Monday, September 26, 2016

Whoops I Did it Again

Things have been absolutely insane around our household and I have been terribly terribly remiss in updating. I apologize and promise that it's been mostly good news that kept me away!

In mid-August, I started my new job. While it's a big change from what I'm used to, it's really a fantastic company to work for and it's great to feel challenged to learn something new. With the new job came many new things for our family - for the first time the twins are in daycare. We found a school that specializes in special needs children but also accepts "typical" children, and luckily they had space for both Emily and Nicholas! We've seen leaps and bounds of development from Emily who is now trying very hard to talk. She's doing very well, and is even attempting sentences now! Nicholas is trying to emulate the older kids (they are in a classroom for 18 months to 3 years old and are the youngest of the group), and we've noticed him verbalizing a significant amount also, along with working on ways to get from point A to point B more efficiently and voluntarily going to a standing position.

Also with the change, Mike was able to move back to a day shift at work which has been amazing for our family. We can actually eat dinner together most evenings (he still works news - breaking stories still happen), he gets to be more involved in Zachary's taekwondo, and we actually feel like a family again.

Things have been pretty quiet here, albeit incredibly busy with life, but nothing out of the ordinary until recently. We had noticed that Nicholas's g-tube was leaking a little. We mentioned it to his pediatrician at his 18 month check up and they told us that the button may be sized a tad small since they've never resized since he had his g-tube placed at 3 weeks old, but that we would keep an eye on it. A brief lesson in g-tube sizing: Nicholas was wearing a 14 french 0.8. That means the part of the tube that actually goes through his abdominal wall into his stomach was 14 french (a form of measurement) around and 0.8 mm long. We noticed the leaking getting worse, so we went ahead and changed the tube. It continued to get worse until almost every feed, he would leak so significantly that his entire shirt would be soaked and smell of stomach acid.

On a Sunday morning, we noticed that his belly around his g-tube site was red and raw. He was screaming in pain every time we fed him. We called the on-call pediatrician who told us that the children's hospital emergency physicians are all trained on g-tube resizing so we should take him to the emergency room to have it looked at. He also mentioned that if we didn't feel comfortable with the emergency room physicians resizing the button, the general surgeon who placed Nicholas's tube originally was actually on call and in the hospital that day. Mike whisked off to the emergency room for what we figured would be an easy fix. After several hours (things do not move quickly in hospitals), they were home. Nicholas had a freshly placed 14 french 1.2 button. He was past due for a feed, so we set him up and started the feed. Nicholas immediately began screaming in pain and the hole where the g-tube button is began leaking so badly that we were actually unsure if any of the feed was even making it into his stomach. Mike packed Nicholas up and took him back to the ER. The surgical resident came down and looked at his g-tube. He decided that Nicholas appeared to be between sizes - he thought a 14 french 1.0 would be too small but a 14 french 1.2 was just slightly too big. Unfortunately, there is no such thing as a 14 french 1.1. He left the decision up to us, but suggested we stay with the 1.2 because scar tissue would form and until then, we could pack the site with gauze to kind of build up the distance and hopefully stem the leaking. He was wary of switching the tube again simply because Nicholas was already in so much pain that he didn't want to add to it.

We took his suggestion and called the surgeon's office for a follow up visit. We were able to sneak into an appointment on Wednesday and the surgeon ended up changing the tube at that visit back down to a 14 french 1.0. At that time, Nicholas was diagnosed with a chemical burn from the stomach acid leaking out of the g-tube site. He was prescribed a topical ointment and we were told to attempt to let the site air dry as much as possible.

By Friday afternoon, we thought things were getting better. As I sat in the chairs at Zach's taekwondo class, Nicholas became very agitated. I was holding him, trying to calm him down, and I realized his onesie was soaked through again. I took him to the bathroom to try and get some cool water on his belly until we could get home and I could change him and fix the dressings and that's when I realized that blood was pouring out of his g-tube site from beneath the button. I asked the director of the school if Zach could stay there (he had demo team practice later that evening) until Mike could get off work and meet him there, grabbed Emily and Nicholas and headed to the hospital. Zach was treated very well while I was off - hanging out with his favorite instructors and fed delicious food from a mom of his friend who graciously took it upon herself to run to Publix and pick up some food for him.

The ER doctors consulted in the surgical team again who decided they would like to see an X-ray just to make sure that at some point during all the button changes over the past week that his stomach hadn't disconnected from the abdominal wall and that we had just been feeding his abdominal cavity for a week. This can happen early in the g-tube placement process as scar tissue hasn't formed to adhere the stomach to the abdominal wall yet, but is a highly unlikely possibility after having had the tube for almost 2 years, however, we agreed with the surgical team - better safe than sorry.



The X-ray found that there to be no problem with the placement of the tube and it was decided that the bleeding was from irritation of the chemical burn. I had made my way back to taekwondo to pick Zachary up from demo team practice (and brought Emily back with me), so Mike was sent home with wound care instructions. The tube is still leaking somewhat, thought it's not nearly as bad as it was during this time. We've gotten the worst of the chemical burn under control, though it's still healing. The best conclusion we can come to is that it was a combination of things - the initial tube too small, transferred into a tube that was two big and allowed for significant leakage over three days before it was switched back out. Beyond that, he's currently getting his molars, so he's had more spit to swallow and because molars really suck to get, he's been crying more frequently than he normally does. Crying causes him to bear down, and may be contributing to the leaking.

Hopefully this will eventually just be a blip on the radar pretty soon. I feel like we're getting close to the end, but it's been a frustrating process.