Ok, so hero may be a little strong, but to me she is one. I honestly cannot find enough words to express my gratitude to Dr. Monti and all she did to help me and Jonathan get our two precious little boys! Almost 3 years ago we started trying to have a family and about 2 years ago we sought Dr. Monti’s help. She stuck with us for almost 2 years doing test after test, infertility treatments and then helped us through a not so perfect pregnancy. I saw her at least once, sometimes 2 or 3 times a month for almost 2 years straight…she even met us in her office on a Saturday afternoon to do an IUI treatment. If that’s not dedication, I don’t know what is! Every time I look at my babies I get a reminder of what she did to help us and I will forever be thankful.
Category Archives: Twins
Due Date
So today is Hayden and Ian’s actual due date, November 11, 2010. It was a date that was circled in red on the calendar for 9 months. But instead our boys are 3 weeks old today and I wouldn’t trade the last 3 weeks for anything.
It was a rough start for our little Hayden but he is now doing wonderful. In the last 3 weeks, we have learned a lot about our little bundles of joy. I love the little noises they make and how “talkative” they can be, especially Ian when it comes time for him to eat. They both love to fall asleep on your chest, Hayden more so than Ian. While Hayden is the better sleeper of the two, he does tend to take after his mom in that it takes him a while to fall back to sleep once he has woken up. Hayden and Ian are both very attentive little guys, they just look around and take it all in (well as much as a 3 week old can see). They are both getting little chubby cheeks and growing a little longer. We are learning their personalities and think that Hayden is going to be our little sensitive one, and the boy who wears his heart on his sleeve. While Ian will be our sweet but mischievous one. Ian will think of some trick to play on mom and dad but Hayden will come up with the plan and how to execute it…such teamwork. It will be interesting to see how their personalities will differ or how much they will be alike. We’ve learned a lot in 3 weeks but we have a lifetime to learn a whole lot more.Jonathan put together a video of the boys from their birthday till now…some of you may need a box of tissues, I teared up watching it. The song was written and performed by All Things New, AKA Aaron Lehmann. Enjoy!
Happy due date boys, but I’m glad you came into our lives when you did!
2 week check up
Hayden and Ian had their 2 week check up with the pediatrician this past Friday (11/5/10) and both boys are doing wonderful. This check up is primarily to make sure they are gaining weight and doing ok since coming home from the hospital. The doctor said what they want is for them to be back at their birth weight by the 2 week check up because most babies lose about 10% of their birth weight in the first week of life. Well our boys not only are back to their birth weight but have surpassed it. Hayden was 4lb 14oz at birth and at 2 weeks he weighed 5lb 8oz and Ian was 4lb 11oz at birth and 5lb 11oz at 2 weeks – he gained a whole pound! They had both been on a higher calorie formula for premature and low birth weight infants, so I guess that formula works like it should. Unfortunately Ian’s stomach hasn’t liked it too much so we have since switched him from that formula to a different brand high calorie formula and it was a little better but still not tolerating it that well. So we have since switched him back to the formula he was on in the hospital because he was tolerating that pretty well…so far so good but only time will tell. Hayden is now starting to do some of the same stuff that Ian was doing so we may be switching him as well….I just hope we can get the whole formula thing figured out soon so we’ll have our happy boys back again.
The pediatrician said that they both look healthy and that they have the strongest suck reflex she’s seen! she put her finger in their mouth to check it and they wouldn’t give it back to her, haha. Ian does have a heart murmur but it is nothing to worry about, it’s basically the same one I have. She said they would keep an eye on it and he’ll more than likely outgrow it. Ian also has something called Laryngomalacia which is just where the soft, immature cartilage around the larynx collapses when you breath in. It’s nothing really to worry about, it just sounds horrible when you hear him. He should outgrow that too by around 18 months. This is something that I’ve seen in many kiddos while working at Children’s. I pretty much decided what it was before we took him to the pediatrician but wanted her opinion on it and she agreed.
Both boys will go back at 2 months for another check up, and unfortunately shots. We’ve already got some questions to ask their doctor! As much as I know about taking care of babies and medical issues with infants, I’m still a first time parent and when it comes to my babies, it’s like I go dumb and forget all I know- haha.
Friends
Since the boys have been born we have been shown so much love from our friends and family. We have had delicious meals prepared for us and that alone has been a wonderful blessing to us. With two little mouths to feed every couple of hours our days fly by. We’ll look at the clock and it’s 8:00pm and we have no clue what to eat…then we realize we still have left overs from a meal that was brought to us the day before – Awesome! We have had a lot of visits from friends wanting to come see the boys, if they only knew how much they are already loved! I just wanted to take this opportunity to say thank you to all our friends and family for their love and support since we welcomed our little boys home a few weeks ago.
Here are just some of the friends/family that have visited us either in the hospital or at home.
For some reason we don’t have one picture with either of the boys and my dad or brother, Brian…we’ll have to take one soon!
Random cell phone pics
Over the last 2 weeks I have started a huge collection of random pictures from my cell phone. Usually cell phone pics will just stay in your phone and probably never be seen again, other than by you. Well, I may be a tad bit biased, but pictures, albeit from my cell phone, of my precious boys should not just sit in an album in my phone. What am I going to do about this…once a month, every few weeks or once a week (depending on how many I take) I’ll post these random pics to my blog. So here is the first installment of Random Cell Phone Pics…
Ian’s first car ride ~ he’s not sure what to think
Hayden’s first car ride ~ He’s not too sure either
Ian asleep on mommy ~ best time of the day!
Hayden asleep looking all cute…how can you resist that sweet boy!!
Ian trying to levitate while donning his Zoolander face
Hayden doing what he does best ~ covering his face with his hands
Ian sticking out his tongue ~ milk and all
Hayden chillin after a bottle
And lastly, the napping Blundy Boys
To help you put into perspective just how small our little ones are, the pacifiers in their mouths are the typical small newborn pacifiers from the hospital…they aren’t supposed to take up half of their face.
Other than sleeping, eating and chillin, there’s not much a 2 week old does…So, while these are very interesting pictures to me, they may be kind of boring for all of you…sorry. They will get more interesting as they get older, I promise they won’t all be of them napping and laying around.
Happy Halloween
Hayden and Ian want to wish you all a Happy Halloween
Hayden’s NICU story
Our little Hayden had a rough go at the beginning of his life. He and his brother were born right at 37 weeks, which technically considered full term for twins. They were diagnosed with intrauterine growth restriction the day they were born…they had basically stopped growing in the womb and it was time to get them out.
When they were born they were very small for their gestational age (4lbs 14oz and 4lbs 11oz) and when you mix that with the fact that they were born right at 37 weeks (37 weeks is the cut off for being premature), they had some of the issues a premature infant or an infant with low birth weight would have.
Within about 10 minutes of his birth he started showing some signs of respiratory distress.
He was grunting, retracting (where the space in between/below his ribs sucks in with each breath) and breathing somewhat fast. Ian was doing a little of this as well, but not as bad.
After we got to see them and hold them for a few minutes they took both boys to the nursery to be assessed and observed. It is normal for infants to go through a “transition” phase after birth and most infants do fine with this while some, especially those in the situation as our boys, don’t do as well. They had a more difficult time getting rid of the fluid in the lungs and this is what they suspected was the problem with Hayden and Ian.
Within 6 hours of birth, the pediatrician decided that it would be best for him to be in the NICU, even if it was just overnight to be observed. So the nurse brought him to my room so we could see and hold him again before being taken to the NICU. It was so good to see him and hold him, that was my first time to hold Hayden.
Ian, on the other hand, was doing great at this point, he had made it through the transition phase and breathing much better. He did have low blood sugar at birth but after feeding him it resolved. He had to have his blood sugar checked before he ate the next three feedings, per protocol, and those were great.
Later that night Ian was released from the special are nursery to the regular newborn nursery and was finally able to come be with us.
When Hayden was taken to the NICU they did a chest xray which showed some signs of premature lungs. He was placed on oxygen and a tube was placed in his mouth that went into his stomach which was “venting” air from his stomach…this helps with difficulty breathing sometimes.
The next morning (Friday) I was finally able to get out of bed and hobble into a wheelchair so Jonathan could take me down to the NICU to see our boy. By this time, he was no longer on oxygen. When I got in there and saw him, I immediately knew he needed to be back on the oxygen….I’m a respiratory therapist and this is what I do for a living.
I worked in a NICU and with babies just like mine. He was working too hard to breath, he was grunting and breathing way too fast (about 70-80 times a minute).
The doctor came over and talked to us to give us an update, one which I took with a grain of salt since everything he said went against everything I knew was wrong. He said Hayden looked great and will start to bottle feed him later that day.
The whole time he was talking I was thinking, “what baby are you looking at? My baby is the one right in front of you that’s showing signs of respiratory distress and needs to be back on oxygen… but most certainly should not be fed by a bottle because he’s breathing way too fast.”
By the time we went to see him Friday night he was back on oxygen and breathing even faster, and was moved into a different part of the NICU.
Saturday morning the nurse practitioner came to my room to give us an update on Hayden. She said when she went in to see him early that morning, he had started to require more oxygen overnight and was breathing way too fast, around 90-100. She got another chest xray and this time it showed a pneumothorax, which is where air leaks out of your lungs and into the space between your lungs and chest. He had a small to medium sized pneumothorax in his left lung and right lung.
The one in his left lung required a needle aspiration, which is where they insert a needle into his chest in between his ribs and the air leaks out. The one in his right lung was small enough that they didn’t need to do this.
After they do the needle aspiration they placed him under an oxyhood with 100% oxygen to help “seal” up the hole where the air was leaking out. An oxyhood is a plastic dome that looks like a bubble that goes around a newborns head. When they first put him in the oxyhood, they could only find a large size and it was way to big.
He likes to have his hands up by his face so he kept finding a way to get his hands up under the hood and by his face, which kept pushing the hood up and out of place. He was miserable with that thing on.
Later that night they found a smaller hood that actually fit him. This just made him mad because he couldn’t get his hands up by his face. Did I mention he loves putting his hands by his face! We called the oxyhood his astronaut helmet.
Sunday and Monday were pretty much the same for Hayden, his little body just had to heal and it takes time.
His chest xray on Monday morning showed that his pneumothorax’s were healing and he was doing better. He still had a high respiratory rate and still working hard to breath but he was doing better. Throughout all of this he was receiving formula through a tube into his stomach, since he was breathing too fast to bottle feed.
He remained in the oxyhood until Monday afternoon when he was able to be taken out and put back on a nasal cannula to receive his oxygen.
Not only was Hayden happy but Mommy and Daddy were happy to have him out of that hood because that meant we could hold him! And since myself and Ian were being discharged that day, it was great to get to hold my baby before going home…and knowing he won’t be as miserable.
It was also later that night, Hayden was able to be fed with a bottle… which he did with great skill!
Tuesday and Wednesday we were lucky to have two grandmothers who were willing and waiting to watch Ian at home so we could go visit with Hayden at the hospital. When we got their on Tuesday Hayden was still on the nasal cannula but didn’t have any oxygen on, just a little air flow to help with his work of breathing.
He was maintaining his oxygen saturations on room air so the doctor said we can take off the cannula. He remained doing well and the Dr. said he has to stay for 24 hours after being off oxygen for observation. He was trying to decide if he could come home on Wednesday or wait until Thursday.
We told him as much as we want him home, we would rather be safe and make sure he was ready to come home so it would be ok if he wants to wait until Thursday… he ultimately wanted to wait until Thursday too so we started getting everything ready for discharge on Thursday. He was still eating well from a bottle and that was another goal he had to meet to come home.
Wednesday we got to feed him, he got his circumcision, had his car seat test (babies have to have that to be discharged from the NICU to make sure they don’t get too stressed out being in a car seat) and he had his hearing test.
All of those went great and Thursday, one week after his birth, we got to go pick him up!!
We were so excited to get to pick him up and bring him home to be with us and his brother! He has been home for 2 full days and it is amazing to see how much he has changed in that short amount of time.
He is already more calm and realizes we aren’t out to get him. I’m hoping he knows that we aren’t going to hurt him and all we want to do is love on him and show him he is safe in our arms. The majority of the time he was in the NICU he was under a warmer and only had a diaper on. So he was not swaddled, dressed and I’m sure felt vulnerable. Now anytime we change his diaper or clothes, he kind of freaks out and likes to be wrapped up.
Having worked in a NICU, it wasn’t any of the medical stuff that got to me, I can handle all the tubes, wires, etc… even hooked to my child because I understand them and know what their purpose is. The thing that got to me the most was the fact that I couldn’t comfort Hayden when he needed it the most.
Seeing my child in this “bubble” crying and upset knowing I can’t do anything but touch his little hand to comfort him has to be one of the worst feelings I have ever felt before. Just typing this and thinking back makes me tear up (man those pregnancy/post pregnancy hormones are powerful).
Another aspect of having one child in the NICU and another in the regular newborn nursery is the guilt factor.
Knowing that one of your sons is getting so much attention and love that he is over stimulated and your other son isn’t even being held and in your hormonal mind thinking he feels like he isn’t loved. Needless to say it was very tough only getting to see Hayden a few hours a day while he was in the NICU.
I am so happy to have both my boys home and healthy and its crazy to see how much they have changed in a little over a week.
I love that my little Hayden went from this (sick and vulnerable) a week ago:
To this (safe, happy and secure with mom and dad):
Home Sweet Home
It has been a long day but we are finally all home and together for the first time. Hayden is finally all better and was discharged from the NICU today. Ian had an appointment with the pediatrician this morning so we brought him back home where there were two grandmothers waiting to watch him while we went to the hospital to pick up Hayden and bring him home. As I said in the previous post, I will post Hayden’s NICU story, I promise…it may just take me a while to get to it in between feedings x2, diaper changes x2 and trying to get some sort of rest.
The boys haven’t been together since they were born last Thursday so we were anxious to have them together again. And we were anxious to have both of our boys home and with us. It has been very hard and tiring for us having one baby at home and one still in the hospital. Getting up during the night with Ian and then going back and forth to the hospital during the day doesn’t leave you much time for rest. Then there’s the whole recovering from major abdominal surgery thing. It’s been 1 week since I had surgery and not much resting. Needless to say, we are glad Hayden is home and we can just focus on taking care of our boys now.
The boys finally got to be next to each other again and they were asleep. They have to get acquainted with one another again after being apart. We always joked while I was pregnant with them that Hayden (Baby A) was pushing Ian (Baby B) out of the way and was the bully because Ian was always curled up in a ball with little room. After seeing them respond to each other now our theory has changed. I think now, Hayden was just trying to get closer to his brother and by doing so, it pushed Ian out of the way. But that’s just a theory…we’ll never know for sure.
These are the moments I dreamed about during the entire pregnancy!
And this is one happy daddy!
Our Twin Boys are here!
Jonathan and I are happy to announce that on Thursday, October 21, 2010 at 2:36 PM Hayden James Blundell and Ian Christopher Blundell were born. Hayden weighed 4lbs 14oz and was 18 1/4 inches long & Ian weighed 4lbs 11oz and was 18 inches long.
We checked into labor and delivery about 11:30 AM and the nurse got me all hooked up to the monitor until they were ready to take me back to the OR for the c-section.
Jonathan was pretty anxious, nervous, etc before hand and wouldn’t sit down…he just kept walking around the room.
Once I was taken back to the OR they put in my epidural and got me all set up. Let me tell you, having an epidural is a weird feeling…not being able to move your legs/feet is just not right. They gave me something to “help with nerves” before the epidural…which I really didn’t want because I didn’t need anything like that, I was fine. Then they gave me some anti-nausea drugs since I was getting nauseous…so both of those combined made me kind of sleepy. I was trying not to fall asleep through the whole delivery.
It didn’t take them long and they were getting started. FYI…there are some graphic photos ahead and are not for those with a weak stomach.
And a few minutes later, the boys are here. first comes Baby A – Hayden….he was head down
Next came Baby B – Ian Christopher…he was footling breech (butt first)
The nurses took both boys to get them cleaned off, weighed, assessed, etc.
Jonathan got to put their first diaper on them and after he was finished the boys were crying and he put his hands on each of their chests and they suddenly stopped crying. It may have been a freak coincidence, but even if it was, it was still pretty cool!
They were both struggling a little bit to breath so we got to see them and hold them for a few minutes before they took them to the nursery for observation.
An instant family of 4!
This has to be one of the best moments of my life!! I’m holding our son and looking up at my husband holding our other son! When thinking back to everything I went through the last 2 years to get to this point….it was SOOO worth it!
While the boys went to the nursery to be observed, they finished putting me back together and then I went to recovery for about an hour and a half. Then I went up to a room. These pictures were taken by the boys’ Aunt Kara while I was still in recovery and the boys were in the nursery.
About 7:00 pm they brought Hayden to my room on his way up to the NICU and I got to hold him for the first time for a few minutes.
Hayden was having trouble breathing and they decided it was better to take him to NICU. They put him on Oxygen and watched him over night. More to come on his NICU stay in another post.
Ian’s blood sugar was low and he was having some trouble breathing too so they watched him in the nursery as well. At about 11:30 pm that night we got a big surprise and the nurse brought Ian to our room saying he was released from the observation and was ours to keep in the room. He was breathing much better and his blood sugar was stable. We kept him in our room for about 30 minutes holding him and when the nurse came back in we let her take him to the nursery for the night. We were completely exhausted and couldn’t keep our eyes open (and when I say we, I mean I).
So there you have it, the birth story of our two wonderful boys!
Amniocentesis
We got some good news the morning of our amnio at the perinatologists office. And, I say good news loosely because the other news isn’t great to hear but it is good news in another way. Still following me? Anyway, we had our amnio to test for the boys’ lung maturity Thursday AM at 9:30 and a c-section scheduled at 1:30 PM that same day, pending the amnio results. We had out growth scan done and the boys had gained a decent amount of weight in 4 weeks. Baby A (Hayden) had an estimated weight of 5lbs 5oz and Baby B (Ian) had an estimated weight of 5lbs 3oz. We also found out that Baby B had flipped, AGAIN, and was now breech again. I mentioned a while back that the hospital that I am delivering at won’t deliver twins via scheduled c-section until 39 weeks unless you had an amnio that showed the lungs were mature. Anyway, the perinatologist came in and said we shouldn’t have to do the amnio now because although the boys had gained weight, their weights had dropped from the 20th percentile 4 weeks ago to the 5th percentile. Based on that they had a diagnosis of intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) and that meant they needed to come out that day. The doctor said this was a “good” diagnosis in the sense that we didn’t need to do the amniocentesis, which put me and the boys at risk for several issues. Well, he called my OB and talked to her and she said to come on over to the hospital and we’ll continue with the c-section as scheduled. The boys would be here within 3 or 4 hours ~ CRAZY!
I’ll post more on the boys’ birthday a little later, but for now…I’m off to bed!