Friday, April 5, 2013

"C" is for Catheterization

I can't believe I've already fallen behind in the A to Z Challenge. I guess that is why it is called a challenge though.  So, I will be playing a bit of catch up over the next couple of days.

"C" is for Catheterization - specifically Heart Catheterization.  Which is actually what my daughter had on Wednesday, the day this was supposed to be posted.  For those unfamiliar, heart transplants are monitored for rejection in a number of different ways, some more invasive than others.  Once a year, a heart transplant recipient receives what is called an annual exam, which includes a biopsy testing for cellular rejection, testing of the arteries for any hardening, and testing pressures on both sides of the heart.

With older children and adults, they can use a local anesthetic, but with smaller children who can not really follow instructions or stay still, they use full anesthesia.  So, it is a surgery, but the incision is very small - more like a scratch than an incision.  I thought I might share our day of the "cath". 

This Wednesday, we arrived at the hospital around 7 a.m., went to the Ford Surgery Center to get checked in, all the vitals taken, etc.  We were then taken to the pre-op holding area, where Bean was given a pre-op medication to help her relax and forget any trauma that happens in the pre-op time.  We then walk down the hall from Lucile Packard to the Stanford Hospital side where the cath labs are located.  (In the new hospital that is being built I think LPCH will have their own surgery areas and cath labs, but right now, everything goes down to the Stanford side).  I had to dress in some ridiculous looking sterile garb to walk down the hall and into the surgery room with her and then we laid her on the operating table and as they tried to put the anesthesia mask on her she freaked out and started bucking like a wild animal, screaming, and crying.  It took three of us to hold her while the anesthesiologist held the mask over her mouth and nose and we waited until it took effect.  This is typical and she never talks about it, so I imagine she forgets it afterwards.  She talked about me being dressed in the "nursing" clothes after and walking down the hallway, but said nothing of the anesthesia mask.  So, that is a a relief to know that she doesn't really remember it at all.

We then go back down the hall to the LPCH waiting room and wait.  The typical cath is anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour, but the annuals sometimes take a bit longer.  We grabbed some breakfast then sat and watched TV, did some computer work, and chatted with my in-laws who were nice enough to drive up from Bakersfield for the procedure.  In about an hour and a half (they don't start immediately because they have to get an IV placed, take some blood for labs, etc. before starting, so this was actually pretty good time) we were told they were done and she was coming back to the PACU (post-op recovery).  The doctor came in and told us that everything looked good and she did well and we waited another 15-20 minutes to be called back to the PACU to see her.

Each time in the PACU is different.  Sometimes she is still asleep.  Often she is crying, but pretty out of it.  This time, she was in the middle of the post-op Echocardiogram and she was crying pretty hard and fighting the echo tech with all she had.  She was rolling away, trying to grab her arm and move it, kicking her legs.  And she was still pretty out of it.  The echo doesn't bother her much anymore when she isn't post-op, but the nurse a few times ago told me that some of the kids have a reaction to the anesthesia that makes them really angry and emotional.  I think she is one of those kids.  Because even when the echo tech finished and left and I was able to hold her and rock her, she was not very comforted.  After about a half hour of crying, trying to get her to take a popsicle or water or juice, trying to convince her to keep her leg straight and still so the entry sight would not bleed, and just general misery, we were told we were moving up to the Short Stay.  This usually happens only after the annuals because they have to put them under deeper and longer and it takes them longer to be completely recovered from the anesthesia and they want to make sure there is no bleeding at the sights.  For other, shorter caths, we're usually able to stay in the PACU and leave after an hour and a half or so recovery.  But, for this one, it is a four hour recovery.  So, they send us to the Short Stay where there are shared rooms and not a nurse assigned to every bed.  She was angry and miserable for about another hour or hour and a half and then she got hungry, so we ordered food for her and she ate and started to feel better.  It was a lot of sitting, trying to calm her down, make her comfortable and dealing with our own hunger and exhaustion.  We got lunch from a local Jack in the Box, ate in the lobby and by that time, they were releasing her.  It was 2:30 p.m.  So, we had been there for 7 1/2 hours and we were now going to have to drive back home, which is a 3 1/2 hour drive!

It was an exhausting and long day, but we received nothing but good news and the next day we were given the news that she had a zero in rejection!  So, all in all, it is worth it to know that she is doing well and her heart is doing well.  But, the catheterizations have become a new level of stress because of the heart valve damage that happened last year.  You can read about that and the aftermath of it here.  But, all went well, and I'm feeling better about things now.  It is good to know that there is no rejection. Even when she seems perfectly healthy, it is sometimes a worry.  So, the catheterizations and biopsies are really the only way to get a guarantee that no rejection is happening in there.


Tuesday, April 2, 2013

B is for Blue and Green Day - April 19

Today is "B" and I thought I would share some information about the annual "Blue & Green Day," which falls on April 19 this year.  On this day, people are encouraged to don their blue and green to bring awareness to organ donation.  According to the website, the purpose of the day is to "give HOPE to the more than 117,000 people on the organ transplant waiting list; HONOR organ, eye and tissue donors; REMEMBER those that died waiting for their second chance at life; and CELEBRATE the
patients who received the gift of life through transplantation."  So, on April 19, I will be wearing my Donate Life shirt, carrying my Donate Life bag!  I will be honoring not only Bean's donor but all those donors and their amazing families.  I will be celebrating Bean's transplant and the life she received.  And, I will do my best to remember all those who are not able to receive their needed organs while also holding out hope for all those still waiting.

If you have not already registered as an organ donor, please do so here!  There is no greater gift than this - I speak from experience.  And I hope you will consider donning some blue and green on April 19 and sharing my story if you don't have your own to share! 

Monday, April 1, 2013

Blogging A to Z in April - A is for April Being Donate Life Month

Well, it has been a while since I blogged here at A Second Heart!  Bean has been doing well (check her out in that picture in the blog header - taken this past week) and I guess I didn't know how to reenter blogging here while lacking the exigence of her illness.  But, I've decided that the Blogging from A to Z and Donate Life Month are the perfect means for making the comeback to posting.  And I realize that I don't need to have it be medically related every time I post, although I have chosen Organ Donation and Transplant for the theme of my A to Z month, so it will continue to be somewhat medically related at least for a little while. 

According to their website, the Blogging A to Z Challenge is:
 Using this premise, you would start beginning April First with a topic themed on something with the letterA, then on April second another topic with the letter B as the theme, and so on until you finish on April thirtieth with the theme based on the letter Z.  It doesn't even have to be a word--it can be a proper noun, the letter used as a symbol, or the letter itself.  The theme of the day is the letter scheduled for that day.
So, I am starting today with A.  I thought of using Allomap or Anti-rejection Medication (that may still come up under "I" for immune-suppression), but then I saw that April is Donate Life Month and so I decided that was the perfect first post for this theme!

Donate Life Month is an effort to increase registered donors so the 115,000 men, women and children awaiting organs will have a better chance of finding a match.  There is even a Presidential Proclamation for the month!  So, in honor of that and in the hopes to give back a little for the miracle we have received for my daughter, I will be blogging about Organ Donation and Transplant this April! 

Looking ahead, I will be telling you about Blue and Green Day (April 19), Cardiac Catheterization (on the day that Bean is receiving her first one since that fateful day last year when they bumped her valve during one), Donors and their families, and that will be just the beginning of this week!  I look forward to catching up with those of you who have been wondering how we are doing, spreading the word about organ donation and providing some information about transplant and the aftercare involved with it.  I hope you will join me this month!

And, Six Years Later - Marking the Good Times

Hello!  Long time no write on this blog.  I have always included a link to this blog on my email signature to keep people reading Bean...