Posts made in December, 2008

With just a few pushes….

Grair Connor Meranda was born last night at 8:24 PM! Melissa started feeling contractions early Saturday morning, and we came to the hospital around 2:00 in the afternoon. At 5:15, the doctor broke Melissa’s water in order to speed up the process. It worked, and Melissa had to only push twice! Grair is a small baby, but the doctors are not concerned about his weight. A few small side effects of his weight are starting to show (lack of body...

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Oxygenless and at home

Grair is home! We were able to come home yesterday afternoon with Grair, and have begun to settle into life at home with two children (something we originally had planned to do three weeks ago). And after many doctor consultations, we are without oxygen! He looks just like a regular newborn coming home from the hospital, with a chest-long incision. The next few months will require a new level of detail with Grair’s recovery. More doctors...

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On the Right Path

Grair has been doing exceptionally well considering his heart condition two weeks ago. We are in the NICU working on feeding, and he is progressing nicely. The staff has come up with a world-renowned feeding pathway that Grair is working on. It is basically a combination of oral and tube feeds, with the plan of 100% oral feeds before releasing him. As it stands now, we are on the pathway to achieve this mid-week. However, anything can change....

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Movin’ On Up

Grair’s recovery has been moving in the right direction ever since the surgery. He has stayed strong and persevered through every significant milestone. Yesterday, another milestone was reached: moving out of the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). In a normal chain of events, Grair would have moved to the fifth floor. However since he is so small, he was moved back to the NICU. This was only done because the NICU staff is better trained...

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And it’s off!

The breathing tube is off! The doctors and nurses will continue to monitor, but so far there is no need or indication that Grair will require the tube any more. Since the tube is off, both Melissa and I were able to hold Grair for the first time since surgery.

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