We arrived safety at Snowshoe Mountain here in West Virginia on Saturday, Feb 27. It is our first trip taking the whole family, including Brett. On the way up we stopped at Thomas Jefferson's Monticello, for a tour of the house and grounds. Grandpa has been wanting to visit there for 30 years and it just never worked out. Since we were driving right through Charlottseville on the way to Snowshoe (via Richmond), we made the stop. Mark has been studying the birth of our country all month in school, so even he was actually interested in the tour as well. He asked questions in almost every room of the house. Yesterday Mark had his first ever ski experience. He had a private lesson and did great! He did so well that his instructor couldn't believe it was really his first day ever skiing. She said his ice skating skills really transferred over to help him master the basic ski skills quickly. Oh, that and, he has no fear! He even said to us he didn't need lessons because he already knew how!
c
We've had a wonderful time so far and I have lots of great photos to share later but right now the ski trip fun has been cut short for me and Brett (and my father-in-law, Dick). Brett started having some respiratory distress soon after we got here, and I've been monitoring the situation, trying to decide if I should drive home to UNC or wait. This morning, though, each time I checked his sats (with my new fancy pulse oximeter!), the highest I could ever get was 80. In fact, when I was on the phone with the doctor, it was actually 75. He recommended we call and ambulance and get started on oxygen as soon as possible, then have them drive us to the nearest hospital. We did so, and after a few minutes on oxygen, Brett's color in his cheeks came back and he was achieving sats in the 92-95 range. The closest hospital is Pocahontas Memorial Hospital, where they took care of his acute needs, and all the routine stuff that we expect to be done for Brett when he comes in the hospital - oxygen, albuterol, chest x-ray, blood cultures, flu and RSV screens, etc. The people here are really nice, and although they do not have the facilities needed to continue proper care for Brett, they did fix him up and got him more stable. I was impressed with how quickly they were able to talk to our pulmonologist at UNC and how quickly they arranged for a transfer as soon as all their tests were done and Brett was feeling better. His chest x-ray showed a lot of inflammation - possibly infection - but since they didn't have a old x-ray to compare it to, they didn't know if it was baseline for him or not. But since last month's discharge and subsequent one-night stay at UNC, the chest x-ray then looked great. I am assuming this is a new inflammation/illness. He has already been started on the IV antibiotics decided on by our UNC doctor and the ER doctor here.
This afternoon we are being transferred to the Carilion Children's Clinic in Roanoke, Virginia. They preferred to bring their own neonatal specialized ambulance for the trip, so they are coming here to pick us up. It's about a 2 1/2 hour trip. I hope to be arriving there this evening. Rob and Mark (and Brittny and Gantt) will be staying at Snowshoe to finish out the vacation, while Dick will be traveling to Roanoke with me tonight. More updates to come!
Pocahontas Memorial Hospital
Marlinton, West Viriginia
A Little Oxygen always makes Brett happy!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
My poor sweet BB. I feel rotten. Would trade places with him in a heartbeat if I could
ReplyDeleteGlad you got to see Monticello - did you know that Brian used to be a tour guide there? It was back in our college days. I hope your current hospital stay is short-lived.
ReplyDelete-Shannon Fields