Thursday, August 29, 2013

Adventures of of our Tube Fed Monkey Continue

Ok throughout today we had many things change at simply a whim... Let me trace back (through facebook) and try to place my day in order.

Around 4am the dr's came in and gave Ellie an enema and started Golytele through her g tube (very strong miralax). The effect of this combination did not take effect until about 9:30. Suddenly she was breaking loose.

During the night she not only had a KUB (x-ray) to check for j tube placement, but a KUB with contrast as well. The initial KUB only showed 1 possibly 2 kinks, yet the KUB with contrast clearly showed 3 kinks and damage to the j tube as well. When looked at in slow motion it was clear her j tube was leaking. The decision to admit was for sure by this point.

I am sure the low blood pressure, low heart rate, low blood sugar levels, and her lack of energy had something to do with the admit as well.

During the morning rounds I discovered that last night she had been given 3 IV boluses for her blood pressure and heart rate, and the fluids brought her glucose levels up from 51 to 60. By the morning rounds these boluses and the additional IV fluids had finally stabilized the most concerning issues throughout the night.

Shortly before leaving for the IR placement of her new JG tube she was showing a bit more of her normal spunk, but still was quite listless and quiet. She had only asked once to go to the playroom but had not pushed the issue so we did not either. Rest was needed more than playing (even though hospital playroom is not very active).

By the way IR is Interventional Radiology and a dept set up just for the placement or use of procedures requiring specific x-ray equipment and sedation (as needed) for the procedures. Our Ellie-bug is one of those little ones that needs the sedation, intubation, and extra monitoring during these procedures.

Once with IR they offer the children different scents (chapsticks) to use to fall asleep with. Well Today Ellie-bug decided she wanted strawberry-watermelon. With the request made they scented her sleeping mask and the smell was not what she expected. So the team loaded the mask with extra watermelon for her. Our now happy child told the entire IR team about our family vacation, seeing her cousins, aunts, uncles, and of course "Mount Mushmore", and the Multnomah fire falls we saw in Or.

Due to maybe 2 hours sleep before her procedure she was out faster than I have ever seen her nod off. Once she was out I waited the normal hour- hour and a half (no clue on time today) to be called back to wait for her to wake up. Once all her vitals looked good and she was awake a couple of times she was taken back to her room.

From there we waited in the room for an hour or so, she got to drink a small amount of apple juice, and eat some applesauce. Once this settled she was released.

So where do we go from here? well we are working on the fluids through her j tube again and we have to make sure she does not become constipated again. What caused the murmur the dr's heard last night, the low blood pressure, heart rates, or drop in her glucose levels? At this point we are not sure.

Does she have a heart murmur to monitor, or is this going to be a stressed based situation? If stressed based then chances of the murmur reacting again once she is dehydrated, stressed, backed up, or any number of things, means the murmur may still be hiding somewhere there.

Additionally, at this point we do not know much of this admission was heat, letting her eat more by mouth than normal, the stresses on the body of extended travel, dehydration related or any combination of the above.

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