Below are all of my facebook updates during the transplant hospitalization If you have time, go back and read the blogs from these dates as well...
Just saw the box containing the new lungs roll past the waiting room. Rachel is doing great and about to receive them!
Rachel's new lungs are placed in her and being sewn in now!
SUCCESS! Lungs are in for good and Rachel is doing great! Lungs were a perfect match, no damage, and she didn't have to go on the heart-lung machine! A perfect surgery. Keep praying as the next few days are critical in her recovery. God's the man!
Just saw Rachel come past the waiting room. She's sleeping and looks even more beautiful than ever (if that's even possible). Doctor said the new lungs are gorgeous. The docs will wake her up later tonight and make sure that she can move everything ok. She'll be on a ventilator until tomorrow morning.
Just got to kiss my wife on the forehead...the simplest thing feels so incredible right now. She's receiving her epidural now which will allow her breathing tube to be easily removed tomorrow. Her blood pressure is down a little, but that's normal after this kind of surgery. The X-Ray of her new lungs is textbook perfect... we couldn't have asked for a better pair.
Rachel is awake! She was able to use sign language/finger spelling to talk to me and her parents just a moment ago, in probably the most moving moment of my life second only to our wedding. "I love you forever" signed into my palm about did me in. Her blood pressure is now normal, O2 level is great, and body temp is awesome...her nurse told me that this is the best transplant she's ever seen at Hopkins.
2/27: Rachel breathed on her own with her new lungs for the first time around 1am this morning! This was just after they took her off the ventilator and she had the difficult task of learning to breathe again. We saw her shortly after and were able to talk with her. She says she's breathing so much better already and not in a lot of pain.
I walked down the hallway of the ICU with Rachel just minutes ago. Less than 24 hours after her lungs were in and she's already walking. It's amazing. She's breathing great but VERY tired from all the meds and the adjustments to her new lungs that her body is making.
Rachel is still doing great, but please pray for Rachel's thirst to dissipate and for her swallow test to be scheduled soon so she can drink. And also for a room to open up so she can move to a regular room and out of ICU.
I just helped wheel Rachel from ICU to a "high level" regular room! Normal time in ICU is more like 3-4 days post transplant, but God has different plans for my girl. I get to be with her tonight. Pray that we both get some much needed sleep and continue to pray for her thirst/swallowing issues.
2/28: Rachel did well enough on the swallow test to start eating pudding/yogurt as soon as her Dr's give the OK. Pray that they do. She also walked a whole lap around her recovery floor, impressing all of us and the staff again. 2 more chest tubes were removed today and the picc line was put in. 2 more good things. Also, we appreciate everyone's support, but we'd rather wait to have visitors once we get home. Thanks!
Thank God! A meal is coming to Rachel! It will be the first fod she's eaten since 9pm Thursday night. It's only things of pudding-like consistancy, but it's still food. She's so encuraged and excited.
3/1: My girl beat everyone on her floor on the "lap around the nurses' station race"! Ok, it wasn't really a race, but she still flew past two old dudes like they were standing still. Doctors are thinking she will be sent home next Monday or Tuesday! She just has to pass another swallow test tomorrow or Thursday, be able to walk up stairs, and get her last chest tube taken out before she can come home.
3/2: Just had a good meeting with our transplant coordinator, prepping us for life at home. Rachel's in a little more pain today, but still feeling great overall. They might have to put a small chest tube back in that came out yesterday to help a lung fully inflate, but the doctors aren't worried and it's not setting us back any.
3/3: Rachel just passed her swallow test! She can now eat and drink whatever she'd like! Let the Mountain Dew start flowing and the chocolate start piling up...she's got a lot of catching up to do after 5 days without eating or drinking anything except "honey-like" liquids and "mechanically soft" foods.
Rachel's last remaining chest tube was taken out today too! All she has to do is walk up some stairs and we'll be ready to go!
Rachel just walked 6 laps around her floor with me! This doubles the amount she did yesterday and set a PR for laps completed in a day. She's definitely going to be a threat on the race course before long...
3/4: Rachel's doing great this morning, but in a good bit more pain. They're switching her to an oral pain med and taking out the epidural soon. She's also having a bronchoscopy ("lung vacuuming") at 1pm to clean out anything in her lungs. Luckily she'll be asleep for that.
Rachel just finished her bronchoscopy that went very well. She's coming back up to her room in a little bit. She'll be on facebook before long, so...if you have a picture of you and Rachel, post it as your profile pic and post something on her wall. She'll love it...
Rachel's 8 laps = 3 football fields...just to put in perspective the distance my recently lung-transplanted wife just walked.
3/6: Please pray for Rachel this morning, as she's in the most pain she's been in since surgery. The numbness is wearing off and it hurts for her to take the deep breaths she needs. She's still doing really well though and is keeping her incredibly positive attitude throughout it all.
3/7: Thanks for the prayers, Rachel is doing 100 times better today. She's already walked twice, done a bunch of deep breathing exercises, and is able to cough with much less pain. The doctors are working towards us getting out of here tomorrow...pray that it happens and that Rachel continues to feel better.
Got a call from the home care coordinator who is working on getting us out of here around 11am tomorrow...keeping praying that this happens. Rachel has walked 11 laps total today! She's also done a ton of breathing exercises and even walked some stairs. We'll be home soon!
3/8: Dr. came in and said that Rachel is ready to get out of here! Either late today or first thing tomorrow morning...we're REALLY hoping for today.
Well, we won't be home until tomorrow around 1pm, but we're still coming home!
Spoke too soon again...we might not be home until Thursday if certain kidney and blood levels don't even out. This is getting a little frustrating. Pray that everything works out and we can leave tomorrow as scheduled.
3/9: No go for leaving today. Maybe tomorrow morning if Rachel's kidney levels go down...possibly not 'til Friday. We've been hearing "Maybe tomorrow, but probably the day after" since Monday. At least Rachel's feeling great and her parents are headed home for some much needed rest tonight. In much less important news: I've made a great gym out of the fire stairwell ever since we checked out of the hotel with a gym.
3/10: Lab work is being sent off...come on creatinine level, go down so Rachel can come home! Oh, and 18 laps (740 yards) yesterday? Yeah, that's my wife.
COMING HOME!!!!
I just made dinner...in our house. And I made it for my wife...who can finally breathe."
So here we are, one year later. We've gone through a hospitalization for kidney failure just weeks after Rachel's transplant, another stay for kidney failure a little later, an admission for a blood infection, and another stay for mild rejection all before August of the first year. At home she's been through continual pain from the surgery, sickness from the medicines, torn muscles from being on high doses of steroids, and many other maladies that no one should have to endure. I'm not reminding everyone of all this to draw pity or to elicit more emotions, but rather to reiterate what God has helped us through this year, and how far He has brought Rachel. The average lung transplant patient is hospitalized 6-8 times in the first year and has a lung function of 80%. Rachel was hospitalized 4 times and just weeks ago tested her lung function at over 96%! Yes, she still has pain, still takes medicines, still has rough days, and still has many doctors visits and blood drawls, but through all of this Rachel and I have relied on our faith to get us through each daily struggle.
The doctors told us that the first year says a lot about how your body will react to the lungs in the future. People who do well their first year, normally do well for their first 5 years after that. The better they do after 5 years, the better they'll do by 10 years. The anniversary of Rachel's transplant is less of a celebration of the surgery itself, but more of her making it through this year so well, and the hope that we have for years to come.
Being married to Rachel is like witnessing a miracle every day, and I hope you too have enjoyed watching her exemplify strength and trust in God throughout this past year.
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