Saturday, October 24, 2009

Fellow CCAM -type III baby with spontaneous resolution!

I am so pleased that a family in Australia that we have been corresponding with has given birth to a beautiful son, full-term and with no CCAM! They contacted us for support during the pregnancy when they discovered their future son had a Type-III CCAM (same as Maya), and discovered us by this blog. We followed with them anxiously as their future baby's CCAM grew to a CVR of 2.0 at one point, which is getting dangerously large. We prayed for his health, along with many others I am sure, and by the time of birth his CCAM had resolved/spontaneously disappeared! This is especially good news as there have been very few CCAM resections in Australia, and there are no facilities that can treat an imminently imperiled fetus in the womb.

So congratulations to Sean, Emma and Jack!

Now any prayers for Australia can turn back to focusing on rain to quench their terrible drought!

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Daddy likes ladies...

The quote of the day from the increasingly eloquent and observant Ms. Maya is as follows:

Maya (while sitting on Mommy's lap at the dinner table): "Daddy, you like ladies."

Chris, Victoria, Uncle Ryan: (snickers)

Maya: "Mommy's a lady."

Daddy: "Well then that's a good thing that Daddy likes ladies!"

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Cats take medical center stage recently!

This past week has actually taken more time and resources (money) to address the medical issues of our cats than it has for Maya! That takes some doing.

First we had an appointment to have our oldest male cat, Hunter, taken in to follow up on some recurrent mouth ulcers he has had. Well he did a Houdini that day and managed to avoid being found for the appointment. However we had some concern with Acadia (Cadi) being too skinny thanks to the objective eye of Victoria's mom, who remarked that she was too skinny. As we are with her every day, the change was too gradual to notice. So anyway, Ryan (Victoria's brother) took Cadi to Hunter's appointment and the vet weighed her, finding her to be only six pounds! She was ten pounds at her previous check-up and had very little deviation in weight for the previous 11 years of her life, so this was a huge deal!


The vet ran the usual battery of tests and called us with the result; Cadi has diabetes. After the initial shock, which was lessened by the memory of giving my sister's cat diabetes shots when she was away several years ago because he had the same condition, I researched the issue and found that the insulin available nowadays is cheaper and better for cats, so more relief there. Then there was the issue of expense. When I met with the vet for a tutorial on how to administer the shots and monitor her I was presently surprised to find that the visit and several months worth of supplies was less than $100. The only really expensive item is the special minimum 50% protein diet she needs to be on, which costs a good 50% more than other premium cat foods. Since we free-feed all of our cats from an always-full food bowl of dry food, we need to buy this same food multiplied by five, as segregated eating is not feasible.


So then Hunter's rescheduled appointment arrives today. He still has mouth sores and the vet is concerned that they have not resolved. Although he was vaccinated against Feline Leukemia, he was retested for that as well as for kitty AIDS and a complete battery of blood and urine tests. Everything came up normal except for some slightly elevated BUN (Blood Urea Nitrogen), which was followed up with a urine test that did not confirm any renal issues. Most likely the slightly high reading was due to eating the high protein food that we have to get for Acadia. Since all of those tests did nothing to explain his mouth ulcers and the vet was stumped, she sedated him and took two samples (biopsies) of the ulcers from his tongue and is sending them out for analysis. It may take until Monday to get results from the biopsies. The other good news from the tests is that Hunter, although a litter-mate of Acadia, has no signs of diabetes or any other disease.

All of this cat news is not to be taken that Maya has not been the subject of any medical concerns. On the contrary, we had an appointment with the Infectious Disease doctor at CCMC, who was unable to give us any answer for Maya's repeated sinus infections that only respond to Levaquin and was only able to point us to Yale or Boston for an Immunologist (which we actually thought he was going into the appointment, go figure) and give us standing prescriptions for Azithromycin and Levaquin and tell us to use them as needed when new infections arose, but only until symptoms were contained, not for a full period as the doctrine is drilled into our heads regarding antibiotics.

So after both an internet request and a follow-up voice mail request we were contacted by the Hematology department at Boston Children's Hospital and were told that we needed to get medical referrals from our Pediatrician for both their Hematology and their Immunology/Allergy departments, as her possible issue(s) span both disciplines. We were also told to gather every lab, record, study and note from every doctor who
had ever looked at her and send them to Boston prior to any appointment that will be set up. Good thing we have most of that work already done and just need to update some scanned PDF files of recent notes and labs to get the CD's up to date and send them up soon.


Now for the day-to-day news. Brianna has had a great summer at Brodie Camp and is becoming a very confident swimmer. She is very darkly tanned despite our daily application of 50 SPF sunblock prior to her 5 and 1/2 hour camp day, but is very fit looking and feeling due to her daily activity level. I dread the switch back to school when her activity level will be only a fraction of what camp provided! She also has made new friends and cemented current friendships and should have no social problems starting first grade in a few weeks.


And one other thing - she has lost her fourth baby tooth! They all were from the bottom center four and the two center ones are growing in and are about 1/4 in already. The one on the right is somewhat behind and twisted from where it should be, so if it does not improve quite a bit she may be headed for braces to correct it in the future.


Maya's sophistication in speaking is continually amazing. She says sentences very precisely and with the complexity of someone much older. That is unless she's overtired or wants something. If you're lucky at these times she'll warn you, "I in a mood." Most of those times she'll just scream, cry or whine or maybe call say to you, "You bad *insert boy. man, girl or lady here*." This is of course funny but we have to withhold a smirk and t
ell her that is not nice to say.

Maya looking like a toddler Ted Nugent - dig the necklace!

She also enjoys puzzles, picking raspberries, playing sophisticated imaginative games with her dolls and toys and taunting her sister, which is actually a mutually enjoyed sport, much to the frustration of their parents.

Victoria has been working a lot lately but will be getting a little break to have a Peace Corps Ecuador group informal reunion in San Francisco at the end of the month.

I have been continuing job searching, which has been about as fruitful as looking for a good time with the opposite sex in Provincetown during Gay Pride week. (It's just a joke, I'm a nutty left wing liberal whose on your side people, so no protest e-mails please ;) ) I've even opened up my search to much lower-paying professions that I would enjoy, such as motorcycle/scooter sales and/or repair, to no avail. It's tough out there people!

Bye for now,
-Chris

Thursday, July 02, 2009

Language complexity, swimming and health stuff...

Maya was laying in her bed with me next to her tonight and she was talking to me about all sorts of things. She noticed my bracelet and she said "Mommy who give you ring?" I told her it was a bracelet and asked her who she thought might have given it to me. She said "Grandpa Jack?" "Auntie Cole?" and I told her no, Richard gave it to mommy. She then proceeded to tell me "Mommy next time talk to Richard get Maya bracelet". Then she said, "sissy big big girl lose teeth." I told her yes, and that the tooth fairy took the teeth and brought sissy $10. At that her eyes got big and she said "sissy big big girl buy bracelet money." Then her eyes got big again and she said, "Ask Richard money buy bracelet Maya big big girl." The complexity of her language is just growing in leaps and bounds!

The other feat for Maya today was that we were in the hot tub tonight and she swam under water without taking in water in her lungs. After that, she keep dunking her head under and up and laughing.

As for Brianna...she has been amazing us these past few weeks with her ever-evolving swimming skills. First it was 2 weeks ago that she first learned to doggie-paddle without the life jacket. Then this past weekend she went underwater for the first time. She quickly progressed to swimming under water with and without goggles. Then yesterday at camp, she jumped off the dock (with a life jacket), but that is huge for Brianna. And tonight, she did the back-float in the hot tub without me holding her. It is amazing to watch her and you can see the gleam in her eyes when she realizes that she can actually do it. Brianna had another big event today at Taekwondo. She earned a trophy because she has 3 medals now and 9 stars for her uniform. She will be taking the test to become a blue belt soon.

-Victoria

Chris here with a Maya health update- Maya is just getting over a sinus/ear infection that she has had for nearly two months. She is taking Levaquin, which is an antibiotic of last resort after being on Augmentin ES, Ceftin, Zithromax and then Clindomycin, none of which helped her in the least. This is one of the same old problems that we hoped would be addressed by the PAPVR surgery, but it looks as if it is truly an immune system problem, complicated by allergies to, among other seasonal things, mold. The allergies, which are mitigated by Zyrtec, but not enough for the worst of high allergen level periods, proceed to post-nasal drip and sinus infection. The same thing happens to Brianna and I at the same time, but antibiotics work on the first try for us both. Maya unfortunately either has worse bacteria that take hold, or some compromise in her immune system that allows the same bacteria that are treatable in Brianna and I to stay alive in her body. We also tried nasal cortisone sprays to reduce inflammation in her sinuses, but they lead to bad nosebleeds in her, as does dry air, so they cannot be used.

Last week she had a sinus cat scan that confirmed sinusitis swelling that was pretty bad. When I discussed the possibility of a fungal infection the Ear, Nose and Throat doctor said that he would have seen the characteristic "spotting" pattern of fungal infections on the cat scan, which he did not. So now we need to pursue the immunological cause of her recurring infections, which the Levaquin is actually working very well on, but it is a focused antibiotic so that may give us a clue as to what particular Immunoglobulin (talking out of my butt here now, not enough research yet) is low in her system and why. Ironically we had a through panel of immunological tests pursuing the same answers last year (when her infections actually went away after Zithromax combined with my cold-killer garlic tea, which she absolutely refuses now), and will now need to delve even further down this road.

Luckily she is very healthy and strong otherwise, and her infections seem confined to the sinuses.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Brianna loses her first tooth, uh, teeth - May 30 2009

Brianna had a fiber wafer this AM and got a surprise - the tooth we were waiting to have fall out any day finally did so. Its neighbor was just as wiggly and bleeding, so Brianna let me give it a gentle tug out as well - a real two-fer! She was a bit melancholy at loosing her teeth as seen in the video, but she cheered up just fine and we had a good day taking a motorcycle ride to Campbell Falls and playing in the water.


Sunday, May 17, 2009

Maya's first exposure to death...

Yesterday we (Brianna, Maya, Chris) were driving down Rt. 8 to a party for Brianna's friend Emma. We saw a brightly colored bird behaving strangely on the breakdown lane. I stopped the car and backed up to a bird we later discovered was a juvenile Scarlet Tanager. I had never seen one before and both Victoria and I later agreed it was the most beautiful non-captive bird we had ever seen.

I had to direct traffic from the right lane into the left as when I first approached the bird it made a lame attempt at flying and ended up in the middle of the right lane. I herded it back to the breakdown lane and on my first attempt, caught it with a two handed cupping motion. It didn't struggle much, but seemed fairly lively except for a downy black feather stuck in its beak and black gunky stuff along both sides of its beak.

We stopped at a BK drive-thru for some lunch and waited in the bowling alley parking lot for the party to begin. While there I was able to coax the bird to drink some water from a bottle cap and I used a napkin and water to clean its beak. Maya and I got out of the car and caught a carpenter ant to feed to the bird, and after a few times worth of flicking it out of its mouth it finally ate it. We then left the car windows open, and as it was an overcast day in the low 70's we were unconcerned about heat for the bird. We put it in a BK bag on its side with the cap of water in there and the bag lightly folded over and the bird was fine when we left the party.

Driving home, the bird fluttered about in the bag and all seemed well until we got home and went to show the bird to Victoria, who was heading up a tag sale at our house. It had the strange curl of its toes that we knew was bad from when we tried to nurse Latka, our baby Blue Jay from two years back. It also would not stand and flapped limply. Within minutes it gave a strange arch to its back, as if taking one last great leap into flight and died in my hand.

Upon a brief examination and using deductive reasoning it seemed to have probably suffered a hit into a windshield, a glancing blow that gave it moderate internal injuries and some slight external bleeding. He probably picked at the external site and got his beak bloody and a feather stuck to his beak at that point, then regained enough strength to hop around dazed. After we picked him up he continued to slowly bleed internally until his death about three hours later.

Brianna said we should bury him and I agreed. Maya wanted to help. I dug a small hole and placed his little body into it and we explained to Maya that he was dead and his body did not work anymore. We told her his spirit was free now like an angel to go fly with other bird friends in heaven. She seemed cool with this and said bye bye Tiki (oh yes, she named him while we were at the bowling alley birthday party), then she used a child's hand shovel to gently put the first bit of dirt on him. Brianna and I finished with the dirt and then Maya produced a beautiful handkerchief she pilfered from the tag sale and she refused help as she carefully covered the grave with the handkerchief and placed stones on it to hold it in place. She then scampered off to play without a care.

Later on that evening, Brianna took a bowl of water and a spoon and said she was going out to do something for Tiki. I saw her sprinkling the water over the lawn with the spoon and I asked her if it was an offering for Tiki. She said yes, and that she hoped his friends would come visit. Kids can be so deep.

This morning Maya went to the back door and said to Victoria "Bird sleeping dirt." Victoria explained that yes, his body was sleeping forever.

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Maya is getting too darned smart and funny, so quickly!


It seems like right in front of our very eyes, every day, Maya is becoming more and more of a little individual who is articulate, independent and funny. This past Sunday Brianna decided she was too mature to go see a live "Blue's Clues" show with Grandma Dayle, Auntie Nicole and her cousin Savannah. Maya was more than content to take her place! According to Grandma, she was enthralled by the show. This means her attention span is now long enough that she can go without a screaming fit to leave for at least an hour and a half - woo hoo!

The day prior, Brianna spent the afternoon with her friend Ali. As it was a gorgeously warm day, Victoria and I decided to try a motorcycle ride with Maya. Maya was wary at first about putting on the confining harness and helmet to allow her to be safely attached to me, but it turns out she was just cranky tired. After we got underway Maya promptly fell asleep and I led Victoria to the Dewey-Granby Oak I recently was amazed to see on a shortcut that my TomTom led me through in Granby. We parked the bikes, awakened Maya and she spent a good half hour playing on the tree and checking out the property there. We then rode to a nearby roadside food stand, had some sodas and snacks and then rode Rt. 20 around the Barkhamsted Reservoir to the part of the Compensating Reservoir nearest our house, where Maya got "nakie" and waded in the chilly water before we headed around the corner for home.
The photos and short videos of our Dewey-Granby Oak tree visit are on our Flickr page here.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Maya's language skills blossoming!



First of all, we officially announce that there will be no party for Maya/Brianna family/friends (the one that was previously just postponed due to chicken pox). We have decided that there is just too much going on. Sorry for the confusion, but Brianna already had three parties and Maya had a small one and she's good with that.

Now that that news is announced, let me tell you Maya is talking much more now. Still not near peers, but making progress. In the above video she uses her improved pronunciation to play a game in which she makes you close your eyes, then she goes and brings her wipes box and says, "Open Eyes!" You then must act very surprised. Great fun the first dozen times in a row...

Brianna is now a full Green belt in Tae Kwon Do. Her friend Grace has started taking classes as well and Brianna is so excited to have one of her friends in class again. Her friend Isa used to be in her class but "graduated" to a more advanced class a while back.

Brianna is also doing excellent in Kindergarten. She is reading at between levels 3 and 4 and writing sentences phonetically in a journal.

Below are some recent pictures of the kids:




Below is a picture of my Great-Aunt Edna taken by my mother recently with one of her great grandchildren. I love the spry energy she is giving in this picture. Definitely one of my new favorite photos.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Tiny Family B-day for Maya - Uncle Ryan now has the Chicken Pox!

We had a nice little party with Grandpa Jack and Grandma Dayle at our house for Maya's actual birthday last night. The main family/friends B-day is still on hold pending complete freedom from the Chicken Pox virus at our house.

Despite the unlikeliness of anybody getting Chicken Pox nowadays with the immunizations that kids have been getting since 1996, it seems that Victoria's brother, Ryan, who has been living with us, has developed a mild case of Chicken Pox as well, thus confirming that Maya did indeed have it. Researching the incubation period, it seems to be around two weeks. This interestingly puts the start of Maya's symptoms about two weeks after our return from Walt Disney World. Isn't airplane travel fun? A new surprise every time!

Ryan did have the pox as a young 'un, and thus his current case is mild with just some minor itching. We are waiting for his case to "crust over" or turn dark enough red and with no indication of new marks or itchiness before rescheduling the family/friends party for Brianna and Maya. What an extended birthday season this is turning out to be!

Plenty of photos posted up at http://flickr.com/photos/gorskipics

Monday, February 23, 2009

Birthday party cancelled due to...Chicken Pox???


This past week we've been seeing little bumps on Maya that looked like various sorts of bug bites. We were unsure of their origin (Victoria and Brianna insisted on labeling them "spider bites" although there are no visible spiders in our house, no one else had bites, and spiders biting humans is for the most part a defense mechanism, not a way to feed.
Well after Brianna's Little Princess party on Saturday, we found more bumps and one that was round and looked like a pustule that you would see with poison ivy. With winter in our area and all, poison ivy was kinda unlikely, so we looked on the 'net for possible reasons and narrowed it down to a mild case of Chicken Pox (last week a low-grade fever, current runny nose, no other symptoms).

"But wait," you say, "Don't they immunize kids for Chicken Pox nowadays?" Sure they do. But a small percentage of those who get immunized can still get Chicken Pox, and most of those are a mild case. Always read the fine print!

So Victoria spent a good part of the night calling people to cancel the family and friends Brianna/Maya party planned for Sunday, and then calling the people who came to Saturday's party to warn them of their Chicken Pox exposure. Sorry world! I have no idea where she got it from, but if anyone is likely to get a rare medical condition, it is Maya. She is as happy as can be anyway, and seems to be unbothered by the pox.

Right now I am blogging from a surgical center as Victoria has a minor procedure performed. I've got my healing thoughts going for a minor non-event...

-Chris

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Our girls are growing up fast...


It is now January 13 and I am writing as I lie here next to Brianna as she sleeps sick with some bug. She threw up at least seven times since waking up this morning and this is the first day she has missed school so far. For all that she seems to be taking it rather well. She is getting so mature! She can read basic books now with very little assistance. She is into Hannah Montana, which is purely via peer influence as she has never seen Miley Cyrus in any program or movie. She also is developing nurturing skills since getting kittens for Yule/Christmas.


The kittens were rescues from New York City in the municipal pound where they kill fairly quickly. The rescue organization in Stamford had the little brothers neutered and up to date on all immunizations. They were twelve week old tuxedo coat mixed breeds with upper respiratory infections and ringworm fungus patches when we got them. The organization was great in supplying us with medicine for free however, and they are in almost tip-top shape now. Brianna named "hers" Boston, short for the Red Sox, and Maya named hers "Baby." Baby is slightly more outgoing than Boston at the moment, and Brianna enjoys cradling him and toting him around like a child. He loves the attention and she loves the fact that he allows her to lug him around. They both have Siamese in them and purr, talk and play a lot. They are also natural fetch and retrieve cats, playing fetch with no training and bringing toys right back to the thrower.

On to our other little love muffin, Maya. She is healthy at the moment with the exception of some out of range labs that we are investigating. Her stomach "G-tube" was accidentally yanked out by me one night in late December when I grabbed her by the front of her pajamas in her crib to pull her up to change her. I felt and pop and she cried for about 20 seconds. Of course I rushed her into our bedroom, opened the pajamas and found the mushroom end of the tube now outside of her body. Victoria called the GI doc on duty and he said not to worry, it might leak a bit for a few days but should close right up. It did not leak and did close right up and we were able to avoid the cost and trauma of sedating her again to have it removed by her GI doc, which was scheduled for January 16. She was so relieved to have it out and still proudly lifts up her shirt, points to the tube wound and says, "Gone - Happy!"


She has had a few bouts with sinus infections since the last post but is clear right now. She also has had several episodes of nosebleeds, similar to a pattern that Brianna had and still occasionally does. My solution is to give her some Nasonex nightly during the dry air months and keep a humidifier on in their room - works 100%.

In other news I have been unemployed since December 19 and we have gone into tight budget mode. The kids are down to two days a week at daycare, the minimum to keep a slot open there. I take care of them the rest of the week all day except for Brianna in the afternoons with Kindergarten. I hope this is very temporary as they deserve the peer interaction and the professional structure and projects at the daycare facility, but work in my computer field is hard to come by and devalued to 1/3 the wages I could get a few years back. At least I am not alone as many others are in far worse shape in this new "near-Great Depression."

We also have Victoria's brother Ryan staying with us in Maya's former room. The girls now share Brianna's room and they enjoy Uncle Ryan's attention. Ryan will be attending courses at Northwest Community College this semester and is doing that unenviable twenty-something process of figuring out what to do with his life. Unfortunately for him and his generation, the opportunities are poor right now. Hopefully by the time he lands a degree the prospects will be much brighter!

Brianna, Maya, Victoria and I along with Nicole, Eiko, Savannah and Jake are being taken to Disneyworld at the end of the month for 4 days by Grandpa Jack! Brianna is so excited! We looked up which rides she can ride at the Magic Kingdom and Epcot and she is tall enough for all of them - the requirement is 40" and she is 46" - woo hoo! She even can ride Space Mountain and she is mega excited to try roller coasters! We hope for good weather and no illness in anyone for the duration of the trip.

The next post should either be about Disney or about the results of Maya's latest rounds of tests to figure out her abnormal lab findings.

Here's to hope and peace starting January 20!

-Chris