Tucker has been seeing all of his doctors lately. About every 6 months or so, we have check-ups scheduled with each of them.
Having them all scheduled together is good because we have months of "free" time, but when the appointments are due, it makes us all so busy. So far Tucker has had at least one appointment per week since the first week of August, and he has one a week scheduled until late October. Then, hopefully, we have another few months off.
I have a calendar at work for appointments, and the other day I realized there are way more Tucker appointments on there than any work appointments. We added the two OT evaluations this month, and then Tucker's g-button kept leaking, so he had two surprise appointments with the surgeon; they ordered a new size for him, and his button is much better. Tucker had follow-ups with his mito dr, new pulm/immunology dr, surgeon, geneticist, and now an appointment with a new pulmonologist/sleep doctor in Houston. This week is the eye dr, then pulmonology in BR (hopefully he will discharge us as Tucker is now followed in Houston), and then the next week Chris and Tucker are back in Houston for a 24 inpatient EEG. Add to this the daily ABA therapy, and the every other week OT visit. He is a busy busy guy!
I also need to schedule a follow up with the GI, and then I think we're done! Hopefully we keep him healthy this winter, all three of us are due to get our flu shots soon.
Good news-the geneticist thought Tucker looked fantastic. He attended the UMDF mito conference in Chicago in June, and he learned a lot more about mitochondrial medicine. He is actually giving a lecture in a few weeks in New Orleans, we are all attending. I think he called us out of the blue to tell us about the new genetic testing available from Transgenomics. Well Dr K had already told us about it, and Tucker has bloodwork done for it already. He also checked the levels of vitamins in Tucker's blood to see if all of the supplements are being absorbed into his body. He said he does not want to overstep or duplicate anything Dr K does, but he wants to help us in the in-between times since he is so much closer, and we only see Dr K every 6 months. He made several good suggestions, such as for Tucker's nap time and energy conservation.
Tucker was very good for the two times he had labs drawn in Houston. Well, he was terrible in New Orleans! I don't know if it's because it was the end of the day, if he was tired, or if Chris was there and he was just being dramatic. He fought all four of us (Chris, me, two lab techs) to hold him down, then once he was stuck, he was fine! He just didn't want to sit still. He is hilarious.
So after this, we went to the nearby mall and let Tucker pick a prize at the Disney Store (it's the closest one because all of the ones in BR closed down). He was SO excited to look around, he ended up choosing a small Tow Mater truck, and a small Winnie the Pooh Bear. So as with all bears, he needed a name to distinguish him; this one is "Pooh Bear," of course. So he is added to "teddy bear", "black bear", "big bear", "little bear", and of course, just plain "bear."
We saw the geneticist that Thursday evening, then we relaxed that Friday night, then of course the potty training weekend was next. On the next Friday morning, we packed up the car and left for Houston at 5am. We drove straight to the doctor's office, but we stopped every hour so that Tucker could use the potty. And he did!! He did such a great job using only the potty, he never asked us to stop, but we scheduled potty breaks so I guess that worked. I think the ride was way too much on him, though, because he was in an awful mood at the dr's office...I mean, like made us want to leave him in Houston kind of a mood! He cried the whole time we were in the waiting room, nothing made him happy. Then he threw a fit when the nurse tech came with the pulse ox sticky reader (don't you love my terminology?). I told him to sit down and let the nurse read his sats, so then he cried real tears! The tech gave him two stickers, then he smiled so big. So we know he was just being overly dramatic, he is such a mess. She took his temperature, which was fine, and we didn't even attempt the blood pressure cuff; he totally freaked when he saw that.
The doctor came in soon after, and Tucker loved her. He was like a different child, playing with her hair and acting like he was reading his chart. The dr. is not really too concerned about Tucker's sleep; she said that the dr. in Baton Rouge is concerned by the last sleep study (from Aug 2010) because of two indicators-Tucker is not getting enough REM sleep, which is the type of sleep that helps the brain to rest. He also has a lot of limb movement; it is small and you can't usually see it, but he moves so often that he wakes himself up all night. The central apnea and obstructive apneas were in normal range, so she is not in a hurry to do another sleep study. We already had one scheduled for that night, but Tucker has a cold. Right when the weather got nice and cool, of course he got a cold. I didn't think it was a bad cold, and it's not, really. But the dr. said that any type of stuffiness can make the test come back abnormal, which means we'd have to repeat it to make sure it wasn't the cold that caused the odd results. So we said NO thank you! to the double sleep study. If you have never seen a picture of Tucker at a sleep study, ask me to show you one time. He is hooked up to what looks like spaghetti wires, they are hooked to his head, face, neck, chest, tummy, and legs, he has a cannula in his nose, a sensor in his mouth.....I don't know how anyone sleeps like that. So we would rather wait until he is 100% cold-free to give him that test.
When the appointment was over, we still had a very cranky 5 year old on our hands. We were also exhausted from the drive, so we decided to stay in Texas and maybe enjoy ourselves instead of rushing home. We drove the 20 miles south to Kemah, TX, got a hotel room, and took a rest. Tucker did not actually fall asleep, he was too excited to be in a "hot-ayal", but after an hour of resting he was in a much better mood. We drove to the nearby Kemah boardwalk. I have wanted to bring Tucker here for a long time, I thought he'd love it. There were several kiddie rides, and some that were a little wilder. There was barely anyone there, so Tucker and Chris didn't have to wait in any lines. They rode the double decker carousel twice, the train, the aviator, which is a spinning ride, and the bouncer, which is one of those crazy up and down up and down rides. Of course Tucker loved all of it.
Then Chris needed a break! So Tucker rode two kiddie rides on his own. We put him in his stroller and took him to walk around the bay area, and to look for some place to eat. We passed a candy/toy store, and the windows were lined with bears. Tucker pointed and said "bear, bear, bear!" so we went in. I told him he could pick a small bear, well the walls were lined with bears of all shapes and sizes. There was even a bear that cost $500! After about 15 minutes, Tucker chose a small white bear, which is now named "white bear." He held onto that bear for the rest of the night, he was so happy :)
We went to sleep early that night, Tucker was fascinated by the telephone with a cord in the hotel room. Chris posted a picture of Tucker ordering room service on facebook (just kidding! we unplugged the phone so he could play with it). The next morning Tucker woke us up around 7am, but then after we were completely awake, he fell back asleep for two more hours. Typical Tucker, we wouldn't expect anything different. So Chris and I ordered room service breakfast, and ate way too much yummy food :) We waited until about 10am to wake Tucker up, then we packed up and headed home. We had a pretty boring rest of the weekend, just cleaning up around the house and visiting family.
Tucker is still doing great with ABA, hopefully once the doctor visits are over he can get into more of a routine. Thanks for checking in on us.
Also, happy birthday to Tucker's Daddy, Chris :)
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