So tired. |
Oh, it was still pretty quick. Some were hoping for 24 hours but everyone planned for 48, just in case, and it was only about 54. Not too shabby, especially when you consider that everything in a hospital runs on something called "hospital time." For the uninitiated, it has to do with the ebb and flow of multiple patients being cared for by a variety of staff, all of whom have to line up everything at just the right time, in addition to the emergencies and unknowns that go along with life. Yeah, "hospital time."
Anyway, we got there on Tuesday morning and Aaron was in fine form. He was hooked up to the vent on our original settings and we waited for pulmonology to get involved. About 1 pm, we had our first orders and made the first changes. These involved similar settings to what we had after his sleep study, but with a little more support.
Playing in his "tent" bed. (Meant to keep monkeys from falling out of bed.) |
Okay, that helped a little bit. He was doing well, but still not quite as good as we hoped. So we started talking about increasing support a little bit more. Again, it took a while to get orders. Wednesday morning, we had them and got started. Now, the thing is, for most people, that would probably work pretty well. Aaron has an artery that presses down on his right bronchus, the main stem that goes into his right lung. Because of that compression, the collapse, it's harder to get good air exchange. The thought was if we increased the PEEP, the pressure that is always in the lungs, it would hold it open better. And that's probably true. BUT increasing the pressure also puts more pressure on the heart because it makes the lungs a little bigger, and makes the blood flow a little more challenging. So which way was it going to go?
A CT scanner that looks like a pirate ship! |
Yeah, well, my kid..... It wasn't good. Now, it wasn't bad as in lots of people in his room, significant damage, scary times. It was bad as in we were on high vent support AND high oxygen, like 15 liters just to keep things at 85%.
All these people hooking me up are kinda silly. |
And since it wasn't scary bad, once again, we had to get all the powers that be to weigh in on things before they were changed. Both cardiology and pulmonology can be difficult departments to reach. Now try getting both of them at the same time. Plus, we were in the PICU and while the numbers weren't high, there were a few very, very critical needy patients, kids who were much worse off than we were.
It took all day. By "all day" I mean we didn't get things changed back until well after dark. With the failure, both cardio and pulmo decided they wanted a closer look at his lungs, which translated into a chest CT with angio on Thursday morning.
Into the CT tube. |
Why can't I play with all these fun cords? |
At the ENT, after discharge. |
So that's where I am. Reality has reared it's ugly head again and made me take notice. We medical mamas are strange, fierce creatures, but we often like to hide from the future. We feel like if we can just know enough, work hard enough, fight long enough, love hard enough, endure forever, that what we fear will stay away. The bottom line is, it won't. There will come a day, and it doesn't matter how far away that day is, it's too close, when we have to step back, stop, and say goodby. And there are simply no words for that kind of pain.
Happy to be home. |
However, that day, for us, is not here yet. I've been reminded in a very real, tangible way, that it is coming, but It. Is. Not. Here. Yet. And I refuse to give into the fear, the pain, until it is. This morning Aaron got his new hearing aid. Next week, we hope to pick up his glasses. We're training a new nurse to be one of his school nurses. I'm filling out paperwork for a communication device that will be much less unwieldy than his current book. He's going to a parade tomorrow and another one in two more weeks. We're going to laugh and play and sing and make memories.
Aaron is happy. He is goofy and silly and sometimes mischievous. That kid knows what's going on around him, and I refuse to subject him to mourning things that can't be changed, but don't need to be focused on right now. We will move forward. We must.
“All the art of living lies in a fine mingling of letting go and holding on.”
I'm sorry. I pray for Aaron every day. xoxo
ReplyDeleteTrust me when I say it NEVER goes away. Not even when the worst happens.
ReplyDeleteI am so glad Aaron still has mlre good days.