Many of you know that our little man, Jude Immanuel, is
going in tomorrow (Tuesday) morning for surgery at Seattle Children's
Hospital. I know many of you have asked
for details and for updates so I'm going to spell it all out but if you don't
want to read it all, take away the following:
It is a miracle we found this condition with his kidneys, it is a
miracle we live so close to one of the best children's hospitals in the world,
we are grateful for your prayers and encouragement and most of all we want you
to pray for all the families at SCH over this Christmas season.
The technical name for his surgery is "cystoscopy with
transurethral puncture of ureterocele."
You can Google it, I choose not to.
Essentially Jude has a cyst-like blockage on his bladder where his left
uterer tube connects from his left kidney to his bladder. Our doctor, who is really awesome, will go in
through a catheter with a tiny camera and a little laser and basically
"pop" the cyst and cauterize the area. That's how I understand it, still can't get over that they can do this
surgery with no incisions, amazing.
So how did they find this cyst? That's where God's timing gets downright
dreamlike.
When I was pregnant with Jude, at our 20 week appointment we
went in for a routine ultrasound. What
we, and the ultrasound tech, saw was a healthy baby boy who was growing well
and everything looked perfect. They did
notice, however, that my placenta was previa, meaning it was lying too low for
me to deliver normally. My midwife said
I would have to go back in to have another ultrasound in 8 weeks and then 6
weeks after that to make sure it had moved enough. At 28 weeks Jude still looked great but my
placenta was still low. At 34 I went in
and my placenta had moved but the tech found something disconcerting with his
kidneys.
She noticed that there was fluid surrounding his left
kidney. When my midwife saw the results
and consulted with another doctor they both concluded we needed a more in-depth
ultrasound. In that scan we saw a
smiling little boy and definitely a lot of fluid on his left kidney.
The doctor was very reassuring and told us we would need to
have an ultrasound after he was born.
So a few weeks after our beautiful boy was born we headed into the
Bellevue Clinic of SCH and had an ultrasound done, which showed the fluid was
still there and now there was some swelling on his right. More doctor calls later (by the way, we have
remarkable doctors who really care, our pediatrician called us at 7:30 that
night just to let us know what was going on) we had to have a more extensive
test done to see if the urine in his bladder was refluxing up into his
kidney. Praise God it was not.
So we met with the pediatric urologist a few weeks later and
he told us that surgery was the best option.
He explained that Jude would need to go under general anesthesia and
stay overnight so they could monitor his breathing but that the surgery would
be quick and rarely ever causes any complications.
We scheduled the surgery for his first available
appointment, December 23rd. For some
people it sounded like a bummer but Noah and I couldn't be more grateful that
this surgery will be billed to our insurance in the same year as he was born so
our deductibles and such have already been paid. This is another great big blessing. So tomorrow morning we head in at 6:45 for
his 8 am surgery and will pray for an hour solid that God watches over our
little boy, just as He has been since before Jude took his very first breath. We would love for you to join us in that
prayer.
But there is something so much more going on that we would
also ask you to pray for.
There are way too many families, for whom spending Christmas
at Seattle Children's is just a part of the routine. There will be families who will be spending
their very last Christmas with their beloved child in that hospital. There will be mothers of brand new babies
clinging to life and there will be fathers who pace powerlessly outside
emergency surgical rooms. There will be
brothers and sisters who don't know life outside the necessity of hand
sanitizer and hospital masks. There are
families who will be saying goodbye for the last time at the moment our son
wakes out of his anesthetic fog only to cry in my arms and be comforted by our
voices.
So please, pray for our little boy, but more over pray for
those families. Pray for hope, pray for
one more day, pray for the release of pain and the miraculous healing of tiny
bodies.
As we waiting in faithful expectation for the light of the
world to come crashing into our existence, pray for His light to shine in the
midst of some unimaginable
darkness. Pray that God would open
opportunities for us to pray with others whose children won't be able to sit
around the Christmas tree with their grandparents like our boys will this
Christmas.
Those children desire your prayers, their parents desire
your prayers even if they would never say it.
Jude's middle name is Immanuel - God with us. This time of year that name comes with a
heavenly announcement. Glad tidings of
great joy and the declaration we need not be afraid. However St. Jude is the patron saint of
hospitals and desperate situations. So
we ask that in your faithfulness and glad tidings, you send prayers of light
and hope to those in situations much more desperate than ours.
Merry Christmas
Ali, Noah, Soren and Jude




