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Hello :

It makes me sad too that our little ones need major surgery. is 8,

however I remember her open heart surgery at 1 month old, for the same

condition, as if it were yesterday. I will carry Josh in my thoughts and

prayers.

Today is strong, despite the fact that the surgeons needed to remove

her pulmonary valve. She swims with assist, has the stamina for full time

school since she was three, runs, jumps, dances and plays. Her upper body

strength is weak, but she will pedal her adapted tricycle, rollerblade with

assistance, and loves to run hand in hand. She's up to 8 minutes of

running in PE!! An aerobic queen! Open heart surgery has come so far in

the last twenty years. Kids have wonderful outcomes. I know...I live with

one!!! Good Luck

Garewski

wife to Jeff, mom to Dan 14, Ali 11, and 8 CHaRGE

At 12:25 AM 8/31/1999 -0600, you wrote:

>

>

>Just wanted to let everyone know that Josh's heart cath on Thurs. went

>very well. He did lose a little bit of blood and so they gave him a

>transfusion but we left the hospital that same day. The cardiologist

>showed us the pictures from the heart cath and it was fascinating to

>actually see the problems he had with his heart. We have scheduled his

>surgery to do his tetrollogy repair for the middle of October. I almost

>feel like I should be preparing him (and me) for it in some way. Also,

>I just look at his beautiful little chest and know that soon he will

>have a big scar! :-( That is a small price to pay for having a heart

>that's fixed but it still makes me sad.

>

>mom to (7 mo)

>

>

>---------------------------

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In a message dated 08/30/1999 11:37:35 PM Pacific Daylight Time,

bryanorjenny@... writes:

> Also,

> I just look at his beautiful little chest and know that soon he will

> have a big scar! :-( That is a small price to pay for having a heart

> that's fixed but it still makes me sad.

>

,

Destiny did not have to have open heart surgery, but did have a PDA and

CoArch repair when she was 8 weeks old. The BIG incision is on her left side.

I was (and still am) eternally grateful her heart problems were fixed, but

the scar still makes me a little sad. I remember feeling very sad post op

when everything was fine, but my beautiful child was going to carry that scar

forever. Several months later it was obvious Destiny wasn't going to swallow

and the reflux was awful enough to need more surgery. Even before the surgery

I anticipated the sadness of never seeing Destiny's unscarred tummy again so

I made my husband take a whole roll of film just of her naked tummy so I'd

never forget what it looked like. Well, it's been over 6 years since the

heart surgery and more than 5 1/2 years since the g-tube and fundo and I

still look at those scars daily (I have to bathe and dress her). The tinge of

sadness is there, but so is the gratitude and pride of accomplishment that

she's made it through it all and remains a happy and HEALTHY kid.

, you have the right to mourn the loss of 's unscarred chest, but

those feeling will fade. In their place will be unending gratitude that he's

here for you to look at them!

Take Care!

(Destiny 6 1/2 CHARgE, Zachary 4)

NYC

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,

I think of 's scars as her beauty mark. If she didn't have the scars,

we wouldn't be able to enjoy her beauty. had the g-tube and fundo at

one month, PDA ligation at 3 months. Then she later had the pyloroplasty to

aid in the stomach emptying. The surgeon was able to cut in the same line as

the g-tube.

This year at age 12, we had to make a tough decision to correct her reflux.

Medications weren't working and she was wanting to eat every 1/2 hour for

relief. Her fundo was tight and intact which left us with the option of

having her esophagus disconnected from the stomach and reattached at the

intestine. I struggled with the fact that I was going to make a decision

that would leave my child as a tube feeder the rest of her life. I too

thought of her tummy and another scar. That thought sickened me especially

when he said that he couldn't cut through the existing scar he would need to

do a vertical cut to get to the organs that he needed.

But now that it is over, we realized what a positive change it was for her.

Not only is she no longer in pain from reflux, but her scar went from a

negative sign on her belly to a big ol' PLUS sign. We say that we sent a

negative tummy into the operating room and it came out positive.

The sadness of the scar will fade but the beauty will show forever.

Sheryl D, mom to Mitch 13, (turning 13 on Sept 11) CHARGE

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LJoyC@... wrote:

>

> From: LJoyC@...

>

> In a message dated 08/30/1999 11:37:35 PM Pacific Daylight Time,

> bryanorjenny@... writes:

>

> > Also,

> > I just look at his beautiful little chest and know that soon he will

> > have a big scar! :-( That is a small price to pay for having a heart

> > that's fixed but it still makes me sad.

> >

>

> ,

>

> Destiny did not have to have open heart surgery, but did have a PDA and

> CoArch repair when she was 8 weeks old. The BIG incision is on her left side.

> I was (and still am) eternally grateful her heart problems were fixed, but

> the scar still makes me a little sad. I remember feeling very sad post op

> when everything was fine, but my beautiful child was going to carry that scar

> forever. Several months later it was obvious Destiny wasn't going to swallow

> and the reflux was awful enough to need more surgery. Even before the surgery

> I anticipated the sadness of never seeing Destiny's unscarred tummy again so

> I made my husband take a whole roll of film just of her naked tummy so I'd

> never forget what it looked like. Well, it's been over 6 years since the

> heart surgery and more than 5 1/2 years since the g-tube and fundo and I

> still look at those scars daily (I have to bathe and dress her). The tinge of

> sadness is there, but so is the gratitude and pride of accomplishment that

> she's made it through it all and remains a happy and HEALTHY kid.

>

> , you have the right to mourn the loss of 's unscarred chest, but

> those feeling will fade. In their place will be unending gratitude that he's

> here for you to look at them!

>

> Take Care!

> (Destiny 6 1/2 CHARgE, Zachary 4)

> NYC

,

I remember just before MacKenzie went in to have her G-tube I was very

teary and upset. My husband thought it was just the whole surgery thing

that bothered me, but I told him this would be the last time we'd see

her little belly without a tube in it, probably for several years. It

actually looks odd to me now to see a baby without one. MacKenzie has

the same scar under the arm for heart surgery, even though it wasn't an

open heart it left a huge scar, probably about 6in.

Jeanie Colp

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Subject: Re: heart cath

From: toby.c@... (Toby Colp)

LJoyC@... wrote:

>

> From: LJoyC@...

>

> In a message dated 08/30/1999 11:37:35 PM Pacific Daylight Time,

> bryanorjenny@... writes:

>

> > Also,

> > I just look at his beautiful little chest and know that soon he will

> > have a big scar! :-( That is a small price to pay for having a heart

> > that's fixed but it still makes me sad.

> >

, I understand how you are feeling. At first I was also sad because of

the big scar. But now, when I see a boy of Barts age, with no scar on his

chest, I think that there is missing something. I call the scar Barts zipper

and we make a sort of 'zipnoise' when touching it. Now, almost 3 years after

his surgery, it is so normal for us. I'm sure it will be normal for you too,

one day.

Good luck.

(monique@...)

Mom of Bart (1-8-96, charge) and Siebe (3-9-98/3-9-98, HLHS)

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Jeanie,

The procedure that I talked about to disconnect the esophagus is a very

radical procedure. In January when we visited the surgeon, my options were

to redo the fundo that according to the endoscopy appeared to be strong and

intact, or to do the disconnect. The disconnect was considered a

non-reversible surgery. It did mean that she would not be able to take food

by mouth because it would not go to the stomach for digestion. When I went

back for another consult, the Dr. said that in February it was in the New

England Journal of Medicine stating that they have been successful in

reversing a few of the cases. The procedure has a very high complication

rate (35% I believe). The esophagus does not stitch well I guess and a leak

can occur. This happens right away if it is going to happen.

I don't know how the Upper GI's are being done, but having the tube,

the doctors always put the barium in through the tube and the results were

always the same, no reflux. When the endoscopy showed that there was severe

esophagitus (sp), they put the barium down her throat. Doing it that way

showed that her esophagus muscles did not work therefore when she did reflux

the acids would sit in her esophagus and it was eating away at it.

It's not a surgery that I would recommend for everyone. But it is an option

after everything else fails to correct the reflux or ease the pain.

Sheryl D, mom to Mitch 13, & (turning 13 on Sept 11) CHARGE

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,

Aubree my daughter has had 3 open heart surgeries. She has

a very large scar. Hers keloid (sp), which is actually scar tissue.

But trust me, we are so very proud of that scar. She shows

it to everyone. We are just thankful that the surgeon that

did her surgery was around. Her last surgery was the hardest

for us. We were told that it was very dangerous because scar

tissue was probably on the heart which could cause bleeding

and may not stop. But the little trooper she is she fought all

the way. Remember, 's scar may disappear. My Mom

just went through open heart surgery in June and you can

hardly see hers. Someone also mentioned to get plenty of

sleep. Trust me, you will need a lot. The night before

Aubree's surgeries, I stayed up until 2:00 AM and had to

be at the hospital at 7:00 AM. After the surgeries we had

to be there because no one could sign to her. I was worn out

by 10:00 PM that night. It's easier said than done, but try

to get plenty of sleep because they will need you after the

surgery.

Wells

----------

>

> To: CHARGEonelist

> Subject: heart cath

> Date: Tuesday, August 31, 1999 1:25 AM

>

>

>

> Just wanted to let everyone know that Josh's heart cath on Thurs. went

> very well. He did lose a little bit of blood and so they gave him a

> transfusion but we left the hospital that same day. The cardiologist

> showed us the pictures from the heart cath and it was fascinating to

> actually see the problems he had with his heart. We have scheduled his

> surgery to do his tetrollogy repair for the middle of October. I almost

> feel like I should be preparing him (and me) for it in some way. Also,

> I just look at his beautiful little chest and know that soon he will

> have a big scar! :-( That is a small price to pay for having a heart

> that's fixed but it still makes me sad.

>

> mom to (7 mo)

>

>

> ---------------------------

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