Gastroschisis

(gas.tros.chi.sis) Support and Resources

Hi, my name is Jessica and my husband and I learned at 18 weeks pregnant that our baby had gastroschisis. They we’re unable to tell if the baby was a boy or girl due to all of the intestines and bowels in the way. Finally by amnio we found out our little baby was a girl.

They took Brooklyn 6 weeks early due to bowel dilation. She was born 4/27/01 at Baylor Dallas hospital weighing 5lbs 8oz.

She was on a vent for 1 day and spent 1 month in NICU until she could come home. Even though she has been hospitalized 7 times throughout her 6 years on this earth for pneumonia, asthma, rsv x 2 and influenza, she’s a happy, healthy, active beautiful girl.

We are currently having some issues with horrible constipation and her crying of stomach pain. She is on mirilax 1-2 times a day with not much relief. Today she had a CT scan to rule out obstruction or “kink” . She’s already had a scan a couple of years ago that showed malrotated gut and appendix up by the gallbladder but no obstruction.

This time the Dr. is more concerned because the miralax is not helping even when she was on it 3 times a day.

The CT tech came in in the middle of the scan today to call in the radiologist and said her stomach still had her breakfast in it from 7 hrs before and the barium was only through the small intestine, for her to walk around for 45mns to see if we could get it to the large intestine and they would rescan. Well when rescaned still no barium had moved.

We were sent home and now here I am stressing waiting for an answer. Has anyone else been through this with their gastroschisis baby or themselves? I wish I had found this board along time ago now I hope I can have some people to talk to that understand.

Thanks,

Jess

Apr-18-08

My son was born with Gastroschisis

Posted by Dean

My husband and I couldn’t be more thrilled to find out that we were having a baby. It was the most exciting time in our lives and to have our first born be a boy was even happier cause it’s exactally what we wanted.

I did everything a mother was supposed to do and then on the first visit that my husband couldn’t accompany me to an appointment I took along my mom.

Well we seen a different doctor than I normally did and he was great. He wanted to do a sonagram just to check how our boy was doing. Well he kept looking and not saying anything.

I was starting to get worried after 10 minutes of him looking in the same spot then he looked at me and said I believe there is something wrong.

Well he told us that he thought it was Gastroschisis but he wanted to send me to a specialist because we are from a small town and they don’t deal with that kind of stuff there.

The next week I went to a specialist who said they wanted to see me in their office in Albuquerque, NM next week.

Well my husband, my mom, and myself drove up to Albuquerque and the next day got horrible news. The doctor ran all kinds of tests, then she came in the room with me and my husband and said that it definitely was Gastroschisis and that we had a problem.

She looked at my husband and asked “Sir do you want your son?” My husband puzzled of course said “Yes, what do you mean?” She then told us that if they did not induce labor now he was going to die. My husband replied “Well yank his butt out then.” The doctor did an amnio to check the lungs of our son since I was only 32 weeks.

He was good to go and they began to induce me since they said natural labor is safer due to they don’t know exactally where the intestines are and they could cut them and hurt us both.

Our son was born July 26, 2000, he was 5lbs 3oz and 10in long. I got to hold him for a second on my stomach then they took him away. I tried to send my husband away with him but they wouldn’t allow it. It took several hours before we were allowed to see our child and I was so sad.

Finally the time came and we walked in to what we were not prepared for they didn’t give us all the details on how he would look. It took three surgeries before they finally closed him up and they had to put everything in different then normal that they had to remove his appendix also.

After 2 1/2 months I finally got to hold my child after they finally woke him and took him off the ventillator. There were so many close calls and the questions of you should start thinking about what is best for him and should you turn everything off. It was some of the most hardest descisions of our lives.

After 4 1/2 months our son finally got to come home. It was a back and fourth struggle to Albuquerque for the first year and a half. Many obstructions and kinks and just things not working right. After nine surgeries, several blood transfusions, and many hospitalizations, things finally started looking better.

Our son is now going on 8 years old and still has some problems with his stomach.  But all in all he is a pretty healthy kid and very happy. He loves to run and play football and do all the normal things any boy loves to do. I did have another child after him and was scared to death, but she was very healthy and didn’t have any issues with her stomach.

I only hope this story has helped someone and if you want to talk about it just let me know.

Apr-18-08

Azriel’s Story

Posted by Dean

My son was born in the National Naval Medical Center in Washington, DC on the fourth of February (Superbowl Sunday) by C-section at 34 weeks.  I was stationed in Germany when we found out he had this condition and after a lot of paperwork, my doctor at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center had me sent to NNMC to deliver..

I went in around 9 in the morning because Azriel had not moved in almost 24 hours.  Upon monitoring, they found that his heart beat was dropping dangerously during my contractions, and he was not recovering well.  I was told it would be better to monitor him outside of the womb and they would be inducing me.  They waited a few hours, gave me an epidural that did not reach my left side and had to be redone, and then decided a C-section would be best.

I was expecting not to be able to see my baby until after surgery, but when the surgeon we had met on a tour of the hospital came in to talk me, it was to ask if we wanted to let my little boy live or not.

Sometime during the birth process, the hole in my son’s stomach through which his intestines were protruding closed in on his bowel, cutting off circulation.  The bowel itself died, and as a result, the surgeon could either remove his entire lower intestine creating severe short bowel syndrome or just let him die.

My husband and I were both horrified and immediately told him to go save our son and quit asking stupid questions.

After about an hour, I finally got to see Azriel.  He was a little 4lb 6oz tube factory with a mop of wet, black hair that covered his whole head.  He was beautiful to me and I didn’t even look at all the tubes or the raw-looking cut across my little baby’s abdomen.  Me and my husband were both instantly in love.

After my short stay in the hospital, my husband and I “moved” into the hotel/barracks across from the hospital paying $30 a night waiting for paperwork for housing at our new assignment post.  We carried all of the flowers and “It’s a Boy” balloons out of the maternity ward and were asked by an innocent passer-by “Oh, where is the baby?”

Walking across the street three and four times a day to watch our baby sleep were the highlights of our days. In talking with our baby’s surgeon, we decided to allow him to reconnect his bowel (which had been turned into an ostomy, basically opening out of a hole in his stomach) to his colon to see if anything would pass through.  (Which went well, he pooped within days!)

Sitting down with specialists and surgeons also took up a lot of our time as we listened to our son’s options.  Depending on how well he did, he would be considered for a small bowel transplant.  We were told that since TPN would be his main source of nutrition for a long period of time, he would also be put on the list to receive a liver as well.

As the weeks went by, my son faced no real problems.  He came off the respirator within 24 hours of birth.  Maintaining a working central line in his arm or leg were difficult as he often pulled them out.  We watched him grown bigger and stronger, passing 5 lbs and working his way on to 6.  The breastmilk I pumped and froze tearfully, wondering if he would ever be able to drink it, began to be infused into his stomach through his G-tube, a small feeding device surgically placed in his stomach, and he hit a growth spurt that we were all glad to see.

After about 2 months, everyone (his GI specialists and pediatric surgeon and NICU staff) felt comfortable sending him home on TPN.  My husband and I were to be trained on his home pumps and in the mixing of his TPN.  Also, we were taught how to replace the dressing on his broviac (central line) and clean around his G-tube.  A week before he was to be released to a half-way facility where we would be monitored as we cared for him prior to him returning home, we noticed he was a little less active and seemed very tired.  We informed the nurse who said it was normal and not to worry.  The next day we were met by all of his doctors, who informed us he had a fungal infection; a fungus had attached itself and was growing on the plastic on his broviac.  Also, they had drained large amounts of fluid out of his stomach so they were no longer giving him breastmilk until they could do a study to see if his intestinal track was blocked some way.

This was our first setback.  He was treated for the infection, and the nurses began suctioning his stomach with a syringe from his G-tube every 6 hours.  After about 2 or 3 weeks, a nurse let it slip that he would be coming straight home, on the antibiotics.  We were exstatic and were finally told by the doctor that we would be “rooming in” in the next few days.

For almost a week we stayed with Azriel in a hospital room.  Every 6 hours we suctioned his little tummy and turned off his TPN to administer his antibiotic.  The nurses came and changed out his TPN every 24 hours.  On the last day, a nurse from the company who makes my son’s TPN pumps came and showed us how to program the TPN, Lipid, and medicine pumps.  On the 17th of April me and my husband put our little 7lb miracle into the carseat that had been waiting for his homecoming for months and did what we had watched countless other families do-carry our baby down the hall and out of the hospital.

In a blur, a home nurse met us at our home with a huge box of medical supplies which she explained the use of.  She watched us to make sure we knew how to change his TPN and then showed us how to add the vitamins to his TPN bag with needles.  The first days were hard; Azriel had no sleep pattern from his stay in the NICU.  He did not sleep at night.  We were up with beeping pumps, we were up draining bile out of his stomach, and we were up with changing out his medicine, but mostly we were up with a crying baby.  We got no sleep, and with both of us being active duty military, one of us had to report each morning at 0630.  Life was very hard.  We got frustrated.

On his first visit to his GI doctor at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, she told us that his G-tube was too small.  She did not have another one in the size he needed, so she gave him one that protruded 4 or 5 inches out of the cavity in his stomach while we waited for the one that is flush with his skin to be delivered.  He bled and leaked terribly.  When we got home, we realized that we could not drain him out of this one, and Azriel’s little tummy was getting full.  A call to the home nurse resulted in an ER visit.  However, as we were getting him ready to go, my husband caught his broviac on the wheel of the bassinette and pulled it completely out of my son’s chest. In a panic, we packed our very calm, very quiet baby up and rushed him to the hospital.

Azriel stayed at Walter Reed for about a week and was then released.  He was only home for a few days when he choked on his own spit while crying and stopped breathing.  We performed CPR on him like we were taught in the NICU until the paramedics arrived and gave him oxygen.  This resulted in another week-long stay and a swallow study which revealed that he could be fed orally as long as it was thickened with a special honey used to thicken baby formula so that babies do not swallow too fast and choke.  FINALLY I was able to watch my son suck down some breastmilk from a bottle.

Azriel is presently 9lbs, 4 months old, and waiting from the comfort of his own home for organs.  We will attempt the STEP procedure (hopefully) in the near future to try to avoid the transplant.

Hi my name is Danyel and I live in NC!

But I was born In Iowa in 1972 and I was born with this defect. I was only a 3 pound baby and that was along with all the IV’s and all the surgical garb. I had quite a few surgery’s when I was a baby and I also have my battlescar on my belly!

I had no problems until just lately I started having servere stomach pains and I noticed that my belly felt like I had a ton of gas and the dr had me go get a ct scan and found out I had a incarsarated hernia and an upper intestine blockage! Stemming from my birth defect! I had this done last year!

Yikes now it can get scary with this kind of birth defect since Dr’s don’t know what they are going to get into until they cut me open! And with all the scar tissue and not knowing if all the body parts are in the right area, very nerve wrecking!

Luckly my Dr’s at the Universary of Iowa Hospitals did such a wonderful job on me when i was a baby all my stuff is in the places or there about! When I was a baby they put a mesh in me that the dr built up my stomach walls and I remember that when I was little I was preached about not getting hit in the belly area or I would Die! I had no stomache muscles to protect my inners.

Well I hope I helped a little I am now 35 years old and doing well! I am married to a wonderful man who dosen’t mind the scar at all and loves me for who I am ! Gastroschisis: angel I am 35 and I also was a Gastroschisis Baby
Danyel

P.S. If anyone has this birth defect please email me maybe we can chat! I would love to meet sum people that I can relate to with this Birth Defect!
coolhippychic@aol.com
Let me know it’s about this subject or it may end up in trash! TY

Apr-18-08

My Life

Posted by Dean

Hi, my name is Amber. I went through gastroschisis when I was a baby!

I am 14 now, and my life is wonderful!!!  I used to be made fun of when I went swimming, because of the scar on my stomach; I always wore one peices, but now all i wear is 2 peices. You get over it, and now I don’t care what people think about me ! My mom always told me that, “it doesn’t matter if people make fun of me, You’ll always have a story to tell !”

For all of the women having a baby with gastroschisis, and for all the kids that have had it, I am praying for you, and I know God will take care of you !!!

Love:  Amber

My name is Kylie and I’m eighteen years old. I thought you’d be interested in hearing my story so you can learn about possible long term issues with gastroschisis.

My parents married young and my mom had me when she was nineteen. Since I was born in 1989, most pregnancies didn’t have ultrasounds done unless they were high risk ones, so my mother didn’t have one through out the pregnancy.

I was born a month early and was a natural birth so when I was born and my stomach was open with my insides coming out, I was rushed immediately to a children’s hospital. My mom only go to see me for a few seconds and didn’t even get to hold me. I was flown to the hospital and immediately went into a small surgery to secure my vitals. The organs that protruded were wrapped in gauze on top of my stomach and I had a small surgery every day for almost a month. They shaved what little hair I had and fed me through tubes in my head and my leg. The doctors told my mom that my surgeries were so difficult that it was like putting toothpaste back into a tube. I’m lucky though because my doctor ended up successfully separating conjoined twins later on.

I finally got to go home when I was almost a month old. I was born very small but gained a few pounds in the hospital. They thought there might have been damage to one of my ovaries but they can’t be sure. If so, I’ll have a narrower chance of having children. My scar on my stomach is vertical and is now six to eight inches long so I technically am known as the girl with no bellybutton. I also have three to four inch scars on my right leg from where I was fed through tubes.

Ultimately, I’ve grown to be a very happy, healthy girl. I’m a freshman in college and I’m living my life each day at a time. However, for the past five or so years, my stomach scar has had pains and the doctors just believe I have built up scar tissue and it wouldn’t be good to have to operate in the exact same spot as before. But other than the scar tissue, there’s nothing really wrong with me other than typical issues teenagers have.

My parents call me their miracle baby and I thank God every day still that I’m alive. To all you parents who have recently found that their baby will have gastroschisis or to the parents who have babies recovering, I’m a success story you can smile upon. I hope your children will grow to be as normal and healthy as I have.

Apr-18-08

Layla

Posted by Dean

At 12 weeks I found out my daughter had Gastroschisis. She was delivered on october 6th 2006 at Hospital of the University of PA

She was treated next door at The Childrens Hosptal of Philadelphia. Layla stayed in the NICU for 4 weeks and was discharged. Since then we have returned to the hospital three times for stomach viruses. Although Layla is very healthy today she still relies on an NG feeding tube for most of her nutrition. The doctors and speech therapist originally told me it would take about a year for Layla to be able to eat and thrive on her own.

Well here a year later and i feel that there has been very little progress. Will my daughter ever eat on her own ?

I’m 18 and 32 weeks pregnant with a baby who has gastroschisis. When I was around 12-16 weeks I was getting my ultrasound, I noticed they kept looking at this one particular spot on his stomach.
She didn’t say anything at the time, but they had me go back in the room and wait. Three doctors came in and showed me a picture of my babies stomach and I noticed a bulge coming from the abdomen. They explained to me what it was, I just went blank.

All I thought was ” What did I do wrong?”…”Is he in pain?” and etc. I researched it and found a study that Oxford journals did about gastroschisis, and I found out that it could be linked to acetametaphine (the pregnant womans tylenol) and also decongestants. I thought back when i didn’t know I was pregnant that I had taken both. Is there anyone who also took those meds?