This morning Andrew had a four hour sprint. Toward the end, he got quite fussy due to a dirty diaper, and though they were able to calm him down, it left him a bit tired...he was working a little harder to breathe, so they decided to start the ventilator breaths up again. He made it three hours and forty-five minutes, but there was apparently still some concern. He's also continued to spit up multiple times per day. There's bile in it, most likely because the GJ-tube is holding open a path for the bile to move up from the small intestine and into the stomach. They haven't been able to increase his feedings past 6cc per hour, and they want to make sure that he doesn't aspirate anything (breathe it into his lungs). He's not responding to medications (Prilosec and Reglan) that are supposed to help with reflux, and there's no end in sight. Everything seems to be moving through correctly, as he's going to the bathroom without a problem, but they want to confirm that there's no physical blockage anywhere in the system.
Between the breathing issues and the feeding issues, here's the new plan:
- Wednesday- Perform an upper gastrointestinal study, by watching how liquid flows through his digestive tract using a fluoroscope.
- Wednesday- Give him his two month vaccinations, which were skipped when he actually turned two months old. Some children have reactions to these vaccines, so he'll be given Tylenol (for fever) and watched carefully for two days.
- Wednesday- Increase the sprints to three times a day, at three hours each time. Perhaps it was the four hour duration that stressed him, so maybe this will help.
- Thursday- Continue with three sprints.
- Friday- Extubate.
- Mid-September- Perform a Nissen fundoplication, creating a one-way valve in the stomach so that reflux will no longer be a problem. The surgeon wants to wait at least two months after the last abdomen surgery.
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