Sunday, April 17, 2011

Why I Hate Mondays

A tough little broad.  That's my Maddie (sorry, Madison as she now prefers...she's 4...really?).  This is a little girl who's been a puker since day one.  Quite literally, my daughter has tossed her cookies more in her 4 short years than I have in 34.  It's gotten to the point where she's completely comfortable with it, moves on like almost nothing has happened until the next round.  So have I.  I've got catching vomit in my hands, closest waste bin and getting it out of sheets at 2a.m. down to a science.

However, when my daughter threw up 9 times between 7:45a.m. and 9:45a.m. on Monday morning, once including blood (sorry, gross I know, but as I said, I'm used to this) I was more than a little worried.  My little girl came stumbling out of her room in the morning, so dizzy she couldn't see straight, walking into walls and collapsing repeatedly in the 30 steps it took to make it to my room, where I sat watching in shock.  The first stumble I figured was just Madison getting up too quickly from her slumber.  The second I thought she was being a typical 4 year old goofing around saying "I'm dizzy Mommy".  That's when the vomiting began and didn't end.

After a quick call to her Dad (a Paramedic who was at work at the time) I decided to pack her into the car, Boo Bear and puke bucket in hand, and head to the Children's ER.  Thankfully, we have an incredible children's hospital and ER here.  

Madison lays with Boo Bear in my lap as we sit in the waiting room of the ER.  

We waited a short while before being assigned a bed and getting assessed by the nurses, then a doctor shortly after.  After a white grape popsicle and a few sips of blue Gatorade, which promptly saw the light of day in reverse, they wanted to see her walking.  That didn't go very well.  Laying down, Madison was the picture of health.  Laughing, playing, smiling.  

Madison happily displaying the surgical glove balloon animal provided by Ollie, the resident clown of the children's ward.
Any sort of elevation of her head and she spiraled downward immediately.  She (to quote the doctor) "walked like a drunken sailor".  Her stomach rejecting absolutely everything, coupled with the intense dizziness when upright concerned her.  So, in went an IV.  Dear Lord I never, ever want to watch my child go through that again.

The absolute terror in her eyes, watching the nurses (who asked me before the procedure began if I was ok to stay with her or if I thought I might need to leave...seriously???  Who the HELL would LEAVE their 4 year old to suffer through that alone????) poke into her tiny vein...wait no, they missed it...wiggle, ah...got it.  That was horrible.  I swear that I almost saw the needle poke straight through the back of her hand.  But, it didn't and the nurses (2 of them) secured a line in and made a "bed" for her hand.

Tiny hand, lots of tape.  The little sticker said "You did it!".  I don't think that made her feel better about it.
She was on an IV drip for a couple of hours which helped, but didn't completely work.  After needing to get a urine sample (let me tell you how much fun that was) and her collapsing into my arms again, even after being re-hydrated, the doctor suggested (reluctantly) that we do a CAT scan to rule out any sign on brain injury or the like.  Oh, ok, sure.  No problem.  I'm sorry, WHAT???  My 4 year old, who was running around the Home Show dipping her fingers into the hot tubs on display, playing on the giant playground and jumping on the trampoline just the day before, has to be strapped onto a slab, moved into a giant rotating camera that is loud and fast and scary to any grown up.  Yep, sign her up.

She was amazing.  Scared at first, but sang songs with the nurse by her side (even corrected her on some of the lyrics) while I had to wait on the other side of the door that felt like it had to be 600 feet away (though it was only about 10).  I've never had one done, but my 4 year old is now a pro.  Something is wrong with that.  

Thankfully everything looked just fine.  Ok, I can breathe now.  Can we go?  Not quite.  Madison still hadn't eaten or walked normally and it was now about 4:30.  After the CAT scan, they filled her full of popsicles and had me do laps with her around the floor (IV pole in tow).  Diagnosis?  Possible inner ear infection which is a viral thing so there's nothing that can be done about it.

So, after a day filled with drama, laughter, terror, relief and an unheard of number of earned stickers for bravery, we were allowed to leave.  WE WERE ALLOWED TO LEAVE!!!  I can't say the same for other families nearby.  One had a son who's left lung was almost completely filled with fluid, another was a regular renal patient, yet another was an Amish boy of 3 who somehow came into contact with kerosene.  

We pulled into the driveway around 7:00p.m. to find my husband and 2 year old son waiting for us and waving.  Madison didn't know it as she'd finally fallen asleep (and stayed asleep until 7:30 the next morning).  It was so sweet to open the car door to see Brayden RIGHT at his big sister's side saying hi repeatedly and watching every move Daddy made while getting her out of the car and up to her bed.

(Did I mention that my son had such a major panic attack...a 2.5 hour attack...that his grandfather had to call my husband home from work so he would start to breathe in a regular pattern again?)

So, that was my Monday.  How was yours?

By the way, she was about 98% better by 3:00p.m. on Tuesday and back to school on Wednesday.  I've always said kids are like Tigger, they bounce.

 

1 comment:

  1. MADDIE! Sorry...MADISON! So glad to hear our little spark plug is back on the mend. Like I said, you guys are great parents!

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