Birth Story - 37 weeks pregnant
I
am in the minority of women that have rh negative blood type. It’s not
such of a issue during the first pregnancy, but if the first baby has
positive blood type and some of baby’s blood got mixed with my blood
during delivery then my blood would see that blood type as a foreigner
and start to produce antibodies against that positive blood. Which is
why I got the rhogam shot within 72 hours after having Kiana and at 28
weeks pregnant, to prevent that. But after the rhogam shot with this
pregnancy my antibody levels kept rising, so the doctors wanted me to
get an ultrasound, at 37 weeks pregnant, with a specialist to make sure
baby wasn’t becoming anemic.
The ultrasound took a while. First a tech did the ultrasound and then
the doctor did it too. The technical/medical part of it I don't
understand. Then the doctor took us into his office to discuss the
results. I still hadn't gotten an indication that they found anything.
The doctor compared both his results and the tech's results (they did a Doppler ultrasound to look at the blood flow in the baby to check for
anemia) to a chart and explained (although I really couldn't follow all
that he was saying) that baby could be borderline anemic. His results
were lower than the tech's. What concerned him, and with discussing
with my doctors prior to my appointment, was that my antibody levels
kept going up. Prior to my rhogam shot at 28 weeks my antibody levels
were at 1, then after the rhogam shot they went up to 8, then 3 weeks
later 16. Rhogam is supposed to make the antibody levels go down, not
up. This meant that my negative blood was producing antibodies against
baby, although we had no way to know what baby's blood type was at this
point but most likely positive since both Tim and Kiana have positive
blood. The antibodies could cause anemia in baby. The doctor was
concerned that if I waited another week or two to go into labor that my
antibody levels would continue to go up putting the baby even more at
risk. Severe anemia could cause heart failure and/or require a blood
transfusion.
Since
I was already full-term the doctor thought it would be best to induce
me. To admit me upstairs right then and have the baby. He just wanted
to be safe. That's when my head started spinning. We didn't expect
that. From that point on it was a whirlwind and I felt completely
unorganized. We asked the doctor if we could be alone a minute to
talk. Ultimately it was our decision. We prayed, we cried, we talked.
I wasn't actually worried about baby. I was more worried about how
long we might have to be there, worried about Kiana, not knowing if our
friends or the baby-sitter could watch Kiana for how-ever long. I just
had so many questions spinning around in my head. And the thing was was
that we had NO CELL PHONE RECEPTION to make calls before we made a
decision. Everything was just happening so fast. But in the end we
knew it would be best to have the baby then.
We
told the doctor that yes, we would go ahead and stay, but that we had
to make some phone calls first. He said I could do that from the labor
and delivery unit and they wheeled me upstairs, got me in a room, and in
a gown. The nurse came in and started asking me all of these
questions, while Tim was trying to get a hold of our friends who were
watching Kiana for the day. I also wanted to call the babysitter to ask
if she would be available to watch Kiana for the weekend if our friends
could not. I also needed to call my mom to see if she could change her
airline ticket a.s.a.p. to watch Kiana since we had no clue how long
we might be in the hospital. While we were making the calls we kept
getting interrupted by the nurse to take vitals, blood, hook me up to
the monitors, etc, etc, and then the doctor came in. I finally just said
"Stop! Wait! Can we have a minute?! We feel really rushed into this and
we need to make some phone calls." So the doctor left and we were able
to make some phone calls. I was also concerned about Tim getting
dinner before we started all of this. Tim went down to the cafeteria
before it closed. After Tim came back the doctor came back in to talk
about induction and to check my cervix to see what type of drug they
would use for the induction. I was already 3cm dilated and thinned out
and having small contractions. ( I guess those braxten hick contractions
I was having on New Years did something.) The doctor said all I would
need was pitocin for the induction. Before they started me on pitocin
he wanted me to eat dinner first. By this time it was 7pm.
I
don't remember what time I was started on pitocin, maybe 9pm. I opted
for no epidural and just to see how it went pain-wise. There was a
pull-out bed in the room for Tim and he fell asleep after a while. I
couldn't sleep because the bed was uncomfortable and I was uncomfortable
with the IV in me, my blood pressure being taken every 30 minutes, and
monitors around my belly. Once I started feeling the contractions I
then had to pee every 1/2 hr, which I had to wake Tim to do so. The
contractions started getting uncomfortable maybe around 12:30am, but I
was still o.k. I don't know the time frame but I know at a point things
started happening pretty fast. I'm guessing maybe after 1am the
contractions were closer together and I had to start breathing through
them. The nurse checked my cervix and I was still only at 3 cm. I
decided I needed something for the pain. If I was still only at a 3
then who knows how long it would be. I considered an epidural but
decided to try the painkiller phentenol first. The nurse said that it
would just take the "edge off" and make me dizzy. I don't know if it
really did much. Within 20 minutes of giving it to me I suddenly felt
the need to push and so I called the nurse in and she checked my cervix
and I was suddenly dilated to 9 cm. It was time. The doctor, the
resident, and nurse were there, and the NICU team came in too in case
something was wrong with baby. I had 7 people in my room. I only
pushed a few pushes, definitely not as long as I did with Kiana, until
he came out. At one point the doctor told me to just do half pushes so
he didn't come too fast (yeah right lady).
He
was born stable and healthy at 2:47am (5-6 hrs after being induced) so
the doctor put him right on me. He didn't cry for long before he
latched on and started nursing. They had him stay on me for an hour
before they took to weigh and measure him. He weighed 7lbs 11oz, and
19.25in long.
Because
my placenta didn't come out when I had Kiana and I hemorrhaged, after
Scott was born I kept asking the doctor if my placenta had come out yet.
I had informed every doctor and nurse that had come into my room that
night about my placenta not coming out when I gave birth with Kiana
because I wanted them to be prepared and not wait too long. But with
Scott it came out. My recovery was a lot quicker and easier than it was
with Kiana. I didn't need an episiotomy and didn't tear, and I didn't
lose too much blood or require a blood transfusion, as I did with Kiana.
We
were told that we probably wouldn't get to go home until Monday. Scott
was stable and was able to stay in my room the entire time. Later that
day they took blood from him to check for anemia, etc. Everything was
normal. And his jaundice levels were very low. Early Sunday morning we
were told that we would be able to go home that afternoon.
Everything worked out and we are so thankful and feel so blessed.
Congratulations! Sorry it was sooner than expected but so glad everyone's healthy.
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