First Father's Day |
There are ups and downs. I learned to expect this when my mom was in the hospital six years ago. Still, it’s hard! Two weeks ago Wesley was up to 2 lbs 4.7 ounces and then he lost weight three days in a row so he was down to 2 lbs 3 ounces. It’s hard not to obsess about every ounce. The doctors had lab work done when he had lost weight for the third day in a row, and after waiting, waiting, waiting…everything came back normal. It’s hard to see him poked and prodded, and then wait for all the results, worrying. But by the end of the week he was back up to 2 lbs 4.3 ounces.
The same week in which Wesley was losing weight, he seemed unusually drowsy and was having more spells with his breathing (apnea, more about that shortly). Doctors determined that his hemoglobin was low and he needed a blood transfusion. They said the low hemoglobin was probably because of all the blood draws they had to do to check blood sugars and various other things. They draw Wesley’s blood and then he is so little he can’t keep up with making new red blood cells. Around the same time, they removed Wesley’s IV line (from his belly button/umbilical cord, through which they administered glucose, lipids, etc. until he was ready to receive breast milk). Sometimes these things just seem so invasive…when he is being poked and prodded I have to fight back the tears. I know that he is receiving the best possible care, but sometimes I wish I could just grab him out of his isolette and take him home.
As for feeding and weight gain, Wesley is up to 11 CCs (mLs)/hour of breast milk feeding (he has a tube in his mouth). He has 3 hours of feeding with one hour of rest and then this cycle repeats itself. After each cycle they check to make sure he has digested all the milk. They are adding some fortifiers to his milk to give it more calories...and it seems to be working. This week his average daily gain was 19 grams, up from 9 grams the week prior (they like to see an average gain of 20-30 grams/day). The nurses have told me that he will probably show signs that he is ready to breast feed around 34-35 weeks, which would be mid to late July.
Wesley’s breathing is stable—after he was born, he was intubated for only about 24 hours, then moved to another type of breathing assistance known as a CPAP for a few days, and now is on a high flow nasal cannula, which consists of two prongs in his nose that send a combination of room air and some oxygen when he needs it. He has periods of apnea, where he forgets to breathe, and periods of tachypnea, where he has labored breathing. The doctors say he will outgrow this as his lungs mature, but for now they have to monitor it closely. Wesley is receiving caffeine, which is a respiratory stimulant, to help with his apnea. The doctors are also now trying to wean him from the cannula, by slowly reducing the amount of air flow that the cannula provides.
Kangaroo care! |
But they also tell me he could have vision problems and he could have growth problems later on and may need to take growth hormone. Maybe, maybe not, they say. I agonized over this for a while and then I just decided to take it day by day. I cannot worry about things that could happen down the road. He will have eye exams beginning soon, which sound very invasive, involving instruments that hold the eyelid open. There are treatments they can offer to help his vision if they find something abnormal. Otherwise, they wouldn’t do the exams, they assure me.
The nurses are absolutely amazing and I am so thankful that they are amazing educators as well as caregivers! I had to tell them that I was registered for a “newborn basics” class but I missed it, due all of these unexpected events. I barely knew how to change a diaper, much less on a two pound baby with an IV coming out of his belly button and various cords attached to him! They have helped me learn so much already.
Necklace from my friend Shannon |
Sometimes I feel like I have been teleported to an alternate universe. One moment, we were living our lives in our little house in our little town, preparing for our baby the way everyone does, and then the next moment, I live in a downtown apartment in a new city and I only see my husband on the weekends. I also mourn the abrupt ending of my pregnancy. I returned home recently and looked at all the maternity clothes hanging in the closet, which I never got to wear. The birth plan I never got to fill out. The sadness that I didn’t get to have a choice about the way everything happened. I realize these are all small things in the big picture and the most important thing is that we have Wesley and he is healthy, but I can’t help but feel a bit traumatized by the way everything happened.
New outfit from Marnie! |
I do kangaroo care with him every day and I believe he has come to expect it…it is our special time together. Doctors say that kangaroo care (holding him skin-to-skin) is the best thing we can do for him other than providing breast milk. During kangaroo care, he sleeps deeply and hearing my heart beat and feeling the warmth of my skin makes him feel like he is back in the womb.
Just after his first bath |
The NICU is always busy, full of many babies and many families, and all the alarms from the monitors that track the heart rate, breathing, and oxygen saturation on all the babies, but we settle in during kangaroo care, mostly napping in our recliner. But sometimes I whisper things in his ear. Just yesterday I learned that Wesley will likely graduate out of his isolette and into a crib at the end of this week. I asked Wesley if he thought he could meet the 3 lb milestone this week as well. Then I told him he can have a puppy when he gets older, and I imagined him going fishing with his dad and his puppy. And I told him, we’ll be home soon…we have so many things we need to do.