We came home from the hospital around 8:30 pm last
night. The procedure went well, but we
had some good news and some bad news.
The tubes are giving him a lot of problems, but they are what keep him
alive right now and they can’t be removed until he is more healed
internally. After the procedure, Samuel
was still in a lot of pain. I was pretty
frustrated yesterday and Dr. Kozar had the specialist who does all these kinds
of surgeries come by and talk with us. I
didn’t understand what was going on, so he drew a diagram and explained it in
detail. A while back, Samuel had a
tube that eroded a hole into his intestines, which was a new problem to work
through. They replaced that tube with a
smaller, softer tube. Well, now the
smaller tube worked its way into his bladder and out the other side. So, now he has additional problems and it
will take additional time to heal. They
can’t pull the tubes out because that would leave big holes. The plan is to keep downsizing the tubes
smaller and smaller and letting the wounds close around the tubes little by
little. It will take a lot of time. He will go back to the hospital in 4-6 weeks
(if nothing new happens) and they will downsize the tube again. It will be kind of big deal because they will
be replacing four tubes that day and the procedure will take most of the
day. I really like this doctor a lot and
I trust that he has Samuel’s best interest at heart. The human body doesn’t like foreign objects
and it resists and fights things that should be in there. Sometimes the tubes migrate to places they
shouldn’t be and that creates more problems, like in the case of Samuel’s
tubes. There are so many problems so
close together that to correct one, you sometimes compromise another. The seatbelt caused a lot of damage, but
without the seatbelt he would have never survived.
As far as the pain problem goes, the doctor explained that
Samuel is in a tremendous amount of pain (even when he doesn’t want us to
know). He said that to sedate him enough
to replace the one tube yesterday, the amount of drugs needed would have put
two elephants to sleep. He said that
because we can’t take the tubes out, the pain will continue and we will have to
deal with that for at least six more weeks, maybe longer. The new pain management plan is that he will
stay on pain meds constantly, not letting them wear off. Over time, the medicine will start become
less effective and at that time they will increase the dosage. They don’t want to increase the dosage now
because they know we will have to do that a little later. So…..today we remind ourselves that in just a
few days it will be four months post-accident and Samuel is alive and that is a
miracle. We pray for the pain to be
managed and healing to be swift. We pray
that no new problems arise and that those tubes stay exactly where they should
be and doing their jobs. We pray for
peace and strength.
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