I have embarked on what will be, and already is, the most challenging and nerve-wracking of my life experiences thus far.
Post-HELLP pregnancy.
All I know is what my doctor can tell me (which is helpful, but really isn't that much information), and what I've read on the internet. And the fact that my writing THIS is actually going to be a significant amount of internet information is proof that even the endless internet is sparse when it comes to post-HELLP information. (If you are clueless as to what HELLP Syndrome is, please check out my previous posts. Information galore, as well as my personal experience!)
We are set to welcome our new bundle of joy on May 4, 2014.
Alastair and I are completely ecstatic, while still nervous.
As of today, I am 16 weeks pregnant. I've had infrequent, but somewhat severe headaches, exhaustion from time-to-time, and blood sugar issues that have yet to be entirely sorted out. (I experienced gestational diabetes with my first pregnancy.) My OB has me on a low-dose aspirin regimen. As it's been explained to me, low-dose aspirin may sometimes possibly lower the severity of preeclampsia symptoms, though not enough research has been done to be sure.
Well, that's all I've got for now! I'll be posting my experiences as a high-risk pregnant woman who is concurrently a wife and mother of a toddler. It's sure to be an adventure, and I look forward to sharing it with you!
Showing posts with label high-risk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label high-risk. Show all posts
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Saturday, April 27, 2013
Let's Talk about HELLP
In general, it’s true that you can’t spend your
life wondering, “what if?” But… what if you could?
My experience with Pre-Eclampsia and HELLP Syndrome was much similar to that of other women: completely uneducated. My experience was different than that of other women in that both my daughter and I survived, more or less without harm.
My experience with Pre-Eclampsia and HELLP Syndrome was much similar to that of other women: completely uneducated. My experience was different than that of other women in that both my daughter and I survived, more or less without harm.
HELLP is an
extremely rare variance of Preeclampsia that can happen with or without
previously occurring Preeclampsia symptoms. It stands for Hemolysis (the
breakdown of red blood cells), Elevated Liver function, Low Platelets. Since it
more often than not occurs in concurrence with Preeclampsia, doctors don’t
generally do a blood test unless there are other non-HELLP preeclamptic
symptoms occurring. There are no risk factors, no known causes, no known reason for this complication to occur. Of
the women who develop HELLP, more have Preeclampsia than not. More have
Gestational Diabetes than not. More are Caucasian than not. More are over the
age of 30 than not. And yet within those categories, there is no increased risk
of developing HELLP, since it is still so rare. And any link between those
categories and the occurrence of HELLP is completely unknown.
HELLP
Syndrome can happen anytime during pregnancy up until 72 hours after delivery.
The onset is generally sudden, and symptoms severe. HELLP Syndrome was
identified by Dr. Louis Weinstein in 1982. Prior to 1982, HELLP was a silent
killer. You know in all those old books and movies, when a character would ask
about someone’s mother, and be told “oh, she died in childbirth…?” HELLP.
Seizures, bleeding to death, a shut-down liver. Dead. Oftentimes both mother
and baby, in a matter of hours. The warning signs often include “feeling kinda
weird.” The only cure is delivery.
What if my
husband and I had been driving TO vacation instead of back home? I probably
would have had a seizure in the middle of a lake in New Hampshire.
What if I
had just gone to sleep when we got home?
What if I
had continued arguing with my husband about going to the hospital?
What if the
nurses and doctor had trusted their instincts that I was suffering from “food
poisoning?”
What if my
blood pressure hadn’t been SLIGHTLY elevated due to stress, encouraging my
doctor to order a blood test?
What if I
didn’t live near Boston, which is home to many of the smartest doctors on
EARTH? What if I had to stay with my hometown OB, who had never heard of HELLP
and was still using the outdated term “toxemia?”
What if I
had developed HELLP when I was 22 weeks pregnant, instead of 38? What if my
daughter hadn’t been ready?
My husband,
daughter, and I are beyond blessed to exist as an entire family. I thank God
every day for my daughter’s life and mine. I spent the first several months
post-partum adjusting to being a mother and trying to forget all the pain and
horror and terror that I went through in the 36 hours before my daughter was
born. But now, as life has settled down a bit (or I’ve just gotten used to the
madness of having a small child!), I’m realizing that it would be irresponsible
and potentially murderous for me to “forget” and remain silent. If I am capable
of helping someone and fail to do so, I have failed as a mother and as a human
being.
I had never
heard of HELLP syndrome throughout my entire pregnancy. I read all the pregnancy
books, and I obsessively scoured all the pregnancy websites, yet saw nothing
about this horrible killer. Even information about Preeclampsia was rare—it’s
as if doctors don’t put the information out there so as not to scare the hypochondriacs.
After all, it IS rare. But what about those of us who actually get the
sickness? Don’t we deserve to have some knowledge before potential sudden
death?
I’m not
going to forget, and I’m not going to stop talking about it. I’m going to bug
my doctors, and remind them to educate themselves as well as their patients. I’m
going to talk about HELLP syndrome to every single person I can, for as long as
I can.
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