| Ford
Dodge, IA
It
was March 15 and I took my 2 1/2 year old daughter outside
to swing. It was a beautiful spring-like day and her laughter
filled the entire backyard, in fact, it filled the whole neighborhood.
I couldn't help but stare at her and hurt with the love that
I feel for her. You see, one month ago I didn't think I'd
ever hear her laughter again.
It
was February 5 when she woke up with diarrhea, no big deal-
the flu. After her nap that day she had a temperature. Of
course, my husband, Troy, was out of town on a wrestling trip,
which always adds a little more stress. That night she woke
up a couple of times to go potty and she had terrible stomach
cramps. Cramps bad enough that she laid on the bathroom floor
and wanted to sleep there, not wanting to move or be touched,
but not crying- not once.
From
the very beginning of this I was a wreck. Two weeks earlier
my husband was in the hospital with stomach cramps and bloody
diarrhea; he had had E. coli 0157-H7, one mean bug.
During that time, my four month old son, Drew, also had had
diarrhea for two weeks, but his tests for E. coli were
negative both times. He also got very sick with some vomiting
and fever-- the flu, they told me. He seemed to be getting
better on his own and since it had been two weeks since Troy
had been sick, Madi couldn't have E. coli. Seems like
too much of a coincidence, doesn't it? It was.
I
had done research when Troy was in the hospital. I knew that
this could be very dangerous for children because it could
develop into a very serious, possibly deadly disease called
Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome. A disease caused by the toxins
of E. coli that in some children can cause kidney failure,
blood problems and possibly death. The good thing was that
this was a rare disease, only 5% would develop HUS. Numbers,
unfortunately, have never been our friend.
Back
to Madi. Sunday and Monday were more of the same- diarrhea
and fever. I was in constant contact with her pediatrician
who knew all of the circumstances and had also treated Drew.
He constantly reassured me that all we could do is watch her
and support her, even if it was E. coli, and HUS wouldn't
show up until 7 days after the E. coli. Watch and worry,
that's all we could do. She was drinking her juice well and
playing some, so we were just hoping for it to go away soon.
Monday night she began throwing up too. She still had terrible
cramps and spent a lot of that night on the bathroom floor.
Many times during the night she would be sitting on the toilet,
sleeping on one of our shoulders, lifting her head only to
occasionally throw up. It was a devastating sight, knowing
there was nothing that we could do for her. By Tuesday morning,
after basically being up all night, her symptoms had only
seemed to have gotten worse and now we had no way to keep
Tylenol in her for her fever either. We contemplated calling
the doctor again at about 4 am, but waited a little longer
for our deciding factor. It came about an hour later when
she had blood in her stool. Probably from all the diarrhea
the doctor said, but bring her in around 8am. It was then
that we checked into our first, of many, hospital rooms.
Still,
I believed or hoped, that it was a bad flu bug. After all,
E. coli usually didn't involve a fever- and hers was
real high. Yeah, she would be fine. They drew some blood and
got her hooked up to an IV. A little dehydration, no big deal,
this happens all of the time. I prayed more than once that
day that this all go away soon. Seeing her this way was killing
me. Daddy came soon and all of our family visited that day.
Things didn't change that day and eating and drinking were
becoming a thing of the past. She couldn't keep anything down,
not even water, not even the sucker that the doctor brought
in for her. Troy and I took care of her in the bathroom all
night long. It hurt us so bad to see her sleeping on the toilet.
I prayed so hard that night for it to go away, Please Lord,
help my baby feel better.
Wednesday
brought more of the same. We all watched and prayed for a
sign that she was improving, hoping for a bite of banana or
a cheerio to stay down. It never did. Troy went to work for
awhile that afternoon and that's when I got the bad news:
she had E. coli. I freaked, not that in the back of
my mind I didn't know, but now hearing it seemed so frightening.
Especially since she was so sick and didn't seem to be getting
any better. Troy came quickly, along with our families and
the doctor to assure us that we were doing everything we could
for her. Supportive treatment, keep her hydrated, that was
the key. We still knew that HUS was a possibility and that
it wouldn't show up until a week after her symptoms, but only
5%, no not us. That day brought us more bad news. She had
pneumonia setting in. She had to go down for a chest x-ray,
which got her very upset. She hated to be messed with, not
to mention we had to visit the bathroom several times for
her diarrhea while we were there. She started breathing treatments
that day. She was so irritable that even those were heartbreaking.
There were so many times that as soon as the nurses would
walk in she would say that she had to go potty, just to escape
them. She was also refusing Tylenol because it would make
her throw up, so I backed her and refused it too. She sat
with a temp of 102 that day.
By
Thursday we were all feeling very exhausted with little or
no sleep at night. Drew was staying with Troy's mom and I
was missing him so I had planned to go visit him that day.
I was afraid that I'd give him the bad germs so I showered
up early that afternoon and left the hospital for the first
time in two days. What I thought was going to be an escape
from the stress, turned out to bring me more. He had a terrible
cold and had had diarrhea all day. I tried to show him happiness
, which I'm sure I didn't do very well, but we played for
awhile, then I headed back to the hospital with a stool sample
from him. The doctor, being concerned with Madi too, told
us to bring him in for observation that night. We were pretty
sure that he had already had E. coli for two weeks
but hadn't gotten quite as sick. Now he also had Bronchiolitis.
They started breathing treatments on him right away and put
him in the tent. Madi was so very sick and irritable that
she wanted Troy and I there at all times so Troy's mom had
to stay in with Drew that night. I didn't even get to be with
him for his blood draw or chest x-ray. I told Troy's mom that
night to try to handle it, I didn't want to hear him cry and
not be able to help. Since he was across the hall, we kept
both doors closed for the night. We were still afraid to give
one of them something that they might not already have had.
I thought I was at my all time low that night. All of our
family was there, parents, brothers, my aunt, everyone was
so concerned. At that point, I lost it! I ran to the chapel
to pray for my babies but it was locked. I dropped to my knees-
sobbing. It hurt so bad; I was so afraid; I just wanted this
nightmare to end.
When
I had finally gathered myself, I went back into Madi's room
where she was throwing up bright green bile. I freaked once
more knowing that this couldn't be normal. The doctors and
nurses told me it was normal for a child that had been sick
this long. Well, would she ever get better? Stop throwing
up? Having diarrhea? Wiould she ever eat again? I was so scared.
Guess what? Unbelievably, it got worse.
Troy
and I started talking to the doctor about transferring to
Blank Children's Hospital. Not because we didn't trust our
doctor, but so we could be where the specialists were, just
in case. A few hours later, our decision was made for us.
Madi started peeing blood. At that point, we all wanted to
be sure. We talked to the doctor at midnight that night and
he told us we would transfer first thing in the morning. He
reassured us that her blood work that morning was fine so
she didn't have HUS yet, it was probably just a urinary tract
infection from all of the diarrhea. No matter what, we were
doing all we could for her, supportive treatment is the only
thing you can do for both of these diseases. That made me
feel a little better, but we were still going to transfer,
just in case. Troy slept a little that night. I didn't sleep
at all. Our families were all there by 6 am that morning to
just sit and stare at her. She was very sick still, nothing
changing. Drew was also still the same. The doctor asked us
if we wanted to transfer Drew, but we figured that he'd be
out in a day so we left him with his grandparents, and we
went alone.
By
10 o'clock, we were strapping her on the ambulance bed ready
to head to Des Moines. She was thrilled at getting to go for
a ride, even though she knew we were only going to another
hospital. She had been asking to go home for three days now.
We were worried about her diarrhea on the way, but she slept
the whole hour and a half, she hadn't had an accident in her
pants yet; what a champ! They let me ride with her, I was
so thankful. I couldn't help but stare at her pale body, sleeping
so peacefully. She looked so pretty, but not my perky girl,
I was so scared.
Blank
Children's Hospital was a bright place and the staff seemed
very organized and friendly. Madi seemed a little better that
afternoon. She perked up some and even laughed once, that
was so good to see. We were all in better spirits when we
called our family to check on Drew; yes, everything was going
to be OK. They came in to get Madi's blood and take another
chest x-ray; she hated that. As a matter of fact, she refused
to get in her bed after that because she was afraid they would
mess with her. So she spent the afternoon and night in the
rocking chair or on the cold, hard floor. As the evening approached,
my body started to feel weird. I could hardly move, I got
the chills and I was burning up. Madi was back to her listless
self and moved very little, watching movies and sleeping.
I was lying in her bed, exhaustion taking over; I was so afraid
I was getting the dirty bug now. How would I take care of
her? Of Drew? Lord, please don't let me get sick now. Around
7pm, our phone rang. It was the doctor in Fort Dodge. He called
to tell us that Drew had a positive E. coli test. I
could feel my heart pounding in my head as I shivered uncontrollably.
"Send him here." What else could we do at that point?
I was sick and absolutely terrified that this would never
end. Right after our call, the doctors came in. I was still
lying in Madi's bed, unable to move, feeling lifeless and
emotionless. They began to talk, my head was spinning. They
told us that Madi had HUS. Her kidney and blood levels didn't
look very good, but all they could do was watch her and hope
that her kidneys didn't shut down. If they did, we would do
dialysis but there was no cure or medicine to help her. Ninety
percent of kids with HUS recover with no long term effects.
All we could see was the other ten percent, but when we asked
about that percent, they wouldn't even answer us. My God,
I'm going to lose my baby, my buddy, my life! I couldn't move
or even respond to them at that point, my body had shut down.
The
phone rang shortly after that. It was our parents telling
us that they were on their way with Drew. Emotionless, I broke
the news to them, devastating everyone. They came in to take
Madi to insert a catheter in her bladder so they could monitor
her urine output. I couldn't move, Troy volunteered to go.
She was so weak and lifeless when they came back she only
laid in her rocker and slept more. I was still lying on the
bed when our families began to arrive. They hardly recognized
me, my limp body, my patchy face, we were all terrified.
I
finally got enough energy to go visit Drew who was a ways
down the hall. As I walked in they were talking about some
pink in his diaper. I turned right back around and ran, screaming
down the hallway. I was so afraid that I was going to lose
one, maybe both of my babies. My mom, brother and some nurses
followed me, I dropped to my knees and cried and screamed.
I began to lose faith in life, in the Lord, what was I going
to do? I finally calmed down and they took me in a room to
rest. I did sleep for a couple of hours, I had to or things
could've been real tragic. As I returned to Madi's room around
2am, Madi was sleeping on the floor and Troy on her bed. His
mom was in there with him. He jumped up to greet me and ask
me how I could leave him. I felt so bad because I knew he,
too, was terrified, but I had to, I just had to. I went in
to take a shower and gain some more strength.
That
morning we woke up to snow. Madi even asked to see it, she
loved the snow. Her flu symptoms were slowing down but she
was so pale and her lab results came back very bad. We all
spent a lot of time that morning crying. We carefully watched
her urine bag, which began to show very little urine. We were
so hoping that her kidneys would come around on their own,
but that wasn't likely now. Troy was beginning to break down
often along with everyone else. Madi would look at us and
say "I feel better", which of course made us cry
harder. It was just like her to want to please everyone. She
was so sick, unable to even lift her head to play with her
dollhouse. I kept reminding her of all of the things we had
to do when we got home- ride her new bike, play hide and seek,
go to the park. I couldn't imagine life without her. Troy
and I went to the chapel and cried and prayed that morning.
She had brought us so much happiness, please don't take her
from us.
Saturday
lasted forever. The kidney doctors finally showed up around
3 pm.They informed us that it was likely that she would go
into surgery the next day to get her dialysis catheter put
in. Her kidneys were not going to turn around. We asked one
doctor if she would be OK through the night because she was
so very sick. "I hope so," was his answer. Those
words stung: he "hoped so". I had never been so
scared in my whole life.
Drew
was still down the hall. Troy and I visited him briefly, wearing
gowns and gloves, just to be sure we wouldn't make one of
them more sick. We would talk to him and cuddle him, but taking
care of him was too much for us now, that had become our mothers'
job. Madi cried for us often and since she was so irritable,
we didn't make her wait. We were so afraid it could be our
last day with her.
Troy
and I had decided to take turns sleeping in another room that
night so we could be rested for surgery. I went first and
missed my 2 am shift. I woke up at 4 am and ran into Madi's
room. Troy greeted me by saying that I had missed my shift,
but he was glad I slept, he knew I needed it. Madi had slept
better, her flu symptoms were slowing way down. She slept
a lot, too much. She moved from the rocker to the floor early
that morning. I spent a lot of time curled up next to her,
holding her and praying.
The
surgeon was in early that morning and said that she would
be going down to surgery soon.When she woke up that morning
her eyes were almost swollen shut and her ears were draining
all over her pillow. We cried every time we looked at her,
so afraid for what today might bring. They finally came to
get her around noon. I can't even explain my feelings, my
fear. We all walked down with her. She was so quiet and listless.
I was clutching the teddy with the big cross around his neck
and Madi had her Barney and Bop. She was so strong. Our whole
family went down to watch her wheeled into surgery. She didn't
cry, only asked for a pillow. By now, all of our tears were
gone and we knew that this was a necessary step to getting
her better. Would it work? We hoped so. Troy and I went to
the chapel to pray and then joined the rest of our family
in the waiting room.
A
couple of hours had passed when the surgeon finally came in
and told us that the surgery had gone well. He was a very
confident doctor and assured us that he thought she'd be OK.
He said that her tissues were soaked, dripping from all of
the fluid in her little body, and he was sure that the dialysis
would be started right away. We were relieved, but still not
sure what would happen next. A short while later, she was
asking for Mommy and Daddy. We were so glad to just see her.
She was very groggy, in and out. We followed her up to her
new room in Intensive Care. They needed some time in there
with her to get her all hooked up so we waited in the hall
with our families. A short time later we were able to see
her again, tired and listless once again. It was so hard to
see her hooked up to all of the tubes and machines. They explained
how the machine would fill her up every two hours, the fluid
would sit in her tummy, then drain. It seemed so scary, but
once again, a necessary step to recovery.
She
slept a lot at first, so we took turns visiting Drew. Troy
was afraid to leave Madi's side, so I tried to see Drew more.
He was still having diarrhea and a bad cold but didn't seem
to be getting any worse. I think they kept him a little longer
for our convenience, for that I'm so thankful. We needed to
all be there together now.
We
spent our 3 days in ICU watching the dialysis machine carefully,
praying it wouldn't clog and send her back into surgery. The
second day it did clog. The dialysis nurses had tried everything
and we were prepared to go back to surgery. The surgeon came
and fixed it without going back in- thank goodness! It set
her back though, she was off dialysis for 5 hours that day.
They hooked her up to an old time gravity machine. This one
really made us nervous because it would fill her with too
much liquid if hers didn't drain all the way out. Now Troy
and I really felt responsible, we were the ones in there all
the time. We couldn't chance the nurses being too busy to
catch it. It was that Monday, February 14, that she got her
first blood transfusion with another to follow on Tuesday.
What a sight, to see that dark red blood pumping into my little
baby. Her hemoglobin was at 5 when it should have been 12,
so needless to say it was necessary. She still spent a lot
of time sleeping and watching movies. We spent a lot of time
looking at her and talking to her and praying. When she was
awake she was usually very irritable and asking for something
to drink. They would only let her have 4 oz. of liquid in
8 hours because of all of the fluid already in her body. She
hadn't been able to keep liquid in for so long and now that
she wanted it, she couldn't have it, it was heartbreaking.
Her lips were terribly dry and her body still puffy. Troy
wrote her a poem during one of the times he wouldn't leave
her. It amazed us all, but she was his everything- his Bear.
They let Drew leave on Tuesday. He went with our parents to
the Ronald McDonald House across the street. He was still
very much the same but holding steady.
By
the third day, they were ready to move us to the pediatric
floor. A positive but scary step for all of us. The nurses
down there would have to learn the dialysis machine each shift,
what a pain. Troy and I quickly became experts and basically
took care of it ourselves. Sometimes we would have to roll
her to get it to drain or unkink the tube. She still hated
to be messed with and often had a lot of pain with the drains
and fills. Sometimes her drains would have blood in them,
that always made us nervous, but they would reassure us that
she was still OK.
Later
that day Madi told us she had to go potty. Go potty! I yelled
for everyone, we got her the chair and she went! Everyone
celebrated, she was glad to make everyone so happy. The doctors
wouldn't let us get too excited, it didn't mean anything YET.
She continued to go over the next few days and her creatinine
levels were creeping down. Her blood, however, was still being
destroyed by the disease. On Thursday, February 17, she had
her third blood transfusion. She was beginning to be awake
more often and playing some in her bed. They were allowing
her a little more to drink but she still wasn't eating. They
had her on total nutrition in her IV, since she hadn't eaten
in 2 weeks. By Sunday, seven days after her surgery, they
began decreasing the dialysis to every four hours. She got
to go for a wagon ride that day around the halls. That made
all of us very happy! By Monday, February 21, they decreased
it to every 8 hours and by Tuesday they took her off completely.
Another positive, but scary step for us. Our family all took
turns going back and forth between the McDonald house and
the hospital. Drew was getting better and became my daily
escape. I would visit him whenever I could but still didn't
take care of him very much. We were still needed at the hospital
each night, but we didn't let him forget us. It hurt my heart
each time I left; I missed him so much!
Wednesday
was a great day. Madi was sitting up, laughing, eating, they
were talking about having us out by the weekend. Her kidneys
were OK, they assumed with no damage and she was holding down
food.
Then
we were struck with more bad luck. Thursday she started throwing
up again with a high fever and stomach pains. I was terrified!
I was so sick for her to have to go through this again. The
doctors were worried about an infection in her body since
she still had the catheter in her tummy and the central line
in. They found out that it was a urinary tract infection and
started her on antibiotics right away. That was good news:
something treatable. A few days later, Troy, Drew and his
mom went home but Troy came back almost every night. I felt
so lonely when they left, knowing that I wouldn't see Drew
daily made me terribly sad.
Well,
once again we were on the road to recovery. They took out
her dialysis catheter and told us that her kidneys were fine.
A miracle, she was my tough cookie. Only one more time did
she go through more fever and diarrhea, which postponed our
leaving another week. Even though she still had her central
line in, they would often have to poke her to take her blood
to be sure there wasn't a blood infection. She hated that
and it broke my heart to put her through anything else. They
found out that this time she had an intestinal infection from
one of the antibiotics. It was beginning to feel like it would
never end. One day she couldn't have food, the next they were
wanting her to eat. Her poor little body couldn't make up
it's mind. There were so many times that she would want to
eat and drink so bad in this last week but her body just wouldn't
keep it in, it was so very sad! With this infection her white
blood cells also began to plummet. They were ready to call
in the blood doctors, but my little tough cookie turned things
around on her own once again! They gave her more antibiotics.
As this infection cleared up, things got better.
She
finally got out of bed and played. She walked like a newborn
colt at first and was extremely weak, but began to show signs
of our old Madi. It was Thursday, March 2 when they told us
she needed another blood transfusion, this would be her fourth
one. Her body just wasn't making enough red blood cells yet.
We were all hoping that this would be the final one to jump
start that blood again. She began to play in the hall, flirting
with the nurses, capturing their hearts with her true beauty.
We would go to the play room too, she loved that. My baby
was getting better!
It
was Monday, March 6 when the doctor came in and told us that
her blood levels were climbing steadily and snuck in the magic
question- "Are you ready to go home?" Wow, I was
beginning to believe it would never happen. I was frozen,
terrified at the thought of taking care of her by myself,
but glad for her to be better. That night Troy came back and
we went across the street to the Ronald McDonald House for
a couple of days. Not only for my comfort, but she still had
her central line in, and she couldn't get it out until Wednesday.
I
had dreamt of the day we would walk out those hospital doors
and now we had. It felt so good. Madison was so excited to
get into our car and go for that short little ride. She had
been through hell. She had battled many things and won, she
was Mommy's tough cookie- she still calls herself that today.
It has been over a month since we've been home. Madi still
has some emotional scars. She talks about the hospitals and
doctors and tubes a lot. She also gets tummy aches now and
then, which are probably normal but they scare both her and
I. She had nightmares at first and had to sleep with us, but
that's OK now. And , of course, her physical scars on her
abdomen and chest which will always be her badges of honor
and bravery. I, on the other hand, still have plenty of nightmares
and scars. I guess when a mother sees her child near death,
they may never completely go away. We have all learned a lot
and hope that with time, all will be healed- forever!
Copyright
2001 by author: Shawn Bennett (Madison's mother)
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