Showing posts with label spasticity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spasticity. Show all posts

Monday, January 21

Monday blues

I don't like Mondays. If Monday sets the tone of the week, frankly I am done with this week already. 

Today we had our appointment with the respiratory paed. We missed our own paed, but got the other senior consultant who is also pretty good and on the same page largely as our doctor. The appointment was by and large, productive. Wriggles had a lovely time playing with the toy truck (future mechanic?) and all hell only broke loose when she needed to be weighed. Unfortunately she must associate side rooms with nurses as synonymous with blood tests and fear, as in seconds, my chirpy little bean was a screaming, rigid, limpet who needed peeling off me. She was so distressed she was stiff as a board and still crying to be measured, so the nurse wrote down "uncooperative with height". I bit my tongue. FFS, she's fucking terrified, not being naughty! She is 2 and has been through more procedures than many do in a lifetime! I know she only meant it in a jokey way but it really made me bristle.

The actual appointment was very thorough. The immune results are not back but will be chased with a letter to the GP confirming if they request a booster vaccine and if so which one, the feeding they are happy for me to manage with help of the dietitians ("and keep hoping"), her tonsil size was checked and we went over her list of medications and checked dosages. We discussed her sleep study and went over sleep history and patterns and they notes even static in the daytime, Wriggles is a noisy breather. This had got a lot better during the autumn but has slowly crept back more and more. The consultant confirmed he thought it would be beneficial to removed tonsils and adenoids. The tonsils are a moderate size and the adenoids are quite large, and we are not yet at 'peak growth' period. He added it may possibly help the night refluxing, as she sucks in her stomach muscles to help breathe when the adenoids narrow her nasal passages, and the extra abdominal work put pressure on the stomach which combined with a lax stomach valve and tummy full of night feeds can aggravate reflux happening. So whilst it is far from a guarantee, it is a bit of hope. I have also read other parents with food aversive children relating that tonsils being removed helped with food consumption and swallowing difficulties. Again, a sliver but hope but sometimes a sliver is all you need to keep going. I have all the usual concerns about having a general anaesthetic and surgery, but a tonsillectomy/adenoidectomy is a pretty common and standard op and aside from GA the only real risks are infection which in our case is heightened as she will not be allowed oral fluids to help the healing site. But as the consultant said, "I have only regretted not sending some children for a T&A, in 15 years I have never made a referral for one I have regretted or has had negative results." That sells it for me.

The thing which did deflate me was another mention of fundoplication; surgery to essentially wind the stomach top around itself to form a wrap to keep contents from refluxing up. This surgery has been discussed on and off since the summer when aspiration was really taken seriously and the feeding tube placed. If the surgery was simple, I would happily sign on the dotted line yesterday. Control reflux? Eliminate vomiting? Be my guest! However, unlike the T&A this is not so simple. It is more major surgery and there is a higher risk attached. Side effects are far more common and the recovery period can be fraught. It is one I have read up on over and over, and whilst I do see the positives and know it has improved things for many, it is not one that sits comfortably with me. That said, we are running out of things to control it. This decision is one that does not have to be made imminently; the doctors are still undecided on whether it would suit us so we have so time to hope either the T&A, diet, maturity or something magical help to control or better still improve things. We had a chest X-Ray to check for aspiration during the latest reflux flare-up so need to to wait the results now in the post. Letterbox, you will become my new friend.

Talking of letterboxes, one letter plopped through this afternoon. A surprise letter about the previous MRI-which had been a disaster and one I was told there were no results from that would be any use and would need repeating. So to receive some results, was a shock. There must have been an image generated that the neurodisability paediatrician could read. It did cross my mind that there was a mix up, but we have not had an MRI before, only the two cranial ultrasounds performed in NICU. The letter read "surprisingly, there are no structural abnormalities. We will discuss further in clinic". It makes me a little nervous that even our development consultant was "surprised". He was clearly expecting something, I was expecting something, pretty much all the doctors we have seen over the last nearly 18 months have expected that something would show up. So I should, in theory, be dancing on the ceiling. No bleeds, no PVL, no lesions. All in all, pretty excellent. But all I can think is, so what the bleeding hell is causing/caused cerebral palsy? Where, are my promised answers? So many things have been chalked up to something we will never know, is this yet, another? Her history frankly suggests that at some point there has been brain trauma. It doesn't help there is no existing antenatal records, but birth and subsequent events are a hotbed for being able to pick things and say, maybe that. An MRI was going to tell me. To pinpoint. To flag up. To answer my questions. It has just generated more. For CP and spasticity there is something somewhere. But not on this MRI. 10-16% of children with CP have normal MRI findings. Maybe I just have to accept that this is us. An MRI reflects the structure of the brain, not function. I just can't help feeling a bit cheated and full of questions to ask. Does this affect the prognosis, the treatment, the diagnosis? Does this warrant extra tests? Do we need to look at genetics, blood tests, anything else? I have a month until clinic. By NHS standards, a month is not too bad. But it is going to be a long month.

So tonight I feel exhausted. It feels a full on day. I am fed up with dealing with things on my own. Sometimes, just sometimes, I wish someone would make me a cup of  wine  coffee and hold me while I toss and turn all night and tell me it will all be ok. 

I am really fed up of seeing my beautiful mischievous daughter love life with all open arms and for life to not always love her back but deal card after card of yet another thing. It seems relentless. 

Less than two hours until Tuesday. Let it be a more uplifting day.

Thursday, August 23

Stop Start

After a week of feeling on tenterhooks, this week draws to a close feeling a little....well I can't put my finger on it. Even without the scheduled PEG insertion, we had a full diary including a repeat video fluoroscopy and development review.

Monday afternoon, we trundled up to our favourite place (hospital) to have a review with the respiratory SHO to confirm whether or not the scheduled operation to insert a feeding tube and perform a respiratory and endoscopic review, would go ahead as planned. We had had no infections, no hiccups, and Wriggles was so full of beans since getting home she would not sit still for a minute. The consultant was delighted and flabbergasted at her immediate recovery as she tried to empty the nurses' trolley, and went off to tell the anaesthetist the good news. The anaesthetist had news of his own. And a mind of his own. He apologised but was not happy to go ahead as planned. Her chest may be (relatively) as clear as a bell and her energy levels enough for an Olympic team of athletes, but it had only been a week of no oxygen requirements and technically she could still be carrying the final dregs of infections. Sorry, but this week a PEG had to wait or he felt we would be having a reunion even if brief, with the staff on PICU on unpleasant terms. I don't regret his decision; I trust his skill and knowledge. It just felt a little deflating after mentally gearing up, packing a little hospital bag, trying to explain to Wriggles about nose-wiggly-worms and tummy-taps. 

It is now rescheduled for next week on the understanding that the whole thing may be cancelled again.

Tuesday morning, we had our first alarm-clock call since hospital for a repeat fluoroscopy. Wriggles had one last October which appeared clear, that dismantled plans laid 9 months previous for NG feeding prior to a PEG placement, that have now of course come up again and stayed. Barium, a radioactive substance, is added to fluids and food to show the swallow process in a moving X-Ray captured on film to be able to slow down and enlarge to get an accurate and in-depth picture. I packed a little tub of Quavers, a fromage frais and a bottle of milk. Wriggles had been nil by mouth for three weeks-surely this would be an exciting moment for her, albeit confusing? No. It was like the early days of her oral aversion again. She shrank away, clamped her mouth and cried in fear, confusion and revulsion. She held her arms out and shook her head. No amount of cajoling did anything. The girl was not drinking or eating. Apart from one Quaver with barely any barium on. Results: inconclusive. Apart from that everyone is now quite clear that feeding has been very complicated.

Today, was our development review that had been arranged for months. It was the appointment I was most relaxed about. As we have community and out-patient support that is ongoing and a fantastic and open team, I thought I was fairly clued up, at peace and relaxed. Important lesson: you don't know really how you feel about something until you hear it from a consultant. Much of the review was positive and complimentary. Funny how they are never the bits you take away. The bits that stay with me and linger in my mind and that will not go away are: 

Wriggles' developmental age is put at 14 months (she is 2 in three weeks, 21 months corrected).
That possible Cerebal Palsy diagnosis is becoming far more real and much more likely. It is not prevalent enough to diagnose here and now, but she is showing enough things to lead them to suspect it is present in a mild form, affecting three limbs.
Of course, both things are very black and white and there is so much in between. The development age does not take into account the various different areas and groups of skills, some of which she displays at a higher level. It doesn't take into account HER and her funny ways, her brilliant smile, her love of colouring, her new game of cuddling everything and her mad laugh which sounds like a manic sheep. It doesn't acknowledge in a breath her history, her bravery, her brilliance, her resilience...it is just a number. But it is a number that hurts, which is silly because it changes nothing and it is a snapshot of where she is now. She is not so affected that it is forever or for the next year, and even if it was, it means so little compared to the way she lights everything up.
And the CP thing. It's something that has been floating around as a possibility in varying degrees for ages; over a year. Just until recently, it could have been something that might have been a phase, something that might resolve. The muscle tone and core reflexes, which are the giveaways in our case, are showing less sign of going now. We have been working our way through things to help, some which are, but it is becoming apparent that they lessen symptoms for time periods, not resolve the central issue like was hoped initially. Partly, the issue has been partly masked by her amazing progress which has so delighted both me, family and the medical team she knows. She has achieved so much that it really is by the way. Our consultant has put us on the waiting list for an MRI and the plan for now is to press on with physio work. Both legs and her left arm have spasticity; her left leg more pronounced than her arm and right leg which are mild and unless you were a doctor with a keen eye and a tappy-stick, you would be none the wiser.

And so the waiting game goes on. Stop start stop start. Questions followed by answers, but not always the right ones. Followed by more questions. Some said out loud, many debated internally. Who knew it was possible to feel so proud yet so sad and confused.