Saturday, April 30, 2011



Our Great Strides walk in Yorba Linda was today, and it was awesome! Our team, Go Gwena Go!, raised more than $5,135 for cystic fibrosis research. Gwena walked about half a mile and had a great time.


Thank you to everyone who came out to walk with us, and all those who raised money or made a donation to cystic fibrosis research! It really means a lot to us.



More pictures to follow!

Monday, April 11, 2011

Genius Baby!

Gwena had her 18 month checkup last week and they asked me if she could say 6-10 words. Ha! Try 32! Here they are:

mama
dada
uh oh
up
down
hi
bye
eyes
ears
toes
belly (bellybutton)
boom
dog
bear
bird
baby
book
ball
apple
milk
back (as in "put it back")
pee pee
poo poo
elbow
eyebrow
peeka (peekaboo)
Oui-Oui
Doudou
Mickey
blankie
cookie
keys

Of course there are a ton of words she can understand but not say, and a few she will repeat after I say them but never says on her own. So yes, that's right, I have a genius baby. ;P

Sunday, April 10, 2011

The End of our Clinical Trial

Well, we returned to Stanford and finally had Gwena's second pulmonary function test, or PFT. She is now done with her clinical trial, and has a real prescription for the study drug, hypertonic saline! Here are her PFT numbers for last year and this year:

last yearthis year
FVC, ml91%76%
FEV 0.5, ml80%81%
FEV 0.5/FVC88%106%
FEF 25, ml/sec76%97%
FEF 50, ml/sec59%103%
FEF 75, ml/sec56%73%
FEF 85, ml/sec57%11%
FEF 25-75, ml/sec57%96%

They told me for the ones that went down, they think she was closing her glottis and the result wasn't accurate. Most of the numbers went up! Yay!

Last year's report said, "Early obstructive changes at the small airway level and with evidence for air trapping."

This year's report says, "Fairly normal flows and volumes without evidence for obstruction."

YES!!!

We don't officially know yet whether we had the real hypertonic saline (7%) or the control drug, isotonic saline (0.9%), but I will be very surprised if they say she had the control.

Hypertonic saline is a pretty new treatment for CF (the study on it was published in 2006) and this is the first time it's been studied in kids under age 6. I think it's an amazing thing and I'm so glad Gwena was able to start on it at such an early age!

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Baby's First Lung Infection

The past couple of weeks have been pretty tough. About 5 weeks ago, Gwena developed a cough. She had a fever for about a day, then the cough seemed like it was getting better on its own, and then it got worse again. I called the CF clinic and they put her on amoxicillin for two weeks. The cough improved but didn't entirely go away.

On March 1st I spent the day packing for what was supposed to be our last trip up to Stanford for the ISIS clinical trial. That day Gwena had a runny nose, but no other symptoms. We drove up that night and the next day, her cough started to get worse. Thursday morning we starved and sleep-deprived her for her infant pulmonary function test, took her to Stanford, and found out that because her cough was so bad (the worst it's ever been, I'd say) and they heard wheezing in her lungs, they couldn't do the test.

They prescribed her a steroid (Prelone) and we started her on it right away. She finally got to sleep and eat and we decided we might as well head for home. As much as I had tried to avoid catching what she had, by this time I was also suffering from a stuffy nose. We drove about half way home, then stayed the night in a motel. The next morning we drove the rest of the way, straight to her CF clinic. They prescribed her a new antibiotic, Bactrim, and did a throat swab culture.

Three days later, on Monday, Jon left on a business trip to New York, and Gwena and I went to visit my folks. The steroids my poor baby was on turned her into a crazy little terror, but we still had fun and she got to spend some good time with her grandma. The clinic called me to let me know Gwena had cultured Moraxella catarrhalis, which should be sensitive to the Bactrim.

We're all home now, Gwena is off the steroids, and her cough has improved considerably, though it's still lingering. We have a new appointment for the pulmonary function test, on March 31st. Hopefully the M. cat will be gone by then!

Friday, February 4, 2011

EEG Results!

This update is late, but Gwena's EEG result was in on Tuesday, much faster than they said it would be! They said that it was perfectly normal!! We are so relieved to hear that, even though it means we may never know what happened last week. Her doctor said maybe it wasn't really a seizure, maybe it was just "well, I don't know." Thanks doc, that's very informative!

I've had an awful sinus infection this week, and Gwena has had a cough and had a fever on Wednesday. We're both doing a lot better now, but we had a tough week. We've been resting a lot and watching Fraggle Rock on Netflix streaming. Gwena now knows which button to press to start the next episode! She loves all the songs and for me the show brings back happy childhood memories. An episode is ending right now, and Gwena is dancing to the end credits song. So cute!

Friday, January 28, 2011

A Scary Thing Happened

On Tuesday Gwena woke up in the middle of the night and wouldn't go back to sleep. She rolled around, she talked to herself, for what must have been at least an hour or two before she finally went to sleep again. When she woke up in the morning, she was fussy. She rolled around on the bed next to me, seemingly still half asleep, fussing and fussing, like she sometimes does when she has gas.

All of a sudden I saw her body shudder. It was a cold morning, so I figured she was shivering with cold. I drew her to me and tried to warm her with my body and the blankets, and as I held her that shudder happened again. It was like her body made one big twitch. She started crying more and it happened again, and kept happening, every few seconds. I began shouting for Jon and throwing things at the bathroom door.

Jon got out of the shower and I told him what was happening. He took Gwena and I remember the terrible look on his face when he felt her body shudder. We threw clothes on, put Gwena in her car seat and left to take her to the emergency room. I sat beside her in the car and covered her with some blankets. She was staring out the window vacantly, but when I said her name she turned and looked at me. She didn't seem to be twitching anymore, and as we started to drive, she closed her eyes and fell asleep.

I called her pediatrician's office and spoke with a nurse there, who said Gwena was not in immediate danger and we could bring her to their office rather than the emergency room. We got the earliest appointment we could, for a few hours later, and went home to wait. Gwena woke up at home and I nursed her and fed her breakfast. She sat on the couch and I put her favorite video on, and she just stared at it, tired and out of it.

The pediatrician said it could have been a seizure, and ordered an EEG and referred us to a neurologist. She said it was a good sign that Gwena didn't lose consciousness and that she was alert and responsive while it was happening. She said that sometimes a child will just have one unexplained seizure and then never have one again. We hope that's all it is.

The rest of that day she seemed extra tired and fussy, but by the evening she was back to her normal self. Wednesday we went to CF clinic, where everything looked great and her weight was 20 lbs 15 oz. They increased her zantac and want more blood work to check her iron levels. Dr Y didn't seem concerned about the possible seizure when I told her, but then again she is a pulmonologist, not a neurologist.

Yesterday we took Gwena to CHOC for her EEG. We were told to not let her go to bed until 10 the night before, then wake her up at 6, and not let her nap until the test. She napped for 10 minutes during her saline treatment before I could finally wake her up again. She was alternating between out of it and fussy when we got there, then started screaming as the tech began attaching things all over her head. It was hard to see her so scared and upset.


When he was done he wrapped her head in gauze. Then I got to lie on the bed with her and she fell right asleep. They flashed a light at her for a couple of minutes, then turned it off. The test went on for a while and I almost fell asleep too! Gwena wasn't the only one sleep-deprived from getting up at 6am (an hour I prefer to ignore the existence of!)


At the end of the test we had to wake her up, which it turned out nothing but a cold washcloth could do. Poor baby! She didn't open her eyes, but began to cry and scream, then he removed the cloth and she conked out again.

The tech said it was a very successful test and we should expect results in 7-10 business days. Is it just me or is that a really long wait??

Friday, January 21, 2011

Words, Words, Words

Gwena has been learning new words all the time now. I'm so proud of her, but it's also been frustrating, because sometimes she'll learn to understand or say a new word, and then will refuse to cooperate when I try to show someone else. Or else she'll completely stop responding to the word the way she was. Like with "nose" for instance. It was the first body part word she understood; we asked where her nose was, and she grabbed it every time! But then she learned "eyes" and got very confused... now she'll point to her eyes when you ask for her nose, or point to her nose and say "eyes".

I need to get some videos of her talking and otherwise being really cute, but the memory on my camera (aka my phone) is currently full, so I'll have to delete some stuff and/or move the picture and videos to my computer first.

These are the words she can currently say or at least try to say, in no particular order:

mama
dada
uh oh
up
hello "eeyo"
bye bye "bah bah"
eyes "eyesh"
ears "eesh"
toes "doe"
dog "dah"
cat "kya"
boom "bao" (when she falls down)
bellybutton "buh"
book "bah"

She also understands a lot of words that she doesn't try to say. I don't think I can list them all but here are a few:

kiss
clap
wave
sit
dance
twirl
arms up
milkies (aka mama's milk)
mouth
teeth
baby

I'm sure there are more... maybe I'll add more later if I think of any.

It is so fun to hear Gwena talking and see her understanding and responding to things I say!