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My son had a couple ABRs but they didn't have to put him under general

anethesia. They used an oral sedative to put him in a deep sleep. It worked

well. Perhaps they're not doing that because of his age? had his ABRs

in the first year of his life. He did have general anethesia for his CI

surgery and we were lucky that was first thing in the morning so we didn't

have to keep him from the food and drink too long. I would suggest just

varying the routine that day to distract him. If you usually get up and eat

breakfast then maybe instead go for a walk or drive to the mall or do

something to keep him busy and not thinking about food. Does he like a

pacifier? That might keep his mouth busy.

Kearns

's mom, 2 yrs old, CI 7/30/02

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My son had a couple ABRs but they didn't have to put him under general

anethesia. They used an oral sedative to put him in a deep sleep. It worked

well. Perhaps they're not doing that because of his age? had his ABRs

in the first year of his life. He did have general anethesia for his CI

surgery and we were lucky that was first thing in the morning so we didn't

have to keep him from the food and drink too long. I would suggest just

varying the routine that day to distract him. If you usually get up and eat

breakfast then maybe instead go for a walk or drive to the mall or do

something to keep him busy and not thinking about food. Does he like a

pacifier? That might keep his mouth busy.

Kearns

's mom, 2 yrs old, CI 7/30/02

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My son had a couple ABRs but they didn't have to put him under general

anethesia. They used an oral sedative to put him in a deep sleep. It worked

well. Perhaps they're not doing that because of his age? had his ABRs

in the first year of his life. He did have general anethesia for his CI

surgery and we were lucky that was first thing in the morning so we didn't

have to keep him from the food and drink too long. I would suggest just

varying the routine that day to distract him. If you usually get up and eat

breakfast then maybe instead go for a walk or drive to the mall or do

something to keep him busy and not thinking about food. Does he like a

pacifier? That might keep his mouth busy.

Kearns

's mom, 2 yrs old, CI 7/30/02

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,

I completely understand your fears. If this helps at all, my son is 2 1/2 now

and has had two ABR in Cinn.(2 hours away from us). Plus they tried to do the

first one with just giving him a sedative, it didn't work. My son did great

going under, I will tell you the first time it is hard to watch (if they allow

you in the room). However, it was well worth it, to know for sure what level he

was hearing at. As for suggestions on making him comfortable, what I did was

keep my son up for as long as he could stand it, so that he could actually eat

past his normal time. His normal bed time is around 8, so around 10 he was

hungry again. Then the next morning (which is the hardest) I made sure not to

drink or eat anything in front of him (I actually didn't eat or drink anything

either, I felt it was only fair). Although my son was somewhat crabby during

the drive he was fine before we left and once we arrived. I should tell you

though he hates riding in the car. Yes, if the anthes. thinks it is not safe,

he will not do it. They will do a short physical before the actual ABR, to

check lungs, heart, etc. They are actually very careful.

I hope this helps..

Cyndi two sons 14 and 2 1/2 progressive profound

nervous about ABR

We went ahead with our third opinion, and Sam (18months) is having an ABR

done tomorrow morning at the Cleveland Clinic.

I'm happy that we are moving forward, but now very nervous about the

procedure. It will be done under general anesthesia. I'm nervous because

of Sam's dramatic medical history (malaria, seizures), lack of medical

history (no birth history) and just in general not liking the idea of my

baby being under! I'm sure there are many who know what I mean. (The

audio told me if the anesthiologist has any doubts about doing the

procedure, he won't. That did make me feel better)

The no food or drink after midnight rule will be very hard on Sam as well;

his nighttime bottles of water are a major comfort for him, and he still

throws a major fit if he gets just a little bit hungry (I'm sure because he

spent so much of his first year of life very hungry).

Any advice on making things easier for him tonight and tomorrow?

Thanks,

Mom to Gabe, age 4

Sam, 18 months

All messages posted to this list are private and confidential. Each post is the

intellectual property of the author and therefore subject to copyright

restrictions.

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,

I completely understand your fears. If this helps at all, my son is 2 1/2 now

and has had two ABR in Cinn.(2 hours away from us). Plus they tried to do the

first one with just giving him a sedative, it didn't work. My son did great

going under, I will tell you the first time it is hard to watch (if they allow

you in the room). However, it was well worth it, to know for sure what level he

was hearing at. As for suggestions on making him comfortable, what I did was

keep my son up for as long as he could stand it, so that he could actually eat

past his normal time. His normal bed time is around 8, so around 10 he was

hungry again. Then the next morning (which is the hardest) I made sure not to

drink or eat anything in front of him (I actually didn't eat or drink anything

either, I felt it was only fair). Although my son was somewhat crabby during

the drive he was fine before we left and once we arrived. I should tell you

though he hates riding in the car. Yes, if the anthes. thinks it is not safe,

he will not do it. They will do a short physical before the actual ABR, to

check lungs, heart, etc. They are actually very careful.

I hope this helps..

Cyndi two sons 14 and 2 1/2 progressive profound

nervous about ABR

We went ahead with our third opinion, and Sam (18months) is having an ABR

done tomorrow morning at the Cleveland Clinic.

I'm happy that we are moving forward, but now very nervous about the

procedure. It will be done under general anesthesia. I'm nervous because

of Sam's dramatic medical history (malaria, seizures), lack of medical

history (no birth history) and just in general not liking the idea of my

baby being under! I'm sure there are many who know what I mean. (The

audio told me if the anesthiologist has any doubts about doing the

procedure, he won't. That did make me feel better)

The no food or drink after midnight rule will be very hard on Sam as well;

his nighttime bottles of water are a major comfort for him, and he still

throws a major fit if he gets just a little bit hungry (I'm sure because he

spent so much of his first year of life very hungry).

Any advice on making things easier for him tonight and tomorrow?

Thanks,

Mom to Gabe, age 4

Sam, 18 months

All messages posted to this list are private and confidential. Each post is the

intellectual property of the author and therefore subject to copyright

restrictions.

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On Thursday, October 17, 2002, at 09:38 AM, Schreiner wrote:

> The no food or drink after midnight rule will be very hard on Sam as

> well;

> his nighttime bottles of water are a major comfort for him, and he

> still

> throws a major fit if he gets just a little bit hungry (I'm sure

> because he

> spent so much of his first year of life very hungry).

>

> Any advice on making things easier for him tonight and tomorrow? 

>

================

Hi ,

My best advice, having been through several sedated ABRs with my two HI

boys, is to be comforting to Sam, but have a lot of quiet mental

resolve. Yes, it's hard to see your little one so unhappy and not be

able to console him with exactly what he wants, but if you put it into

perspective, it's really for one day, and the long-term benefit is more

than worth it. Of course you can't explain that to him, but keep that

in your head, and it will at least help you through the day. And if

you're calm and comforting, he'll be just fine through it.

I will never forget Ben's ABR and horrific real ear measurament at 3

months of age, nor a couple of 's sedated ABRs when he just had

more will than the sedation they gave him. NOT fun days! But when you

get through those tough first ones, future evals become a piece of

cake. When Ben, who's almost 8 now, did his first pure-tone test by

raising his hand a couple of years ago, I just beamed and realized how

far we'd come since those first few miserable times in the sound booth.

Best of luck to you guys...you'll get through tomorrow just fine, and

just keep focusing on the future.

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On Thursday, October 17, 2002, at 09:38 AM, Schreiner wrote:

> The no food or drink after midnight rule will be very hard on Sam as

> well;

> his nighttime bottles of water are a major comfort for him, and he

> still

> throws a major fit if he gets just a little bit hungry (I'm sure

> because he

> spent so much of his first year of life very hungry).

>

> Any advice on making things easier for him tonight and tomorrow? 

>

================

Hi ,

My best advice, having been through several sedated ABRs with my two HI

boys, is to be comforting to Sam, but have a lot of quiet mental

resolve. Yes, it's hard to see your little one so unhappy and not be

able to console him with exactly what he wants, but if you put it into

perspective, it's really for one day, and the long-term benefit is more

than worth it. Of course you can't explain that to him, but keep that

in your head, and it will at least help you through the day. And if

you're calm and comforting, he'll be just fine through it.

I will never forget Ben's ABR and horrific real ear measurament at 3

months of age, nor a couple of 's sedated ABRs when he just had

more will than the sedation they gave him. NOT fun days! But when you

get through those tough first ones, future evals become a piece of

cake. When Ben, who's almost 8 now, did his first pure-tone test by

raising his hand a couple of years ago, I just beamed and realized how

far we'd come since those first few miserable times in the sound booth.

Best of luck to you guys...you'll get through tomorrow just fine, and

just keep focusing on the future.

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& Cyndi-

Thank you for all the wonderful advice!

We will certainly keep Sam awake as long as possible. We'll need to leave

our house at about 7:30am, so I'm hoping he'll stay asleep and we can

transfer him, in jammies, to the car. My mom is going to take our 4 year

old tonight, because he has a very hard time seeing/hearing his brother

upset, and I suspect Sam's going to be pretty mad come 3Am when he wants a

bottle of water!

I'm hoping this goes better than his EEG earlier this year. That was

terrible because he had to be sleep-deprived, and it took forever to put

all those electrodes on his head. They had to eventually cocoon him to

keep him from pulling them off. He was so upset during that test that he

vomitted on me twice.

I am very glad that we should have some answers tomorrow morning; I never

would have known to ask for this test, if not for this list. Thank you!

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& Cyndi-

Thank you for all the wonderful advice!

We will certainly keep Sam awake as long as possible. We'll need to leave

our house at about 7:30am, so I'm hoping he'll stay asleep and we can

transfer him, in jammies, to the car. My mom is going to take our 4 year

old tonight, because he has a very hard time seeing/hearing his brother

upset, and I suspect Sam's going to be pretty mad come 3Am when he wants a

bottle of water!

I'm hoping this goes better than his EEG earlier this year. That was

terrible because he had to be sleep-deprived, and it took forever to put

all those electrodes on his head. They had to eventually cocoon him to

keep him from pulling them off. He was so upset during that test that he

vomitted on me twice.

I am very glad that we should have some answers tomorrow morning; I never

would have known to ask for this test, if not for this list. Thank you!

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& Cyndi-

Thank you for all the wonderful advice!

We will certainly keep Sam awake as long as possible. We'll need to leave

our house at about 7:30am, so I'm hoping he'll stay asleep and we can

transfer him, in jammies, to the car. My mom is going to take our 4 year

old tonight, because he has a very hard time seeing/hearing his brother

upset, and I suspect Sam's going to be pretty mad come 3Am when he wants a

bottle of water!

I'm hoping this goes better than his EEG earlier this year. That was

terrible because he had to be sleep-deprived, and it took forever to put

all those electrodes on his head. They had to eventually cocoon him to

keep him from pulling them off. He was so upset during that test that he

vomitted on me twice.

I am very glad that we should have some answers tomorrow morning; I never

would have known to ask for this test, if not for this list. Thank you!

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