We may be trying her out with her first bottle tomorrow if she does well enough as they evaluate her in the morning rounds.

Here are a few of the latest pics.  They're still growing!

Avery





Wren







Every once in a while, we can catch a glimpse of what their faces look like without masks and tubes.