Monday, December 13, 2010

shifted...

Hannah had rough weekend full of broken arm pain...  I continued to give her pain pills to help take the edge off (she hates taking them because they knock her out).  I went back and forth. but finally decided to take her back in to see the ortho this morning. (we were just there on Friday... holding steady, no change).  However, today was a different story....

Her bones shifted again... BIG TIME.  They shifted 20 degrees in addition to what they were before!!!  ugh.  He said her bones will not heal straight on their own.  She needs surgery.  The dreaded words I was sooo hoping to avoid.

So, we go in Wednesday... Dr. Ortho will put two pins in.  She will have an incision by her wrist and one by her elbow.  She will have a removable cast.  The pins will stay in 6 months and then she will have another surgery to remove the pins.  yuck...

Nana is coming down to go with us, per request of Hannah.  She is scared.  This is out of her element.  Give the girl anything neurological and its piece of cake!  But this is something new and different.
I think we will be spending the night and I am glad for that.  With all of her underlying conditions, I think it's a good idea.  Not to mention they can really help with pain management...

I will keep you posted.  Hopefully this will do it!!!  I pray she can finally start healing now...

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Beautiful Hannah...

How this journey started....

Hannah was born prematurely at 34 weeks gestation. She was a relatively healthy preemie; initially having difficulty maintaining body temperature and needing to grow. She weighed 4 pounds 9 ounces at birth. When she was four months old she began to drool, non stop. We were told the first year she was "teething." At 18 months old, we really started searching for reasons of why her shirt was always soaking wet. We saw various specialists who always sent us to another specialist, saying "everything looks okay." She spent years in oral motor/feeding therapy to help her not to drool. It wasn't until she was four years old and in preschool that we started to get some answers. Her preschool teacher commented one day that she wasn't reponding when her name was called. I took this information to her pediatrician who then orderd an EEG, "just to rule it out." Much to our shock and amazement, the results showed, she was having seizures. That is the day our journey REALLY began. Once she began taking seizure medication the drooling almost stopped completely. (She will still drool to this day when she is having seizure activity). Since then, it has been a roller coaster; countless medications and medication changes. She has never really reponded well to any medication.

About two years after she was diagnosed with epilepsy, the doctors noticed that her blood pressure was running high. After many tests, she was diagnosed with hypertension. We still are not sure why, but her cardiologist feels her blood vessels are thicker than normal.

About this same time, we also began looking into why Hannah was such a horrible sleeper. She would thrash, talk, move every which way, during her sleep. The sleep studies revealed that she has alveolar hypoventilation sydrome, which means she has too much carbon dioxide in her system when she sleeps. To help this, she wears a BI-PAP at night. This has been monumental in giving her more effective and quality of sleep.

Every day is a challenge for Hannah and our family as a whole. Blitzen has been an absolutely wonderful addition. She calms herself sometimes just by petting and loving on him. He has been trained in behavior disruptions and will sometimes be able to stop a meltdown from getting out of control.
It has been extra hard on the whole family since daddy is deployed to Iraq. He has been gone since January 09 and will gone until Jan 2010. We get to talk with him by phone and on the web cam; which is nice, but not the same!! Blitzen has helped to make his absence go just a little smoother....