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If September 20, 2003 had been a weekday, my story would have
turned out differently. If I had been at work, busy, I wouldnt
have noticed that she had stopped kicking. I was 30 weeks pregnant,
and was told I was having a textbook (normal) pregnancy. So that
day, Saturday, September 20th, I was sitting on the couch at home
being lazy. By mid-afternoon I noticed that I wasnt feeling
the usual kicks and tumbles in my belly, and I called my OB. The
doctor on call told me to come up to the hospital just to check
it out and "better to be safe than sorry."
We went to the hospital at about 6 pm, and they took the babys
readings. The next thing I knew, there were about 15 people in the
tiny triage room. They told me that they would have to do an emergency
c-section. I, of course, got hysterical. I was only 30 weeks pregnant!
I had been reading about fetal development and I knew that the baby
wasnt done growing. The c-section happened SO fast. Eliza
Allyn was delivered by 7:01 pm and weighed 2 lbs., 10 oz. They showed
her to me for one secondall wrapped up in a blanket. Her face
was pink, and she looked small but healthy to me. The doctors told
me that if I had waited until my regular appointment (2 days later),
she wouldn't have made it. As tiny as she was, Eliza gave me a signal
that she needed to be born, and stopped kicking.
Eliza was rushed to the NICU, and I was sent to recovery. My husband
went down to the NICU alone during the night to see her because
I couldnt move yet. He returned to my room and said that the
doctors could barely look him in the eye. Eliza had a lung bleed
and a brain bleed some time during that night. But 30-weekers usually
have good outcomes, so we were hopeful. They said the next 24 to
48 hours were very critical.
I guess she was really tough
after that first day she stabilized
and then made nothing but progress. Elizas doctor called her
the perfect preemie. My placenta was sent to a pathologist,
who discovered that I had a severe Maternal Floor Infarction, meaning
that the placenta had essentially clotted and died, so that Eliza
was getting no nutrition from it.
For the next month, Eliza lived in the NICU, and we visited her
every day. Each day the nurses told us how much she ate and how
many grams she gained. After 4 days, I got to hold her and cuddle.
I didnt want to let go. It seemed like forever until she came
home with us. On October 21, 2003, Eliza finally came home, weighing
4 lbs., 4 oz.
Last month Eliza turned 1! She is over 20 pounds now, cruises the
furniture, says words like bubbles and ladybug
and is perfectly healthy. It is because of the March of Dimes and
their research on prematurity that Eliza thrived in the NICU, and
that next time I am pregnant, we can take steps to prevent another
premature birth.
Dana
Make a donation
in honor of Eliza.
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