Friday, April 12, 2013

Back on the charts

A bit of good news this rainy Friday: our doctor visit this morning weighed James in at 16 lbs, 6 oz - which places him officially on the growth curve. He's in the smallest 3%, but he's on the charts at last! At 28 inches, he has officially grown out of his car seat. Time for more shopping...

He's also back on the tube, mostly because the flu kept him from eating his usual amount so we had to keep him hydrated via the feeding pump. The fact that he was off the tube until just this week, and still gained weight, is a great sign. It's very possible we'll be packing the tube away for good soon :) Today was our first visit to Weill-Cornell in 7 weeks, and it actually looked different. (It's amazing how cool renovations appear when you compare 2-month intervals instead of weekly ones.)

We are all excited about the arrival of spring, the increasing independence from the tube, and a much lighter doctor schedule. We have the time and flexibility to get out more, accomplish more, and look forward to new endeavors in coming months!




Monday, April 1, 2013

Spring progress!

Happy Easter! We spent the holiday recovering from a nasty bout of the flu, so it hasn't been very celebratory around here. Rest and relaxation are much appreciated though.

We have actual progress to report on this time: James is off the tube! It's still only provisional, but he's been off for over a week now and he's eating well. He's not meeting his goal (800 ml), but he's obtaining the daily minimum (600 ml) - and day by day he's slowly improving. We change the tube each week for sanitary purposes, and the last time we were all just too fed up with the tube to muster up reinsertion energy. A few days of break did him good though, and his eating skills took off. James has had such "testing" off-tube days before and not done so great, but this time he was ready to show us what he can do.

It is SO nice to not deal with the tube feeding process every day. With the tube out, he no longer needs to keep his hands gloved, so he can play more freely. He doesn't throw up, at all, ever. He's starting to sleep more soundly at night. He's also picking up on solids: yogurt, mashed banana, crackers, soft puffy chips that dissolve in his mouth. He still resists swallowing anything more solid than yogurt, but his Early Intervention therapy has begun so we'll be working on his swallowing with the help of a feeding specialist.

In honor of tube independence, I'm posting a few photos of little J without any medical paraphanelia blocking his face :)










Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Spring weather and fun fluff

This is a fun post; nothing newsworthy from our end. The camera cord is recovered though so we have some pics of James's recent growth and adventures.

We had our first zoo outing today. I'm not incredibly impressed with the Bronx Zoo, especially since they have no elephants! (?) and the lions and gorillas were not in their exhibits. The giraffes were, and we got impressively close, but only because their enclosure was approximately as small as my apartment. Still, it was a nice day for an outing and I enjoyed seeing the animals. James kind of missed the point. I'm not sure he realized the tigers relaxing on the other side of the glass weren't on tv.

We have a nice playground about a block away, and the 3 of us went together last Sunday to enjoy some sunshine. It was incredibly busy, and James seemed to like just seeing and being around other happy kids. He loves going down the slide, although this playground only had a spiral one and I don't fit too well...



who's here to see who?



 


Thursday, March 7, 2013

Routine and repetition

I've delayed posting for awhile, because I've misplaced my camera cord so I can't download photos for the time being. James has some adorable rolls of fat on his legs now, and is really looking his age. He's still below the growth curve (meaning the average weight of the smallest 3% of kids his age is still higher than where he is now) but he's catching up.

However, he's not catching up in other areas. Feeding is still a major issue, and we've met with a series of Early Intervention evaluators in hopes of getting him feeding therapy. He has developed behaviors that they label as "oral aversion". We've known this for awhile, but the label is nice to hear because it means that finally someone is taking this seriously. Solid foods are not enticing him... he's curious enough to swallow a few bites of food with a yogurt-like consistency, but not interested enough to go beyond the initial taste test. Anything more solid gets promptly spit back onto his bib.

I won't even get into how annoyed I am with Early Intervention, except to say that the program is disappointing with its limitations. Feeding is a recognized developmental delay, but NYC doesn't consider it important enough to address on its own. They won't let a child who can't eat on his own get feeding therapy unless he also has another developmental delay. Furthermore, their own evaluators decide whether a child qualifies - even though a pediatrician must recommend the child for specific services in the first place. Thus, EI depends on the arbitrary decision of a non-professional evaluator who is not familiar with the child's medical history, and ultimately ignores the child's doctor's input. This is how our government dollars are allocated...spent paying evaluator after evaluator after evaluator to reexamine an already diagnosed child before any of those dollars go towards actually doing something for that child.

Fortunately for us, James has been judged as a qualifying candidate. Ultimately, though, no one will do much to teach him the skills he missed and un-teach the negative behaviors he acquired through these past months of medical marathons. So above all, we're lucky that I can stay home and work with him throughout the day. It's frustrating to deal with, since I feel like I really do dedicate hours a day to feeding him. Not only does he take a long time to eat, but the series of exercises we go through to keep him developing his skills and tastes adds on to each meal. We spoon feed him one or two solids first, to expose him to flavors and hopefully help him slowly develop his oral and social skills. Then we bottle feed. We migrate from chair to arms to crib as we try to coax him into relaxing and eating... we trick him into taking his meds... we do facial massages to stimulate his swallowing... we try music and videos and bouncing to relax him if he's too wound up to focus... Finally, once the options have been exhausted, we connect him to the pump and finish his meal via ng tube. To wrap up: dishes to wash include 1 bottle, 2 spoons, 2 bowls, 1 ng bag, 2 syringes; and the table and floor are covered with food. Clean, sit back, do some physical exercises with James, and then get ready because he's getting hungry again.

I get pretty worn down by the monotony of my days, because although I love him, much of our time is spent with the above routines. He makes up for it though when he cuddles close... :)


Friday, February 22, 2013

2 weeks home and celebrating

It's February break for the public schools, which means no work for Peter and some quality family time for the 3 of us! James is doing great, and has been very busy. A few days after post-op discharge, we saw his pediatrician and dosed him up with a slew of vaccines. The following week, a home nurse service came by to check on him. Then Early Intervention, recommended by his docs as a given for any child with a severe heart defect, kicked in and set up a few meetings to get him enrolled and evaluated. Finally, we met back with his cardiologist for a 2-week followup.

Results? He looks WONDERFUL. Almost 14 pounds... probably not even going to qualify for Early Intervention because he is sitting and rolling and practically standing already all on his own... possibly soon to be off the feeding tube too. He has finally figured out he can eat on his own, and is managing to take a solid 80% of his meals by mouth, if not more (achieved courtesy of a fair amount of time and effort on our end, of course).

A few pics of our adorable guy... healing so well, cuddling his teddy from Aunt Cookie, enjoying his toys and books and everything about being home, & graduating to solid foods :)



Thursday, February 14, 2013

Happy Heart Day!

On Valentine's Day 2012, Peter and I learned that our baby-on-the-way, then 22 weeks along, had a broken heart. We were told he had a severe Congenital Heart Defect, then diagnosed as Double Outlet Right Ventricle (although revised at birth to Double Inlet Left Ventricle). The outlook was not good, and it sounded initially like our baby boy was not to be.

In those first few days of shock and tears, James began kicking up a storm as though to tell us that he wanted to live and was going to fight. Two heart surgeries later, he's a giggly and active almost 8-month old... and here we are, one year later and once again celebrating Valentine's Day. This year's Valentine is success and recovery and relief and much love.

The month of February is Congenital Heart Defect Awareness Month each year, with special focus on this week and this day as CHD Awareness Week and Heart Day:

- CHDs affect approximately 1 in 100 births

- CHDs are as common as autism

- CHD surgery is not a cure, but hopefully in the coming years a lasting treatment will be found. Lots of amazing research is being conducted!




Monday, February 11, 2013

A snapshot of how we're doing

James at the hospital: 
I'm sure one day he'll thank us for not sharing photos of him sedated and drowsy on drugs. He did just undergo a pretty amazing surgery though, and it's incredible to see how quickly the body bounces back. See his scar from a week after surgery, still bandaged... and then a week after that, home with his stuffed monkey and healing beautifully. To the right, he chilled during recovery with some tv and a lovely drawing by the talented Miss Sarah decorating his crib.



Back at home, here's a view of what we've been up to this past week: James is sitting again, is not supposed to be on his stomach yet but reaches around and twists his torso with ease, laughs and giggles and grins, and has regained his pre-surgery weight. We're pretty sure he's even a bit past it as of this weekend... he's got a new high chair, and looks positively chubby as he slouches into it. He's going to be getting Early Intervention physical therapy in the upcoming weeks, but his strength is bouncing right back even without PT. We braved the snow on Friday to visit his pediatrician for more vaccines and a post-op check-in, and she was wowed by his rosy color. Our "blue" baby isn't so blue anymore, and his Friday checkup showed his oxygen levels to be a solid 90%! He's getting very good circulation; pre-surgery levels were around 78.