Wednesday, June 7, 2017

Smooth sailing (delayed post from June)

This post was meant to be posted months ago, as in almost a year ago, but once again, life got away from me.  We have been busy enjoying our girls and a life without doctors' appointments, the way parenting should be.  For a little while, things have been completely "normal" as in other people's normal, not our normal.  Mireya is doing great.  She's been as healthy as a horse and is making big strides, but more on that later.  I feel like I should start with our most recent medical event before I get on with the exciting stuff.



Our most cath admission back in June was a dream.  I can't believe I'm saying dream and admission in the same sentence, but almost everything went right.  When we started this journey with Reya back in November, I expected smoother sailing, mostly because she was bigger and stronger than Hope was when she went for surgery.  I failed to take Mireya's feisty nature and complicated anatomy into account.

I often find myself reflecting upon that first admission, but found myself more reflective during this last cath.  Ironically, for this past admission, during the day we had the same nurse (Kaitlyn) that we had when we were first admitted back in November.  She and I were reminiscing a little bit about how much trouble Reya gave them when we arrived here for that first surgery.  It's been a rocky road, but she really has come far, and this past admission was a great indicator of how much progress she's made.  To put it in the words of her cath doctor, "she's starting to look like a keeper".

He's a character, Dr. Lock.  He's starting to grow on me.  We learned at this most recent cath that he was one of the first doctors to start working on MAPCAs at Boston Children's Hospital back in the 80s, so he is a veteran.  But he's also a man of little words and glass half empty kind of guy, giving you the negative scenarios first.  He talks very fast and doesn't dumb anything down, talking to you like a medical professional.  He blows in and out and doesn't really allow the opportunity for questions.  Chris asked him something and he looked shocked that we were asking him a question.  This was Chris' first encounter with him and we both chuckled after he walked away.  It's kind of one of those "what just happened?" scenarios.  We are able to follow most of what he says, but I always feel like I need a review and clarification, which luckily, Dr Friedman is very good about doing.  Back in March, Dr Lock was the one to tell me Mireya had pneumonia.  After this most recent cath, he walked in and told us her left lung was a mess and her conduit was severely obstructed.  He was able to improve the flow through her conduit and into her left pulmonary artery as well as dilate some of the other vessels as well.  At the end of his very short visit with us, he was finally able to give us the positive - "she's starting to look like a keeper", as in he's finally gotten her to a place where her future looks good.

Our stay for the cath was short and mostly sweet.  We got a decent room.  A window bed with no roommate for the duration of our stay.  Reya's recovery was easy.  The cath was on Tuesday, we came home on Wednesday and by Thursday, you would have had no clue it even happened.  She was a little fussy immediately post-cath, most likely because she was tired and hungry.  She had a pretty decent night's sleep and took two naps while waiting for discharge, which was pretty early.  I even slept pretty well in my pull out chair. Mireya was feeling so well that we went out to Walden Pond to enjoy a beautiful day, two days post-cath (don't worry, she didn't go swimming!).  Hope was more out of sorts than Reya was.
   
The only hiccup we had was with the GI appointment I had cancelled the day before the cath.  When we finished all of our pre-op stuff on Monday, there was a two hour window until her GI appointment.  I asked pre-op to see if they could see us sooner or if they could come see us inpatient.  They said they would catch us inpatient.  Well, I started asking as soon as we got up to the floor after the cath.  They said that they would come up around 11.  11 came and went and then they told me that they would do what I'm asking them to do at our 3 month follow-up.  Funny, because that is the appointment I cancelled.  GI never showed up and weren't returning the NP's (Nurse Practioner) phone calls.  They ended up discharging us and sending over to GI to see if they would do it for us right there.  I got down there, and there was no one to do it, so they booked us an appointment for the following Monday, when we were already scheduled for an appointment with a different department in Waltham.  It was very frustrating as we would have been discharged far earlier and home before lunch had we not waited for GI.  It was especially frustrating given it was the first thing I asked about when we came upstairs.

The cath was on June 6.  We had the GI appointment and ORL (the vocal cord doctor) the following Monday.  We didn't have ANY doctor's appointments between that visit on June 12 and July 10!  That is the longest we have gone without a doctor's appointment since Mireya's diagnosis last MAY.  The GI appointment was simple - it was just a tube change with a nurse practitioner.  She changed out Reya's g-tube, explaining to me how it was done.  I am not able to do it myself yet, they will teach me that at our next follow-up in October, but in an emergency situation, if it were to come out, I would know how to put a new one in, instead of having to rush to the ER at 9PM on a Sunday night like I did back in May.  The simplicity of this appointment made our experience with the GI department the week of the cath even more frustrating.  As a whole, I have not been overly impressed with GI.  I find them disorganized and not at all like cardiology, which is obviously our home base at BCH.  I feel like we are the "away team" when we visit GI, whereas cardiology we are definitely on the "home team".  Even though it is a huge department, I recognize most of the cardiology staff both in Boston and Waltham.  At GI I don't know anyone and the unknown is unsettling.   Up until a month or two ago, I didn't even know who our GI doctor was...lol.  Fortunately, we only have to deal with them every few months.

Our ORL visit was interesting.  The doctor we see, Dr Lee, is young and the best I can describe him is "very clinical".  He is nice, to me and my kids, but not overly warm and fuzzy.  Back in February, he would not do a scope until he heard back from Dr Friedman that it was safe.  He was clearly afraid of my heart baby, especially because I see him Waltham, far away from the safety of the hospital.   This visit was a follow-up from our visit back in February, to check to see if her vocal cord was still compromised.  This is done by scoping her throat with a camera through her nose.  Its interesting to watch and I was able to get the answer myself right away.  The answer is that her left cord is still not completely functioning.  When she gasped for air (because she was screaming), we saw some movement, but in general it is immobile.  But the most interesting part of this visit was not what we went in for.  Upon doing the scope, he noticed that she had either swallowed or inhaled a blade of grass (she had been eating grass by the handful at a birthday party on Saturday) and it was stuck in her nasal cavity.  He was insistent that he had to get it out because he was afraid it would get into her lungs and cause some problems.  He tried going in with some needle nose tweezers.  She didn't much care for that...lol.  So he had to strap her down in a straight jacket attached to a board.  It was pretty traumatic.  But he was able to get it.  Thank God, because if he hadn't, we would have been sent to the OR.  Thanks, but no thanks.    

We had our one month post cath follow-up with cardiology in July.  Everyone remarked at how great she looked.  Her sats were good, her weight is up and overall, a positive visit.  Next cath is set for October 20.  We have had very few appointments since - just the feeding specialist and the neurodevelopmental team.  The feeding specialist thought she was doing great.  Her feeding skills are caught up to age appropriate skills but we do need to work on motivation and stamina.  She was cleared to try thin liquids and so far, she is doing great taking milk from a straw cup!  The neurologist was so impressed by how far she has come.  Looking at the notes over the last few months, she expected a skinny sickly baby that was far behind on her milestones.  Instead, she saw a sort of chunky, happy baby who is rapidly catching up.  She is still slightly behind in her motor skills, but doing great from a cognitive and verbal perspective.  

So those are the most recent medical updates.  I'd say since she kicked the cold she had back in May, it has been pretty smooth sailing.  Smooth sailing and a life free of doctor's appointments allows for a lot of forward progress.   So now for the exciting, regular baby stuff!

Most exciting - she's eating like a champ!  Ever since discovering sand on the beach in Ocean City on Memorial Day weekend, she has been eating more and more.  Her weight gain has been fantastic and she is up to 9% on the charts.  I know, that sounds low, but when we went in for the first surgery she was 3% and when we brought her home in December, at 8lbs3oz, she wasn't anywhere near the charts.  Hope is still only 4-5%.  Chris and I were both small kids.  I don't expect her to be big.  We had a little slump around the cath, but things are so good now that we have dropped two of her tube feeds.  This gives us a lot more freedom and we no longer need to lug the feeding pump unless we're going to be out all day.  At 10 months, she weighed 15lbs10oz, and was about the same as Hope did at the same age.  Now, at 11 months, she is up to 16lbs5oz.    Anyway, I started to feel pretty confident that between nursing and eating solids, she was getting the calories she needed from that extra feed.   Her feeds run every 5-6 hours now, so it is also allowing for her to get hungry in between feeds, which gives her more motivation to eat.  Since we dropped the feeds, she has been eating more and even drinking from a straw cup.   I'm starting to feel optimistic for being mostly off daytime feeds when I go back to work.  She may require one daytime feed, but my hope is that it won't require me to lug the pump to daycare every day.  She will also hopefully be drinking cow's milk by then, so if all goes well, it will make packing for daycare relatively low maintenance.  So far, she has continued to gain even with the dropped feeds, so that's a good sign.

Another exciting update - she's on the move!  Just like Hope, she has chosen butt scooting as her method of movement.  She just started moving at the end of July, so she is about a month behind Hope, but she's already trying to figure out crawling and possibly even trying to figure out how to pull up, so I think she's going to catch up fast.  And boy is she fast.  She has been so proud of herself.  The first day she was on the move, she scooted all over the house checking out every last corner  and pulling out every last toy.  She's very busy and into everything.

She is making a ton of vocalizations, intonation and all.  She has whole conversations with herself and with us.  I remember Hope talking a lot, but I don't remember her having these types on conversations this young.  It is pretty hilarious.  She has angry noises where she sounds like she's cursing us out and happy joyful noises.  She also has a few words with meaning attached - "mama" "dada" "bye" and I could swear she's saying something for Sanders.

Finally, she has her bottom two teeth with 3 or 4 more popping through up top.  We discovered them on the 4th of July and just noticed the others this past week.  Once again, she is behind Hope on this, by about a month.  It's funny, it has completely changed how she "talks" and where she puts her tongue.  She's like a different kid since we discovered the teeth.

Overall, she is a happy, funny baby.  She is a character.  She knows how to wave "hi" and "bye" and is starting to clap.  When we were in for the cath, she had a chest x-ray immediately post-cath.  This is one of her least favorite activities at the hospital.  After we picked her up to go back up to our room, she immediately stopped crying and started waving "bye", kind of like, see you later, I'm out of here!  She "dances" by swaying back and forth.  She gives kisses.  She loves stuffed toys, especially her bunny.  She already covets Hope's dolls, hugging and kissing them.  She still adores her big sister and Sanders.  But possibly my favorite thing about her is her snuggles.  Every time I pick her up, she snuggles in for a good hug and sometimes a kiss.  She won't snuggle for a long time, and doesn't really like to cuddle or sleep in our arms, or even sit in our laps for a long time, but she gives the best hugs when you pick her up.

I completely adore her (obviously) in a completely different way than I adore Hope.  Its funny how things come into your life at just the right time.  Hope is a fierce, independent fighter.  But she's also happy go lucky and a breath of fresh air that came at a time when we were struggling for air.  Reya is the storm along with the subsequent rainbow that came after the breath of fresh air.  She came into the world much more quickly (should have known then), and has had a much longer and harder road, but somehow she is silly, happy, and more fun than anything I've ever known.  I don't know that I could have handled the stress I felt from Reya's journey without having Hope first.  Hope has continued to be my breath of air, but Reya is the comic relief (even though she is usually the one causing all the stress!).  Sometimes, I think she's like a hurricane, but that's not a positive enough analogy since nothing good comes from a hurricane.  She's always causing trouble and wreaking havoc.  She has to touch everything.  Then you look at her, and you just have to smile.  I'm terrified of when she starts really moving.      

Life is good right now.  Moving way too fast, but really good.  

Thursday, March 9, 2017

The Nature of the Beast




Over the past 6 months, we have learned a lot.  The biggest thing I have learned is that the MAPCAs component of Mireya's condition makes it much trickier to manage.  She is constantly throwing us curveballs.  The most recent one cancelled our gtube surgery Monday, a surgery we were really looking forward to having behind us.  We came in for a gtube and will come out with a cath instead.  This is the nature of the beast.

Sleeping peacefully, blissfully unaware of the stressful day ahead
What I thought would be the last photo with the NG tube
  

Monday's updates from the ER probably made it sound a lot scarier than it actually was at the time.    I was pretty anxious about this surgery going in, almost like I knew something wasn't going to go as planned.  I had a really hard time settling on Sunday.  I was worried she was coming down with a cold as I had seen a few pretty juicy looking boogers.  I knew that a cold would cancel the surgery.  Monday morning, our report time was 6, with a 7:30 surgery time.  I got up at 5, and we were on our way by 5:40.  We checked in, everything went as planned and headed back to pre-op.  No boogers.  They started to do the work-up and when they hooked up the O2 monitor, they had a hard time getting her sats.  They weren't getting anything over the mid-70s.  I knew this was trouble and was a little surprised that they were so low.  The surgeon came out to meet me and it looked like we were going to go ahead.  However, when the anesthesiologist came to check in, he confirmed my fear.  He didn't feel comfortable going forward with the surgery.  He explained that by going forward, they could probably get through it, but they could also potentially make her very sick.  He said he had seen kids in her position end up on ECMO (life support).  That was all I needed to hear, as ECMO is one of the big fears heart parents have.   He thought it best for us to find the root cause of her low sats and since it was early in the morning, nothing was open.  So they hooked her up to oxygen and off to the ER we went, so we could at least get the ball rolling.   She was never really in any danger (she wasn't even blue!) and it was never scary, just a little frustrating and disappointing.  Once in the ER, they did a more thorough work-up - IV, labs, chest x-ray, echo.  Chris calls the ER Mireya's little house of horrors.  She was pretty pissed off, but mostly stable.  She didn't really start to fall apart until we came upstairs.  The final verdict was that her awesome growth, along with the reconstricting of the pulmonaries, was the cause of low sats.  Ironic, considering two months ago, her lack of growth ended us up here.  Something we all wanted for her was the cause of her current problem.  Basically it seems she had outgrown her pulmonary arteries.  

Tuckered out  in the ER

While she was getting a work up in the ER, they were securing a bed for her up on 8 East.  We were in the ER all morning.  Chris tapped me out around 11:15 so I could run to an appointment and by the time I got back, they had just gotten upstairs.  For once, we got a decent room.  At first it looked like we got a window, which was good enough for us, but upon getting up here, we learned that this room is actually a single!  It used to be a double, but when they opened the new wing, they turned a few doubles into singles and this is one of them.  It baffles me how they chose which ones should be singles, as this seems like a larger room than some of the doubles we've been in (Bucknell people - think Swartz dingles), but whatever.  It is so much better being in a single room.  
Once we got up here, we were reunited with so many old friends.  Our nurse had been our nurse back in December when we were in for the poor weight gain.  A few other nurses stopped by to check in.  We got the news about one of our favorite nurse's new baby boy, just born on Saturday.  Yesterday, some others stopped in to check on us too.  It's nice to see familiar faces and everyone, including her cardiologist was amazed by how "big" she has gotten (She's still only 12.75lbs and 3rd %).  

 

We went through the litany of questions and spent most of the day trying to get her sats stable.  She was all over the place.  Anywhere from 50s to 80s.  They tried different amounts of O2.  Every time they went up on the O2, I held my breath because the threshold for staying out of the CICU is 2L.  Once they go over 2L of Oxygen, they kick you off the floor into the CICU.  Normally a trip over to the CICU for this reason wouldn't bother me too much, but it wouldn't be likely that we'd get as good of a room upon our return from the CICU, so I was praying to stay here.  They bumped her up to 3L a couple of times and I was sure we were on our way to CICU, but knowing her history and the fact she's done this exact thing before, they gave her a chance and eventually she leveled out.  While she definitely needed the extra support (her sats dropped into the 50s without it), it doesn't seem to make a difference whether she is on 2L or 3L.  Aside from outgrowing her pulmonaries, one cause for this wild ride was that she had had nothing to eat since 2AM.  We asked multiple times, but they wanted to keep her NPO in case they wanted to take her to the cath lab right away.  They finally realized she had been 12 hours without food or fluids.   This is especially dangerous in the case of her tiny collaterals because when she becomes dehydrated her vessels constrict.  So we fed her and they pumped her full of fluids.  Through all of this, she was pretty good, not too fussy, though it was clear that she needed a nap.  She couldn't seem to settle, probably because she was dehydrated and hungry.  She took two short naps, and both times she woke up, got upset and immediately desatted, causing everyone to come in to check.  The second time, we had left her all peaceful to go out for a walk and we came back there was a party in our room.  But overall she was a trooper.  
This morning was pretty quiet as we waited to go down to the cath lab.  We were second case, so we had to wait for first case to be over.  It was a long case, so she didn't go back until 1:30.  She was pretty patient up until the last hour, and even then, she wasn't that bad.  Multiple nurses commented on how good she had been.  

Sleeping off the dehydration hangover

Ready for the cath lab. Loves her soft toys


The news from the cath lab has been overall good.  I wanted to post Tuesday night, but I didn't have the full report from her cath.  All we knew Tuesday night was that they had put a stent in both pulmonary arteries, that her direct measured O2 levels were in the 60s when they went in and 80s when they came out.  Dr Lock, who performed the cath, stopped by yesterday morning to give me his report and that was followed by rounds.  There was a lot of information and I needed some time to process it and find the motivation to write about it.  Dr Lock threw me for a loop when he came in.  He walked in and started by telling me there was a little bit of pneumonia in her left lung.  I asked him why and his response was simply "kids get pneumonia."  I was confused.  Then he told me the left lobe was almost gone when they went in, but they were able to recover it.  He then made it sound like he was worried about how much they were going to be able to accomplish when he went in, but that he was "encouraged" by how well it went, and that her next cath should be in 6-8 weeks.  And then he was gone.  I tried to ask questions, but as the day has gone on, I have learned that he is a man of few words...so it wasn't just me.  While he may have had better evidence of pneumonia, the team does not actually believe that she has pneumonia, nor do they think we should treat her for it.  Clinically, she does not present as having pneumonia.  No cough, no fever, her chest x-ray and lung scans looked normal.  The only indication that she might have pneumonia would have been her low sats, but that was also indicative of her narrow pulmonary arteries and collaterals.  Dr Friedman explained to me that in measuring, he should get a 100% oxygen reading from her lungs.  He got a 70%.  This could indicate pneumonia, but could also indicate other things, such as a partially collapsed lung, which he believes is more likely given her situation going in.    As far as his left lobe comment, the attending (Dr Saleeb) suspects he meant the left pulmonary artery, which would explain why they put stents in.  Dr Saleeb could sense my worry and assured me that everything they are seeing in her is normal course for a MAPCAs baby.  They told me "she is fine."  You may have noticed she is still on oxygen in my posts.  This was another source of worry for me - overnight Tuesday night I had a slight freak out when I looked at her sats and thought she was still on 1L.  I thought for sure we'd be coming home on oxygen.  Again, Dr Saleeb to the rescue.  As Boston Children's is a teaching hospital, rounds always includes a bunch of residents that are still learning the field, so she took the discussion of her O2 needs as an opportunity to teach.   The cath doubled the flow to her lungs.  In doubling the rate of flow, it will take some time for Mireya to adjust to the increased circulation, causing her to have higher oxygen needs for a day or two.  This is only temporary and she will adjust.  Throughout this visit, my impression has been that Mireya, because of her MAPCAs, is a particularly interesting case to residents.  There has been a lot of teaching, which is really interesting and also explains why we have become so well-versed in cardiac medicine.  The doctors here do their best to make sure families are well-educated.  

Off to the cath lab

Recovery was a little rough.  She woke up from the cath groggy, but a little wild-eyed.  She had a lot to say, but no voice to say it with.  She was clearly hungry and was sucking down sugar water.  We came upstairs around 8 and thought I would nurse her, to settle her down.  Upon getting up here, she fell asleep.  She had a pretty fitful night's sleep.  She was very unsettled.  Upon waking, it was clear she was not in a very good place.  She had a couple spit-ups and a couple of vomits.  We suspected nausea from the anesthesia, so she was treated with Zofran.  We finally got her settled into a three hour nap and she was much happier when she woke up.  We even went out for a little walk around the floor.  We got her settled back into bed, and she was back asleep shortly.  We had to interrupt this nap to go get a lung scan, but she happily went back to sleep when we put her back in her crib.  She slept for an hour or so, and woke up just in time for the 6PM fussies.  We had some friends drop by to visit, and she was happy to cuddle, and eventually we were able to settle her down and get her to sleep for the night, so we could go to dinner.  


And she's out!


Not feeling so hot, day after cath #4

feeling better post cath
Feeling better post cath 

It looks like we'll be in a little longer than originally planned, so I decided I would come home last night to gather some things and sleep in my own bed.  When we came back from dinner to check in, Mireya was still sleeping.  Throughout the day, I had gotten into the habit of not watching her sats because I found them to be disappointing.  So I didn't even look at them.  I went into the bathroom and when I came out, Chris told me to look at the monitor.  After hanging out in the low 80s all day, she was comfortably resting in the mid-90s!  She had finally adjusted to the flow.  We found out our nurse for the night was one I had not particularly cared for back in November.  She was new at the time, and very green.  She lacked the typical confidence of the nurses on the floor and did things a little strange.  She particularly liked to give baths in the middle of the night and was a big fan of going on a schedule and waking us up according to the "schedule".  I am much more of a let the baby wake you kind of parent.  I was relieved that I hadn't been planning on staying but also impressed with the level of confidence she had gained in 3 months.  I am actually looking forward to having her as our nurse tonight, so that I can catch up and see how much she has learned.  Anyway, when we left, the plan was to start to see if they could wean her off of the oxygen. I am sure she got a bath, too.
So when will the g-tube be placed?  We were thinking of aiming for the end of the month because we are leaving for Florida on Tuesday and I wasn't sure that would give her enough time to recover.  After a few discussions with the team today, it sounds more doable than I thought.  A resident came by this afternoon to tell me they were scheduling the surgery for Friday.  When I asked him about Florida, he said without hesitation that that should be fine.  A little bit later, I had a discussion with Dr Friedman, who thought we were still leaning against it and asked me if I was comfortable with it.  As I told him, if they are comfortable with it, then so am I.   We'd all love to get it done this admission.  It would mean we don't have to come back at the end of the month.     So we are booked, I signed the surgical consent, and will sign the anesthesia consent today.  
Overall, its been a productive stay.  I thought we'd be going home yesterday, so its a little frustrating that we're still here, but if it means we get to have the g-tube placed and still go to Florida, it will be ok.  While I've been a little bored then last few days, it really hasn't been bad.  I was able to have lunch with another heart mom and her daughter, who has the same condition as my girls, on Tuesday.  I learned that there is a gym across the street that is actually pretty nice, and even more importantly, has nice showers (for the next time we're in a double!).  Having a single has really made a big difference in quality of life while in the hospital.  
I am currently working on another post updating on all the things we've been up to since December and am hoping to get that posted before the end of this hospital admission.  The hospital is a good place to write because there is a lot of downtime and no two year old to distract me.  In the meantime, I will keep you all posted via Facebook and Instagram.  






























Wednesday, March 8, 2017

Catching up



Mireya is not impressed

We've been pretty busy since Christmas.   Between running to doctor's appointments, caring for an infant with medical needs, and chasing a toddler, I rarely have time to sit down, let alone blog, anymore, though I've been meaning to for months. I've literally started this post 5 times and have been unable to finish, for various reasons.  As so many of you know, taking care of two small children all day is exhausting, especially when one of those children has extra medical needs.  I have so much respect for people with more than two kids, and even more so for parents of multiples. Since November, we have visited at least one doctor a week.  In fact, the weekly doctor's appointments probably started last May, so a year ago.  There have maybe only been a half a dozen weeks since we learned of Mireya's heart condition where we didn't have a doctor's appointment.  Add to that an active two year old that has play groups she likes to go to.   Busy!   About two months ago, there was a week where we had a doctor's appointment or visit from a medical professional every single day.  I felt pretty down that week, as it was a little too much, but mostly, it's just how our life is going right now.  I try to remind myself that it's not forever and how lucky we are to have doctors appointments to go to.  The alternatives are unspeakably worse.  

These two melt my heart with how much they love each other
I was so lucky that I was able to take the year off from work.  I don't know what I would have done.  I probably would have had to quit.  Like I've said in pretty much every blog post since diagnosis, the MAPCAs component really complicates things.  At this point post-op with Hope, life was pretty normal.  We were starting to drop specialists and were only going to the doctor once a month or even less frequently than that.  She was off most of her meds.  I was getting ready to go back to work.  While going back to work is finally starting to be on the horizon (more on that later), there is no way she would be ready to go off to daycare in a month, which is when Hope went.  Mireya seems to be adding specialists.  She is currently followed by cardiology, occupational therapy, otolaryngology (ear, nose, throat), genetics, nutrition, feeding, and we just added in gastroenterology in March.  It's a lot!  We are lucky, as she is not on a ton of meds.  We dropped lasix during her last hospital stay, so now all she takes is pantoprazole (for reflux) and aspirin for her heart, plus a multivitamin.    It seems like things are finally slowing down, though every time I say that, something else crops up.  Back in March, we saw cardiology, and he said he didn't want to see us again until June, when we have our next cath.  The following week we saw our pediatrician.  She didn't want to see us again until her regular nine month appointment, also in June.  We saw GI a few days later and weren't scheduled to see anyone until her next cath in June.  I thought maybe I could finally exhale and, now that the weather is getting nice, enjoy what is left of my maternity leave.  Well, a bunch of stuff cropped up.  A month ago, Mireya's sats randomly dropped into the 70s and that coupled with poor weight gain and blue feet, prompted us to visit the pediatrician two times in a week and then cardiology the following week.  Long story short, it was a fluke.  She had an echo and everything looks fine.  Three weeks  ago, while Chris was away on business, I accidentally pulled her gtube out at 9 at night - ER visit.  Then we all got colds.  A cold could be very dangerous for a baby with Mireya's condition and will often land them in the hospital.  I can't say I wasn't terrified.  Things got pretty bad Wednesday, two weeks ago, but the visiting nurse was coming on Thursday, so I thought I'd wait it out.  Then the nurse couldn't come, so I took her to the pediatrician instead.  Her normal pediatrician was not in, so we saw a different doctor.  This doctor leans on the conservative side.  He was the one that sent us off in an ambulance back in Dec.  I was pretty certain we'd be going to the hospital after seeing him, and had even packed a bag.  He wasn't exactly comfortable with her sats which were hovering in the upper 70s - low 80s, but he let us go home, with the condition that we come back that afternoon to recheck.  I explained to him that she is "permitted" to be in the 70s as long as it is not sustained.  When I went home, I emailed Dr Friedman to keep him aprised of the situation and make sure he agreed with the plan of action.  He responded with exactly what I thought he'd say - that low sats were not unexpected at the onset of a cold and as long as she stayed in the 70s, it was best to keep her at home.  I reported this back to the pediatrician.  Her sats hadn't changed.  He was slightly more comfortable (I suspect he may have read up on MAPCAs in the interim), but uneasy still, as her clinical presentation would result in hospitalization in a normal kid.  I assured him that I would get the nurse out the next day and would closely monitor her at home, letting him know if there were any changes.  Thursday night was pretty miserable as it was clear she was not feeling well.  The visiting nurse came out on Friday.  Her sats were still in the 70s, but she was clearly doing so much better.  Each day has been a little better since.  Of course Friday, i came down with the cold, but since I don't have time to be sick, it didn't slow me down and I was feeling pretty much normal again in a few days.  The nurse came out again the following Monday and her sats were back up into the 80s and she had gained 5 oz!  Then the cold came back, and once again, she was in rough shape.  She was coughing, which was causing her to vomit.  We went to the pediatrician on a Saturday just to check and make sure she was ok.  While the pediatrician said we did the right thing in bringing her in, there was nothing we could do but wait it out.  Somehow, by the grace of God, we got through it without going to the hospital.  At one point, we were looking at no doctor's appointments for over a month, but instead we only got two weeks.   She had her 9 month well visit this past Friday, which I don't really count.  So here we are on the eve of her next cath.  She had pre-op today, which we sailed through with no surprises.  Her lung function is down a bit, which really just indicates that it is time for a cath.  It is such a relief to make it to a cath without it being an emergency.  

To complicate matters, in addition to the cold, both Chris and I have each had our own little health crisis.  I have not recovered well from Mireya's birth.  I have had lower back pain on and off since she was born, with it getting pretty bad back in December, but with rest, it got better.  At the beginning of March, it came back, but this time, did not resolve with rest.  I tried stretching, that seemed to make it worse.  One night, the pain was so bad, I couldn't turn over in bed and when I got up in the morning, I couldn't walk.  I was having trouble dressing myself, picking up the kids, and doing anything around the house.  If I had had a cane, I would have used it.  That morning I called a chiropractor, who was able to see me later that day for an emergency appointment.  The chiropractor confirmed what I thought was going on.  My sacroiliac joint had locked due to a weak core, causing all the muscles to tighten and spasm.  She worked me over and got me to the point I could move again.  I was still in pain, but I could at least walk.  Each day, it improved a little bit.  I went back to her a few days later, on the day Mireya was supposed to get her g-tube and ended up in the ER instead.  Two more visits and I was feeling like myself again, though I still am not able to be as physically active as I would like and have earned myself a ticket into physical therapy.   I've been going twice a week for a month.  The physical therapist says that in addition to my SI joint being loose, which is a result of my ligaments being loosened by the pregnancy and breastfeeding hormones, that my inner core had essentially forgotten how to fire and we need to strengthen and reactivate it.  It has really cramped my style and has not been great for my quality of life.  I am a very active person.  This was so bad, I wasn't even able to do chores around the house.  I couldn't bend over to pick thinks up, I couldn't turn to my right side, I couldn't even put my shoes or socks on!  I was in better shape pregnant.  Forget any kind of physical activity, even swimming and the elliptical hurt.  My range of motion is fully back and I can now pick things up and turn to my side without any pain.  I have been able to swim regularly, so I am swimming 3 times a week.  I am also able to walk and use the elliptical.  I've been told no yoga.  My PT says I can run, but not to exceed my threshold, so if I have any pain, I am to stop.  So we are strengthening and it will be a slow comeback.  I'm finally back up to 2-3 miles at a time, and i even ran a 5k this past Sunday.  Recently, my PT just prescribed an SI belt to help hold my pelvis in place and i really think it is helping a ton.  I graduated from PT last week, mostly because she had done everything she could do.  She was proud of me and said I had made a ton of progress.  Like I said, this is 100 percent related to my pregnancy with Mireya.  My hips spread while I was pregnant with her.  They stayed spread for quite a while, but right around when my back started to really bother me, I also realized I was able to get my jeans over my hips again, meaning they likely shifted back.  This seems awfully coincidental that it happened at the same time as this back pain and both my chiropractor and my PT have confirmed this is the root cause.  I was starting to feel pretty good and then I tweaked it loading the plane to come home from Ocean City last week.  That set me back a bunch, but I'm starting to feel better again and even ran a 5k yesterday with minimal pain.  Unfortunately, I don't think it will truly get better until those hormones are out of my system, which may not happen until Mireya weans, which neither of us are in any hurry to do.  It's the only eating she liked until recently.  

When it rains, it pours.  As if having a two year old (who incidentally is potty training - more on that later), a baby with special needs, and a mama with a body that is completely destroyed by childbirth, Chris dislocated his elbow 2 months ago at his Krav Maga Martial Arts class.  This was so hard on all of us.  He was not able to care for Mireya at all for about three weeks, so I could not leave her with him.  He could care for Hope reasonably well, but could not throw her in the air like she loves.  And it's definitely cramped his style.  He hasn't really been able to work out at all and was in a sling for a good portion of his injury.  He has now been given the go ahead to resume normal activity and also just graduated from PT, where he was working on getting his range of motion and strength back.  He's doing pretty well and I know he's looking forward to getting active again.

Unfortunately, this is only my second post since Christmas so I truly am catching up.  There's just no time to write.  I'd love to do it at night, but in between bedtimes and sheer exhaustion, it just doesn't happen.  Hope has been in a very mama dependent stage, and almost requires I put her to bed.  This is hard because I also like to nurse Mireya right before she goes down.  It makes it really hard for Chris to help me, but we're finally back into a little bit of a rhythm where he at least gets her in her PJs and reads to her while I get Mireya settled.  

Baby's first Christmas
Since I haven't really updated since before Christmas, I'm going to try to recap all that has happened since then.  It may take a few posts because I am determined to get this up asap.  We didn't get many pictures on Christmas and when I look back I'm not really all that upset about it.  I was a frazzled, crazy mess and don't really care to remember myself that way.  We didn't get home until 5:30PM on Christmas Eve and while I was relieved to be home, everything felt very rushed.  On top of it, Mireya was not overly happy or comfortable.  She was refluxy and required being held upright during her feed, which ran for an hour, as well as an hour after her feed.  She was being fed every three hours, so it basically meant we could put her down for an hour every 2 hours.  It was exhausting.  We talked with our pediatrician and she agreed with us that maybe a bouncy chair would help her, so we went to our local consignment shop from the pediatrician's office and came home with possibly the best invention ever: the mamaroo.  They retail for about $250 and we scored one for $50!  We have gotten every penny's worth out of it, and I'm pretty sure we will be able to sell it for what we paid.  Christmas feels like a blur and in so many ways I feel like I was robbed.  We missed out on so many pre-holiday festivities and what we did get to participate in, I spent most of my time worrying about Miss Mireya.  My parents drove up for Christmas dinner at Chris' parents, that was pretty nice.  They stayed for a few days afterward and helped us out a lot as we adjusted to the new normal, which was so beyond helpful.  I don't know how we would have gotten through that first week home without them.  Things continued to be dramatic through the New Year.  The night before New Year's Eve, I went out for a glass of wine with friends, only to see Chris was calling me.  He had accidentally pulled the tube out.  The protocol for that was a trip to the ER :(. So I came home to hang out with Hope and he took her in.  That's one way of getting a daddy-daughter date.  



All cozy in her mamaroo.

We had a pretty quiet New Years Eve.  I took Hope to New Years at noon at the library.  She got some sparkling apple cider and we had a good time.  We went to my favorite Mexican restaurant for dinner (margaritas!) and then came home to relax and watch the ball drop.  Well, as the night went on, I felt worse and worse.  I got to see the ball drop, but a half hour later I was praying to the porcelain god, and not because I had had a fun New Years.  I spent the first day of 2017 in bed.  Seems fitting to say good bye to 2016 that way, and certainly didn't set the bar too high for 2017.  Chris got it the next day and we believe Reya got it in an upper respiratory form.  Hope had had it right before Christmas.  Fortunately, it was violent but short.  The year has more or less lived up to the standard set on New Year's Eve....lol,
New Years at noon
New Year's Eve at Jose's Mexican

We were grateful for a mostly quiet and mild January.  We were able to get outside a bunch and just enjoy being home.  I feel like I spent most of the month cleaning up form the mess of November and December.  On Jan 13, we went back to the hospital for Mireya's first post-op cath.  We were told to expect to end up in the CICU and that it could be a 5 day visit.  She was in and out in 2.  Everything went perfect.  It was beautiful.  I even took a picture of her numbers, they were so good.  We were home in time for the patriots playoff game, which we didn't expect at all.  Our visit was so short, we didn't even get to see any of our favorite nurses, or talk to some of the people we wanted to talk to (feeding, nutrition, lactation)

Playing outside on a warm January day
Little Reindeer

First time in the bumbo (which no longer fits!)

Big sister ready to go out in the snow

January



More winter fun

Resting peacefully the night before her cath

Look at those numbers!

Somebody was happy to get home in time to see the Patriots playoff game!

Party girl all dressed up for the SRR party 

After the mid January cath, we took Mireya on her first flight.  Hope got to ride as a big girl with a big girl headset for the first time.  She was delighted.  They both did great.  But life has been so hectic, The first time we've been up since was this past weekend, for a Memorial Day weekend trip to Ocean  City.  At the end of January, Hope had her annual cardiology visit, where everything checked out perfectly.  She has officially been cleared to do any activity she chooses.  She was a champ during the echo and ekg!  We also celebrated Christmas with the SRR family where Hope was the life of the party, dancing up a storm!  

Big girl ready for flight!

First flight for Reya





Checking in with cardiology

EKG time

Having her annual echo

February was another mostly quiet month, even if it started out kind of hectic.  We had plans to travel to NJ the first weekend of February for the Evans family Christmas.  The night before we were supposed to go, Mireya pulled out her tube.  It seemed that she had been nursing well, so we were willing to give her a trial, to see if we could ditch the tube, but it didn't go well at all.  I struggled to wake her at night to feed, she wouldn't take a bottle, even though it felt like we had made some strides a few weeks prior with the bottle, and it was just bad.  The visiting nurse came that morning and agreed that we needed to go get the tube back in, especially since we were traveling.  Meanwhile, Hope had some sort of bug and slept in until 1PM.  I had to wake her to take Reya in to get the tube back in.  I wasn't sure we were going to go to NJ until an hour before we left.  But we decided to go anyway.  It was Mireya's first trip away from Boston and my first time leaving New England since she was born.  It was great to get away and go home to NJ.  We had such a nice visit.  It was surprisingly lovely to celebrate Christmas in February.  Everyone was relaxed and not hurried at all.  There wasn't much traffic either, so another bonus.    We spent the rest of February hunkering down as we were hit with several big snowstorms.  It seems like every time I have a baby, we get epic snowstorms!  


"Look what I've got, Mama!"
It was nice to see that pretty face!

Dinner at our favorite restaurant in Philly - La Buca
Outtakes from the Evans Family Christmas





First happy meal

Cheering on the Pats at the Superbowl!  What a game and what a trooper!
The day after we came home from NJ, we saw the ORL doctor.  After doing a scope, he told us that her vocal cords were still compromised.  That, coupled with the failed trial from a few days before, was the confirmation that we needed to go forward with the g-tube placement.   I emailed Dr Friedman immediately upon leaving this appointment and asked him to schedule g-tube surgery.  This was one of my lower moments in Mireya's journey.  I was very sad to have to make this decision and mourned it for a few days.  My biggest fear was that our nursing journey was over.  I know now that I was wrong.  We have kept it up and it is something we both cherish.  A few days after this appointment, we had our first feeding team visit.  She really didn't show a lot of interest, so more confirmation that we needed the gtube. 
   
Trying to sit up

Getting ready for her first solids

Cereal

Two weeks later, on Valentine's Day, she pulled it out again.  It was clear that as she got better with her hands, this was going to continue to happen.  I can't even imagine having an NG tube with her grabby hands now!

The rest of the month was pretty quiet and uneventful.  My favorite memories of the winter were watching my kids bond.  As much as I am looking forward to going back to work, I am so beyond lucky to have this time at home with my kids.  Here are some photos:

Mutual admiration
Lovin on her baby sister


Lunch with my girls

First time in the jumparoo

Ready to play in the snow.  She was all excited until it actually came time to play in the snow...lol

Hope the mummy



Another trip in to the hospital to get the tube back in....sigh

Happy Valentine's Day from our favorite Italian joint

More feeding therapy

Avocados.  Wish I could say she liked them as much as it looks

My first baby

Playing with friends

Cruising in our pink bunny coat



"You want me to drink this?"

On the move and proud of it
We had some lovely warm days in February for which we were all grateful for.  It melted the snow and got us outside again.












Jumping is exhausting



We're so lucky to have this sweet kid in our life


Selfies with mama




My girls






Family time



So that pretty much sums up Christmas to February.  This was not one of my more cohesive writing pieces.  I really struggled, as there is just an overwhelming amount of content.  I plan to use the downtime at the hospital to catch up on March, April, and May, as well as an update from tomorrow's procedure.  Please keep us in your thoughts tomorrow as we head to the cath lab.  I am feeling positive and confident.  I am hopeful we will be home by Wednesday afternoon.  No surprises!