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VBAC
Week by Week
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Catherine
Grace
Friday, December 13, 1996
There are a number of benefits to a vaginal rather than a
cesarean birth, including less uterine scarring, decreased
pain, increased mobility, faster recovery, lower cost, and
the ultimate feminine experience. With a vaginal birth after
cesarean (VBAC), there is a risk of uterine rupture, which
can have disastrous consequences as chronicled in the
following account of our daughter's birth. The good news is
that a uterine rupture can virtually eliminate
serious maternal and fetal consequences if the VBAC delivery
is appropriately managed. ACOG says, "plans for appropriate
management, rapid diagnosis, and immediate intervention
should be in place prior to undertaking a trial of labor."
This means that the fetal heart rate should be monitored
regularly, especially during the second stage of labor.
Virtually all uterine ruptures coincide with a sharp drop in
fetal heart rate. Recession of the fetal head and bulging of
the abdomen are the most accurate signs of uterine rupture.
Other symptoms, such as acute abdominal pain and vaginal
bleeding reinforce such a diagnosis. Upon recognition of
such ominous signs, immediate surgery should be
undertaken to assure a good maternal and perinatal
outcome.
Unfortunately, the word is not out to the whole obstetric
community. A comprehensive survey of obstetric textbooks at
Stanford's Lane Medical Library shows that very few cover
the management of VBACs. Detailed diagnostic information is
really only contained in the professional ob/gyn journals.
Sadly, most practicing obstetricians do not attend
continuing education seminars, read their own journals, or
in any other way keep abreast of new trends, info, and
procedures. Then, they encourage their patients to have
complete trust in them as the expert.
After going through our daughter's birth, I read
everything I could about our situation, and I probably know
more about this than most practicing obstetricians. Too bad
we didn't do such reading before. We put too much trust in
the experts, who assured us of their knowledge of the
procedures, but not of their ability to handle
complications. Next time, we're going to know everything
about the procedures, statistics, complications, diagnostics
and alternatives. Here's what happened when we just "went
along":
Our first child, Stefan, was born by cesarean section
because of fetal distress. We had already taken Lamaze
classes, and we were all prepared to finally apply the
breathing, coaching, and massage techniques we had learned
to have the ultimate feminine experience: a vaginal birth.
However, when variable decelerations dipped below 80 and
then down to 60, our obstetrician, the nurses, and several
anesthesiologists (including a few students) ganged up on us
and strongly recommended to have a cesarean delivery. Within
minutes, perhaps a dozen staff attached IV's, made other
preparations, and whisked my wife Rita away to the operating
room.
The OB acknowledged that the birth style was not the one
that we had planned, but the most important thing was that
we had a healthy child. Since then, the disappointment of
the thwarted birth experience has faded because he's brought
us so much joy, and has astounded us with his development
physically, emotionally and intellectually.
But Rita still felt that she had been denied the birth
experience she really wanted. There's so much literature
about the positive aspects of a vaginal birth that we didn't
even consider a second birth to be other than a VBAC
(Vaginal Birth After Cesarean). The word was that with
modern cesarean techniques (low transverse section), VBACs
were just as safe as first time vaginal births.
We talked about our future, and both of us felt that we'd
like to have another child, or maybe two more. Rita was
especially interested to have a girl, because she loves to
sew and make crafts, and was excited by the possibility of
making pretty clothes for her, and helping her to make art
and crafts.
We thought that the optimum age difference would be 2-3
years, so we started getting sloppy with our birth control
after about nine months, since we knew that one doesn't
usually get pregnant right away (although we did so with
Stefan). Well, we did get pregnant right away, much to our
surprise, and rationalized over the next few months how good
it would be to have them so close in age (18 months apart)
so that they'd be able to play together, so we'd be able to
take more mature vacations sooner, etc. We were also
thrilled that it was going to be a girl. We were a bit
concerned that the uterine scar only had nine months to
heal, but we were assured by the OB that Rita would be
fine.
We started getting into the 41st week of gestation, and
the OB recommended that we induce labor, because after the
42nd week, the umbilical cord starts to disintegrate, and we
could jeopardize the health of our child. We had a bit of
doubt about the actual due date, because one of the many
earlier exams placed the date of conception one week later,
making this 40 weeks instead, but the overwhelming number of
estimates placed us at 41 weeks.
The day before the scheduled induction, Rita went in for
an ultrasound, which indicated a perfectly healthy baby
girl, sucking joyfully on her thumb.
We arrived at the hospital at about 9 am on March 23,
1995, and had a little discussion with the OB about what we
were about to do. I asked if there were any risks to a VBAC,
and she responded that there is a small risk of uterine
rupture, during which the baby is thrust into a hostile
environment, resulting in a number of nasty things, such as
infection. When we asked for further information, she
brushed us off a bit, implying that there's a number of
things that could happen, that we don't have much time, it's
too depressing, and the probabilities are negligible. So we
got on with the induction.
To monitor the fetal heart rate (FHR) and uterine
contractions (UC), the OB felt that it would be most
accurate to use a probe that is attached to the fetal scalp
with a hook. We both cringed at the thought, but we were
assured that the mark it would leave wouldn't even be
noticeable.
One of the staff inserted an IV into Rita's arm to feed
the pitocin which would induce the labor. It was fed
continuously by a pump at a rate that was increased and
decreased slowly over time in response to her progress.
However, in order to attach the probe, Rita's water
needed to be broken. The OB used a small tool, and a small
movement of her hand caused a prick of the membranes,
resulting in a slow discharge of fluids. After draining
completely, she attached the probe to the fetal scalp in a
few seconds. She then went home to spend some time with her
infant/toddler son.
Over the next few hours, we'd watch the chart strip
recorder trace out the FHR and UC lines. Several times, the
traces disappeared, fluctuated, or became noisy, but we were
assured by the attending nurse that it was nothing to be
concerned about, because if we just move a bit or jiggle the
wires, the trace would return. Rita rotated to lie on her
left side, or her right, and the traces would come back.
Sometimes, she'd have to readjust her position several times
over a few minutes in order for the traces to clear up. The
nurse called the OB a few times to consult with her about
the traces.
Neither of us really knew how to read the chart (although
we know a lot more now), but we were happy to see regular
oscillations. We kept track of the time between
contractions, anxious for them to become more frequent.
When the OB came back to check on progress, she was
satisfied that the cervix had dilated to 2 cm at 2 pm. She
studied the FHR charts for a while, showed some concern, and
readjusted Rita a few times to test something.
About 2:30, Rita felt that she'd like to have the
epidural, so she sat up while a technician inserted it into
her back. The FHR charts were very noisy at this time, and I
assumed that this was caused bit sitting up and squirming.
For 41 minutes, the traces sometimes disappeared with
occasional blips. About 3:15, the pitocin level was reduced
to 6 mU/min, and more "normal" traces came back, except that
these had variable decelerations that went down to 90.
Normal FHR should be 120-160 (180). About 3:45, an oxygen
mask was put over Rita's face. After 5 minutes, a chart
paper change and recalibration, the variables only dipped
down to 110 or so.
Of course, since Rita and I knew nothing at the time
about VBACs, we thought this was normal management
procedure. We would chat while I watched the chart, noting
that Rita was oblivious to the contractions due to the
epidural.
At 4 pm, the OB found the cervical dilation to be 4 cm.
At this rate, it seemed like we'd have to wait until 10 pm
to be dilated 10 cm. But shortly the chart recorder was
being stubborn again! About 4:20, we were getting late
decelerations down to 70, 80 and 90. About 5:00, Rita got
the oxygen mask again, and the FHR stabilized by about
5:15.
At 7 pm, the OB returned. Rita said that she thought she
was ready. Though the OB thought she was ludicrous at first,
after she checked, she announced that Rita was fully dilated
and 100% effaced.
The time had come to finally put the Lamaze technique to
work. Rita squeezed with the contractions. The probe had
come out, but a nurse attached an external one.
Unfortunately, this one was more noisy and didn't show the
uterine contractions, only the fetal heart rate. The FHR
fluctuated from 90 to 150. The OB told Rita to squeeze
harder, and she squeezed until her face was as red as a
tomato. The OB pushed on Rita's abdomen to help out.
At 7:15, the FHR dropped to 90. When it dipped down to 60
a few minutes later, the pitocin was turned off. At 7:20,
Rita is given oxygen a third time. The FHR is fluctuating
erratically from 40 to 240. We see the baby's scalp! It has
somewhat of a grayish pallor, due undoubtedly to the stress
of active labor. The OB wants to use the vacuum to assist
with extraction, but the nurse is helping a delivery in
another room. The student nurse manages to find the vacuum,
but fumbles because she hasn't got a clue how to put it
together.
While we wait for the nurse to return, Rita complains
about a sharp abdominal pain, even though she was unable to
feel the contractions. The OB says that pain is common in
labor, and that it is nothing to be concerned about.
I notice an asymmetrical bulging in Rita's abdomen. I ask
the OB whether this is normal, and she says this bulging is
common in labor. I touch it and remark that I feel something
long, like a leg, and maybe a butt.
The nurse returns and the vacuum is attached to the fetal
scalp. The OB pulls once with the squeezing and
contractions. Not much happens. She suggests that maybe a
cesarean is in order and calls the OR. Rita ask to try one
more time, and the OB OK's it because the anesthesiologist
won't be there for a few minutes. So the vacuum is tried a
second time, but the head retracts afterward. The OB calls
for a stat C-section for real, this time.
We wait, but no gurney appears. No one seems to be around
to help. The nurse scours the floor, and finally locates a
gurney. But how does Rita get onto it? There's no staff in
the room except for the doctor and two nurses, but they
don't look too beefy nor willing. And I don't know what to
do, so Rita volunteers to scoot onto the gurney herself,
thrusting her pelvis into the air to do it.
Seven minutes after the call for stat C-section, Rita is
in the OR. Four minutes later, general anesthesia is
applied. One minute later the first incision is made, and in
another minute the baby is out. It's 7:46 pm.
By this time, I'm dressed in my scrubs and ready to watch
in the OR, but I'm immediately shooed out. "You can't come
in yet", they say, so I watch through a one foot square
window by the wash basin. I see about ten serious-looking
people clustered around Rita. I few minutes later, I poke my
head in, take a picture, and ask if I can come in yet. With
an "oh, shit" look on everyone's faces, the doctor shakes
her head no.
After a while I see about a half dozen people at the
other end of the OR, where they suction the baby and count
her toes. I sense trouble, because at our son's birth, there
were only two staff at the same station. More time goes on.
I'm really being kept in the dark. Eventually, a nurse comes
out and gives me some news. Rita's OK, and will be able to
have another baby, but the doctor will probably require that
it be a cesarean birth. The baby, though, is having
problems, and wasn't breathing. The Apgars are 3@1, 4@5, and
4@10, though, and she's got good color, so she's pretty
healthy.
Eventually the doctor comes out. She says that Rita had a
uterine rupture, and she found the head and shoulders of the
baby thrust into the interabdominal cavity. Rita is fine,
she hardly lost any blood, and she should be able to have
another baby, but she wants to get an opinion from a uterus
expert first. But the baby isn't doing as well. She is "very
sick" (a term we would hear several times that night), and
is having a hard time breathing. The doctors are using a
bellows to give her air. There's a team of experts on her
now to get her better. She's sorry, but I won't be able to
go into the OR this time, because of the complications.
She goes back into the OR. I peek back into the OR,
looking at the doctors' faces and the activity in there. I
look for Rita and see her passed out with her arms at her
side and her purse on her lap. But what's her purse doing
there? How's she going to use it when she's under sedation?
And then it hits me: that's not her purse, dodo, it's her
uterus!
I glance toward the other side of the OR to the baby
station, and everyone's gone! The door on the opposite side
of the OR is swinging a bit, so I run through the otherwise
sedate hallways, bash through the double doors, and demand
of the first person that confronts me, "Where is my baby?",
and he points me down the hall to the right. I bash through
a second set of double doors, jogging past the guard at the
entrance to the NICU, who stops me to ask my business, and
when I say "they got my baby", she points me to the
room.
It was obvious which station to go to, because there were
a half dozen people surrounding it. I walked up to it
cautiously, almost tiptoeing, and asked if it was my baby.
They moved aside and revealed a baby under strong lights
with all sorts of tubes and wires attached. I see her tongue
quivering, but she is otherwise limp. Her labia were pink
and swollen (that's a girl, all right!). They told me what
everything was: several cardiac pads on her chest to monitor
her heart rate, a catheter into her umbilical cord to supply
most of her drugs, another catheter into her wrist for
something that shouldn't go directly to her heart like the
umbilical does, a red light clamped onto her toe to monitor
oxygen, and a tube inserted down her throat to help her
breathe because she wasn't breathing on her own. They said I
could touch her and talk to her. I'm a bit aghast, because
she looked so..., I don't know, half girl and half machine.
But I hold her hand and tell her that daddy's here. They
take a Polaroid picture. I tell her I'm sorry she had such a
hard time coming into the world, but that the doctors were
going to get her better.
I was in shock. There was a lot of stuff happening that I
wasn't prepared for. Having a scientific background, I was
able to ask scientific-sounding questions without thinking
much. How long would she be on the ventilator? What were her
Apgars? What was her time of birth? How long before she is
conscious? How long do you expect her to be in the NICU?
When do you think we can bring her home?
I'm not sure I heard the answers. I couldn't really
concentrate on much when looking at the baby (my daughter!)
and the pity and hope I felt for her. The memories of that
first visit are a blur (except for that picture) and I was
starting to feel dazed.
Eventually, I snapped to attention, said I had to check
on my wife, and raced out of there, back to the OR. I peeked
into the window, and she was still there on the table,
unconscious with open abdomen, 45 minutes after the birth! I
called Rita's dad and mom, who were watching Stefan at our
house, and I told them about the rupture and the NICU, and I
asked for her dad (because he can drive) to come to the
hospital because I felt that Rita needed him now. I went
back to the OR, then visited the NICU, and eventually found
Rita and the obstetrician in the recovery room. Rita was
still unconscious, and was fitted with a breathing tube,
cardiac pads and an oxygen clip. The doctor was analyzing
the FHR charts and filling in an operative report. She got
on the phone, and after a while called me over to talk to
Dr. Matt, Stefan's pediatrician. He said our daughter was
"very sick" (why don't they just say "damaged" and be more
truthful about it!), and sympathized with us, offering to
help in any way he could.
Rita was still unconscious, so I went back to the NICU.
Dr. Marian there said that our daughter started to have
seizures, so she was given Phenobarbital and Dilantin to
sedate her. The doctor figured that there was some brain
damage (including the brain stem) caused by oxygen
deprivation during the uterine rupture, and the damaged
cells were hyperactive and secreting a chemical that would
overstimulate the nearby cells, causing a chain reaction of
hyperactivity and destruction. So the solution was to put
the whole brain to sleep by heavily sedating her. I asked
what the prognosis was, and she said that depending on the
extent of the brain damage, she could suffer learning
disabilities, seizures, cerebral palsy, or possibly even
vegetation. Rita and I both considered ourselves to be
pretty intelligent, having attained masters degrees and all,
and this was a heartbreaking disappointment. How would we
cope with the extra care this damaged child would need?
Would we ever be able to break free to take a vacation
again? What a drastic change it would have on our lives! How
could this happen? What did we do to deserve this? I was
starting to feel numb.
I went back to the recovery room, and Rita's dad was
there with Rita regaining her consciousness. They heard the
news about the brain damage as soon as I had. Rita was cold
from the chilly OR and shaking from the narcotics. I held
her hand. Over an hour passed in the recovery room before we
were transferred to the maternity ward with Rita in a
wheelchair.
Rita's dad drove home and walked in the door with tears
streaming from his eyes. "How could this happen at a
[tertiary care] hospital like this? How could this
happen?"
I'm not sure how we slept that first night. We were both
in shock and Rita was on pain-killers, recovering from a
major surgery. The next morning I went to visit our daughter
several times, but Rita said she didn't feel well enough to
visit, even though it was only a hundred yards away. She
eventually admitted that she didn't want to visit, because
she didn't want to get attached, as she felt, from the
moment she awoke from her anesthesia, that the baby wouldn't
make it. I finally convinced her to visit later that
evening.
Her face was so pretty and soft! She looks so much like
Rita's grandmother, especially her hands! Poor thing! Such a
sweet child to be sentenced to life in that condition!
The second night, the preceding events finally caught up
with me. I was heartbroken. Our daughter's life was
shattered! She would never experience the joys of life as we
had. I sobbed quietly all night, although my frequent
sniffles may have given me away. Our daughter was so
different than the adorable preemies in the NICU with her.
She was like a frankenstein creature, so human looking but
acting so subhuman! I felt that her soul had left her, that
whatever was left was trapped inside a body restrained by a
crippled mind. GOD, pity her! I kept thinking of the
psalm, "The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want," and
broke into deep sobs. My pillow was soaked in the
morning.
We talked about names. Before the incident, we had
several names, but somehow it didn't seem appropriate to use
our favorite. We decided to call her Catherine Grace.
Catherine as a symbol of strength, and Grace because it was
only by the grace of God that she was still with us.
Our pastor came to console us. Before he left, he said
that he wanted to read some passages from the Book of
Psalms. I broke down and cried just hearing the word
"psalm." He came back a day later, with Rita's parents and
Stefan, to baptize Catie (or Katie) in the NICU. Stefan (18
months old at the time) reached out to touch Catie and
console her. Somehow I think he knew she was hurting.
For something like seven days, Catie was heavily sedated.
After three days, she started losing weight, so they
inserted another IV and pumped hyper-al (sugar water and
oil) into her blood as food. I pleaded with the doctors to
take her off the sedatives, so that we could see what she
was really like. It took days for her body to flush the
Phenobarbital out of her system. She eventually was able to
breathe on her own, and the hyper-al IV was removed, instead
feeding her by pumping liquid through a tube inserted
through her nose into her stomach.
It took a long time to get a diagnosis. Most of the
information I had to get by reading the doctor's reports
while visiting Catie. One of our nurses said that Catie's
umbilical blood pH of 6.6 was "incompatible with life." We
never saw the attending physician. The doctors avoided
giving us detailed information. We were starved for
information! Finally I found Dr. Marian, a Fellow, who spent
as much time with me as I wanted. She was the same person
that had accepted Catie in the NICU after birth, and gave me
much of the information I wanted.
Catie's diagnosis was severe encephalopathy (brain
damage) with feeding intolerance due to metabolic anoxia
(oxygen deprivation) secondary to uterine rupture. She had
no corneal reflex, no gag reflex, no sucking reflex. Her
eyes were wild and moved robotically; her cornea was dry and
crusty because she could not blink. Spastic quadriplegia
with clonus means that she shakes, the joints of her limbs
are stiff and bent at right angles, and her fists are
clenched with her thumb between the first two fingers. Food
sometimes doesn't stay in her stomach, and refluxes back up
to irritate her mouth and nose. She moans a lot. She is
considered to be in a persistent vegetative state.
The numbness, my numbness, didn't wear off for
months. Since no one seemed to know how this happened, I
spent days in the medical library learning all I could about
VBACs, uterine ruptures, pitocin, and anoxia. I researched
books, journals, even nursing guidelines. I looked at
everything published by ACOG (American College of
Obstetricians and Gynecologists). I wrote a Parents' Report
to complement the myriad medical reports (neurology,
gastrology, physical therapy, etc.). It was the only thing I
could do to keep myself sane.
Catie spent 10 days in the NICU (Neonatal Intensive Care
Unit), was transferred to the IICN (Intermediate Intensive
Care Nursery), and eventually to and offsite subacute care
center, where she died three and a half months later. At her
funeral, we read her these poems:
Dear Katie,
You were our hopes and dreams.
With you, we'd have the perfect family.
You were perfect, up until the moment of your
birth.
And then came the event that forever changed your life and
ours.
We felt that your spirit left you then,
leaving behind the vestige of a biomechanically functioning
body.
The doctors told us of miracle babies that survive this
type of insult.
We had our hope that you would be one of those
miracle babies.
We picked you up and held you, along with your IV's,
your breathing tube, and your monitor probes,
and we told you that we loved you.
Then you got better, and we were overjoyed.
But the next day, you took a turn for the worse.
We rode the ups and down of the roller coaster of your
health,
and we got numb and scared.
We didn't know how to feel: whether to love you, or to
distance ourselves from you.
We visited you every day; we visited you every week.
We heard you moan when you weren't feeling too good.
We admired your fair face and beautiful eyelashes when you
were comfortable.
You showed us the value of life, and the dignity of
death.
That every moment of shared happiness is precious.
Your death brings us peace, and your spirit brings us
newfound fervor for life.
Now that you are free from your body, you can frolic with
the angels.
God will nourish your soul and bring you joy.
Rest in peace my sweet child.
You'll be with us in our hearts forever.
Your Father
Catie, We Love You
Our little baby girl,
so sweet and dear you will always be to us;
remember not the pain and fear of your birth,
but the everlasting love we bestow upon you.
May your journey to your eternal home be filled with
peace and joy.
Let your spirit unite with your soul, the way the ocean
finds the surf.
While your time with us lasted no longer than the first
bloom of spring,
no flower was ever sweeter than the smell of your newborn
head.
We will keep your memory safe in our hearts until we meet
again.
Your Mother
Catie, My Little Flower
Every new spring blossom will reflect upon us your
perfect face.
With every scent of the new spring we will recall the smell
of your sweet head.
The sight of spring dew, reminders of the tears, cleanser of
our souls.
Fly free, little one, whole with your soul.
Never will a month of March go by that we don't think of
you.
Your Mother
by Ken
Turkowski
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