Noah's
Story
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NOAH'S STORY
Noah was delivered at thirty five weeks
after a very turbulent pregnancy. I was on bed rest from sixteen weeks,
premature rupture of membranes at thirty two weeks. Noah weighed three
pounds even and was a whopping fifteen inches long at birth. He was
beautiful, nursed well, and held his body temperature well, so after six
days in the hospital they sent us home.
From the start we noticed problems with him and very odd behaviors. He
would stay awake for nine to ten hours at a time at only a couple weeks
old, he acted as if a motor was running constantly. Several trips were
made to the E.R. to have him sedated to sleep. He also rubbed his feet
together constantly even while sleeping. By the time he was three months
old we had made a total of seventeen E.R. visits, and way too many
visits to his pediatrician to count. The E.R. would treat the symptoms
and refer us back to our Ped. Who would tell us he was just neurotic. We
were so desperate we even took him to a Podiatrist to have his feet
checked for fungal infections, because he rubbed them constantly. He
always had to have shoes on them because he would rub them until they
were raw & bleeding. He also would always scream if you laid him down.
At four months of age Noah began retracting and wheezing severely,
breathing treatments never brought any relief to his symptoms, nor did
any medication for asthma we tried. Noah would retract so bad that his
rib cage was bruised on the outside for what seems now like forever. The
oddest thing was that when he would wheeze his O2 level was always over
98% and the medications they used for the treatments caused his heart
rate to accelerate too high, it became a viscous cycle. The pediatrician
finally referred us to a Pulmonary Dr. who never figured anything out
either and said his symptoms were concerning but, since his stats were
always so good he would probably outgrow it, and that he reacted so
overtly to the medications he was better off with the symptoms then the
treatments for the symptoms.
By
then as parents we felt defeated. We felt so helpless, Noah was our 3rd
child and we had done everything the same with him as the other children
and we just couldn’t bring ourselves to believe like the Dr.s wanted us
to think that there was nothing wrong with him but bad behavior. We
continually were told it was behavioral; we heard that a lot over his
life time.
Noah never really was
comfortable being held. It was as if he were overly sensitive to
everything. To nurse him I had to prop him up on pillows and dare not
move or he would go into a terrible crying spell. By 5 months old all
you would have to say was “Night-night baby”, and he would scream. By
the time he was 10 months old I was lying to everyone we knew that he
was sleeping through the night because I was so tired of people saying
he was just spoiled or strong willed.
I decided to wean Noah of the breast at 13 months of age, by 14 months
of age Noah began vomiting every time he was laid down and was suffering
from severe diarrhea and weight loss. Still no matter how much we
pleaded with our ped we never got any where but, frustrated. Noah’s
symptoms continued to worsen over time. By 18 months of age, I would
have about sold my soul for a full nights rest or a day without changing
on average 10 diapers, and washing bed clothes. At this time our family
had decided to intervene and show us that he was just spoiled and that
he could be broken. He could be taught to behave nicely, he could be
taught to sleep through the night, he could be taught to not throw up
every time you laid him down.
That
intervention was very short lived days after turning 18 months old Noah
began vomiting blood. After a trip to emergency, referrals, and every
diagnostic test for GI symptoms was preformed. Noah was finally
diagnosed with severe silent gastro intestinal reflux, bleeding lesions
in the esophagus, and motility problems. Noah was also diagnosed failure
to thrive and began months of extensive testing and treatment of his
symptoms. Immediately we began running into problems with the reflux
medications prescribed for him. If his eyes weren’t crossing and he went
a day without some strange facial ticks it was another day closer to
resolving his problems. He suffered and struggled with the medications
and diet changes for months and months. Noah’s body refused to accept
the medications and diet modifications we were giving to him. Noah’s
blood work was always way off. The strangest being his IgG anti-gliaden
(found in people with Celiac’s) was always over 100. (Normal range being
around 20) However Noah never tested positive for Celiac’s disease at
any time over the course of almost 3 years.
Just shy of Noah’s 3rd birthday we decided the only way to get his
esophageal lesions under control was to have the Nissen Fundoplication
surgery. It was performed, laparoscopically, the summer before he turned
three years old. His recovery was typical of most children, problems
with initial gagging and retching, lower nutrition intake, dehydration,
and dumping syndrome. Three months after the procedure with steady
weight loss we choose to have a G-tube inserted for nutritional
supplementation. Things began to steady out for Noah and he began to
hold his weight, for a short time. The following February Noah began
having terrible pains in his chest, along with weight loss, and little
tolerance to the tube feedings. Noah would tell us his heart was black
and that he needed to go to the Dr.s to get a new blue heart so he could
feel better. He would also wake up crying at night begging us to ask
Jesus to move out of his heart because he was making it hurt. It took us
about 3 weeks of complete persistence to get the Surgeon and GI to agree
to perform another endoscopy to check the status of his Nissen wrap. By
that time I had learned to be very aggressive with the Dr.s because of
going so long with no one listening to us. After a lot of hemming and
hawing both the surgeon and GI Dr. came out of that lab with apologies
on their tongues. Noah’s wrap had slipped and was sliding up and down in
the esophagus. Less than a week later Noah was admitted into the
hospital for his second Nissen fundoplication surgery, this time it had
to be preformed as an open vs laparoscopic.
Immediately after the surgery we noticed something seemed terribly wrong
with him. We were assured over and over that we were just worried about
him because he was having more pain the second time around and that Noah
would feel better if we took him home. Five days after his second
surgery home we went for less then 24 hours. He was rushed back into the
hospital with severe fluid retention, inability to swallow his own
saliva, and total malnutrition. After hurried testing and lots of
questions the surgeons found that some how when the hiatal hernia was
being repaired the stitches had been ran through the vagal nerve thus
causing complete paralysis of his stomach along with swelled fusion of
the upper esophagus. Noah was taken back in to surgery about 24 hours
after we had taken him home. Many hours later Noah came out of surgery
after a complete redo of his Nissen, a pyloroplasty to aid in the
emptying of his paralyzed stomach, yet another G-tube site, a NJ tube
for drainage during what would turn out to be a very long recovery, and
also a PICC line for administering total nutrition thru his blood stream
to allow the stomach and esophagus to rest and recover. Forty-five days
after being readmitted into the hospital for his 3rd Nissen
Fundoplication surgery we were able to bring him home.
Since that surgery Noah has had an uphill battle to keep his head above
water, both with managing his pain and his nutrition. He has been from
G-tube feeding to J-tube feeding, and ultimately wound back on TPN with
a Central Line placed in his chest during the year following his 3rd
surgery. We will never know exactly what went wrong with his 2nd
surgery; all we know is that it has changed his life completely. Noah
has suffered with pretty much all of the side effects that come with
GERD and Nissen Fundoplications, ear infections, lack of
repressurization of the ear drums, complete loss of tooth enamel,
chronic cough, sinus infections, reactive airway disease, rapid heart
beat associated with pain, decaying of the back teeth so badly the will
need to be removed, sleep disturbances, (Noah is now 5 years old and
still has yet to sleep a night through unless medicated), chronic loose
stools, dumping syndrome, failure to thrive, weight loss, feeding
problems, dysphasia, speech delays and problems, behavioral issues,
emotional outbursts, aggressive responses to pain, mild sleep apnea,
chronic illness, monthly impacted sinus’s, blood stream infections, plus
many more problems.
Over the past 2
years we have been very cautious when it comes to any GI treatment for
our son. We have sought out treatment for his chronic pain, thru
alternative treatments. About a year ago we were desperate for a much
deserved break for Noah and ourselves. We choose to have him medicated
with a mild mood altering drug. It was out of desperation and fear of
over treating his GI problems. We choose to take him off of the
medication about 3 months ago. Almost immediately we noticed a change
for the worse in him. His pain came back, his dysphasia worsened, and
his chest pains returned stronger than ever, along with the rapid
heartbeat. We knew putting him back on the medication was not an option.
We have spent an entire year keeping him medicated to give him a break
from medical procedures and the medication he was taken is not a “safe”
long term alternative for anyone. However, we did not expect for his
symptoms to come back much at all, let alone so quickly. We knew that it
meant we were left with really no other choice but, to seek surgical
treatment for his symptoms after an endoscopy showed weak areas in the
Nissen wrap. His GERD symptoms came back as well, along with the
sleeplessness, and slowly but, surely the behavior changes also began to
rear their ugly head. He is to start kindergarten again next year after
a failed attempt at it this year. We are hopeful with this 4th surgery
to get a 20% improvement of life quality for our son. To some 20% may
seem like so little but, for us it means the world. This surgery may not
change much for him in terms of controlling his reflux, and it will be a
very long recovery for him something both he and we as his parents fear.
The procedure will be unlike any he has had before. It will be of course
an open procedure with an upper chest approach; the surgeon will have to
go in behind his heart. Reason being if the surgery was to be
reattempted as an open abdominal approach his chance for uncontrolled
bleeding is way too high to even consider attempting it, the area has
been insulted far too many times.
Through all of the above Nissen surgeries it has failed each and every
time to control Noah’s reflux well enough for him to not need
anti-reflux medications. At this time all we can do is trust. Trust the
Lord above that he indeed has a plan for our son, trust the GI Dr.s who
have worked endless hours to keep our son alive and well, listened to
all of our concerns, and answered each and everyone of our questions to
the best of their ability, trust the surgeons who will attempt a very
difficult 4th Nissen procedure, and trust ourselves as his parents that
we are making the best decision for our son. Never in our life time had
we ever expected to endure what he has been through. To watch our son go
through what he has been has been very humbling to us as parents and
humans alike. It is our wish to be constant advocates of increasing the
awareness of the damaging effects of untreated GERD and the impact that
the treatments can have on a child.
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