T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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246.1 | Rest, rest, rest!!! | CHEFS::MANDALINCIA | | Mon Aug 13 1990 05:43 | 10 |
| Sarah,
Funny our should enter this because last night I was reading in one of
my books about pre-eclapsia. It really said that bed rest is the "only
cure" (for now) and that there might be some indication that a diet
without enough protein might be a factor. If it turns into the
full-blown eclapsia it is very serious because it can casue convulions
and even coma in the baby. I think other symptoms were blurred vision
and headaches. Birth is the ultimate cure.
Rest as much as you can. There might be diet restrictions as well.
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246.2 | Our experience | CRONIC::ORTH | | Mon Aug 13 1990 13:01 | 53 |
| My wife had pre-eclampsia with aour second child. Yes, it is a
potentially very serious complication of pregnancy, but needn't be if
you follow your doctor's advice and get lots of rest!
My wife had to lay down on her left side any time she wasn't doing
anything else. She had no noticeable symptoms (noticeable to us, that
is). Her doctor made the diagnosis based on an elevated blood pressure
that lowered when on her left side. she only showed protein in the
urine wonce or twice, not at every checkup. She only worked one
marathon day per week, and had to stop frequently to rest. Her doctor
advised quitting work at 34 weeks, which she did. We had a 21 month
old at home at the time, so rest was still difficult. During her 40th
week, she suddenly gained great quantities of weight (I think it was 12
pounds, when she'd only gained 8 lbs up to that point!) and swelled up
like a ballon, esp. ankles, feet, and hands. At theat week's checkup,
the doctor took her BP at (if memory serves) 190/110...that is
EXTREMELY high! A quick call to me at work, a quick trip to our home
where her folks were watching our eldest, and we were off to the
hospital to be induced...it was, coincidentley, our due date. At
admission, her BP was 200/115....enough to cause a mild panic in the
nursing staff. The baby's vitals were fine. She was on total bedrest,
with an automatic BP monitor, which chekced her, initially, every 10
minutes. When her BP went down to a more tolerable 140/85, they set it
to take the BP every 30 minutes. She was on an IV with Pitocin, to
induce labor. It did and didn't work...contractions were very strong
and regular, but dilation went to 4cm. and stayed. And stayed. And
stayed. For about 24 hours. They finally gave her an epidural, so they
could up the Pitocin, because, at this point, if they'd upped it,
without the epidural, she might have killed them! 24 hours of hard
labor (contractions lasted about 75 seconds and came 2-3 minutes
apart...the whole 24 hours) had left her exhausted. She slept deeply
for about 30 minutes after the epidural, and woke up amazingly
refreshed. BP continuted fine, and so did babie's vitals. After 2 hours
on the increased Pitocin she was still at 4 cm. They brought in teh
portable ultrasound to check that the baby hadn't turned...it had
not...still head down. All of a sudden (this within about 5 minutes
from last internal which showed just 4 cm.) she sits bolt upright with
the announcement she feels like pushing! They ran in, and checked
her...she was a full 10cm.! Just like that! Really weird. They rushed
us to the delivery room (As she had little control over her legs
yet)and our daughter was born about 10 minutes later. She was in some
distress right before birth (the baby, that is), her heartrate dropping
below 100. The doctor was almost ready to use forceps, because he felt
he had to get her out *immediately*. But the next push popped her out.
She did not cry. We were, to say the least, frightened. After a little
oxygen, she did cry loudly, however, and her Apgar's were 8 and 9.
My wife's BP went almost immediately back to normal, and even was a bit
low in the next 2 days. On her third pregnancy, there was no sign of
pre-eclampsia, BP was normal throughout (hoever, she did becomde
gestationally diabetic!).
Best advice...rest, rest, rest! And...follow your doctor's advice!
Here's hoping for a short dlivery and a healthy baby!
--dave--
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246.3 | Lie on your leftside and take it easy | AKOV13::TAKEMOTO | | Mon Aug 13 1990 14:13 | 56 |
| I had preeclampsia and please take it very easy, lying on your leftside
whenever possible and listen to your doctor. Like you, I didn't feel
badly, just very tired at the end of the workday...but the condition
can worsen within days, if you don't follow your doctor's instructions.
There are 3 conditions, rapid water weight gain, protein in the urine
and hight blood pressure.
2 months before my due date, my doctor asked me to lie down for 1 hour
during lunch everyday. The next week, my blood pressure and water
weight had ballooned, so I had to leave work completely ( 1/2 day
notice ) and go home to lie down on the couch or bed until delivery.
If I walked around, I would gain 3-5 pounds of water weight in 2-3
days. By lying down for 5 days, I would lose 3-5 pounds...even sitting
caused me to gain weight and the blood pressure to soar! You must lie on
your leftside, because the major returning blood vessels to your heart are
on your rightside.
I had to go to the doctor's office 2 times a week for urine analysis testing
and blood pressure. By lying down for 15 minutes, my blood pressure
would drop 20 points! Every week, my doctor did a non-stress test on
the baby to make sure that she was thriving. If there are any
complications, the baby would be taken early, since it is the baby's
health that would be affected. ( premature birth is also possible).
For those days that I would walk around or "cheat" and go out for a few
hours ( since I didn't feel badly ) the tests would show a rise in one
or all of the 3 factors and the doctor would threaten to put me in the
hospital to enforce the bedrest. It's the only thing you can do...that
and drink lots of water.
My baby was induced on her due date. They used pitocin and magnesium
(epsom salts) solutions. The Pit to encourage the contractions and the
Mag to control the muscle spasms ( from the high blood pressure and
pre-eclampsia) Unfortunately, the mag also slows down the
contractions. Due to my condition, I was not allowed to have an
epidural during my 16 hours of labor. At the end, due to an arrested labor
I had a cesearean and an epidural ( that was wonderful!) and a
beautiful, healthy daughter.
So take it very easy, stock up on novels...read baby books, get a
portable phone next to the sofa, a pitcher of water ( 8 glasses a day)
a remote control for the TV and ATT's "reach out America". YOu'll be
calling everyone you know during your wait. ( My phone bill soared ;-)
Have your husband get alot of sleep before your due date. I had 1/2
hour to every 15 minutes monitoring after the baby was born and my husband
couldn't get a good rest ( the baby was born at 12:02am and Peter stay�ed
the night with me in the hospital) with all of the nurses coming in all
of the time. The staff at the Birthplace at Nashua Memorial Hospital
were terrific.
Relax and take it easy
Joy
p.s. I lost 30 lbs of water weight and baby after the first week. Just
make sure you always have a bathroom nearby ;-)
rest
|
246.4 | No fun | GENRAL::M_BANKS | | Mon Aug 13 1990 14:23 | 16 |
| I had it, although I didn't get it until the 39th week. I was sent
immediately to the hospital, where I had to stay laying down on my left
side (or right when the left fell asleep) for 3 days. It started getting
worse so labor was induced, but after 7 hours nothing was happening except
my blood pressure was going up and the baby's down, so we did a c-section.
Just stay down as much as you can. If you start feeling dizzy or seeing
'tracers', lay down ASAP--or call your doc. My ob said it's common in
about 10% of first pregnancies, and doesn't necessarily happen on
additional pregnancies.
Yes, it can be very serious, so treat it right--lay down as much as
possible!
Marty
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246.5 | | TCC::HEFFEL | Sushido - The way of the tuna | Mon Aug 13 1990 15:59 | 31 |
| Only work 4 hours a day! Yikes! I'm surprised your doctor is letting
you work at all.
The day after Katie's due due, we went to the hospital because I had
regular-increasing-in-intensity-5-min-apart contractions (ie. I thought I was
in labor). Well, I didn't have Katie that night, but I did have high blood-
pressure. Even after lieing down for an hour, my BP was 145-95. My blood
pressure tends to be low (Last night it was 90/63) so this was quite high for
me. After determining that it was false labor, the labor room sent me home
to lay on my left side with instructions to see my doctor immediately if a
had any visual disturbances or a headache. The next morning I woke up with
a headache.
My OB prescribed COMPLETE bedrest on my left side. His exact words
were "up to go to the bathroom, sit up to eat, lay back down, nothing else."
He also informed me that if I couldn't do that, he could and would hospitalize
me so I could lay on my left side there. But "It's more expensive, you won't
sleep as well, and all we'd be doing is enforcing the bedrest." So I took him
seriously and stayed home and stayed on my left side. (Those of you who have
been confined for months, I stand in awe of you, 8 days was enough to just
about turn me into an axe murderer!) I had non-stress tests every other day
until I went into labor (7 days later). During labor I had to lay on my left
side. If I rolled onto my right side, my BP would shoot up and Katie would
show signs of distress.
As long as stayed on down on and on my side, my BP stayed low(er) and
everything was fine.
As everyone else has said, REST, REST, REST!
Tracey
|
246.6 | Recent info on preeclampsia/eclampsia | SLSTRN::RADWIN | | Tue Apr 16 1991 12:05 | 62 |
| Interesting article in 12/90 Harvard Health Letter on nature &, possible,
prevention of Preeclampsia & Eclampsia -- conditions formerly known as
toxemia. My wife suffered from both of these, and the Harvard article is
the first piece we've read that provides at least some explanation for what
happened.
For those unfamiliar, preeclampsia and eclampsia can be dangerous to mother and
unborn child. According to the article, Preeclampsia occurs in about 5% of
first pregnancies and is marked by swelling of hands and feet, protein in
urine, and higher-than-normal blood pressure. These symptoms mmay remain
fairly stable; however, sometimes small blood vessels all over the body begin
to constrict. This can cause reduced blood flow and very high blood pressure.
These changes, in turn, can damage such organs as the kidney, the central
nervous system & the liver. If the disease progresses further, convulsions --
threatening to mother and fetus -- can result. With the onset of
convulsions, the disease has moved from preeclampsia to eclampsia.
It turns out that problems with the placenta are at the root of the condition.
To quote, from the Harvard Health Letter:
"Because the growing fetus demands a rich supply of blood from the mother,
controlling blood flow is an important task for the pregnant body. Early in
pregnancy, the uterus develops a special set of arteries to supply the
placenta. To meet the needs of accelerating fetal growth ... a second phase
of arterial growth is required. During the sixth month the placenta therefore
reaches farther into the uterine wall for better access to nutrients in the
mother's blood. The arteries in the uterine wall dilate at least fourfold to
facilitate this process.
"If arterial growth [during this second phase] fails or falters, fetal growth
may slow, and the distressed placenta is believed to release one or more
substances into the mother's circulation .... that are capable of
damaging the tissue they contact.
The cells which are damaged are those that "help to regulate the diameter of
smaller blood vessels (and therefore the resistance to blood flow). They
[the cells] also maintain the balance between the fluidity and clotting of
the bllod. In women with preeclampsia ... the small [blood] vessels
constrict and micrscopic clots form .... Injury to delicate vessels in
the kidney leads to protein loss in the urine ... and the function of
almost any other organ may go awry."
....
"Preeclampsia is self perpetuating. Once the disease is established it makes
itself worse.... Bed rest, treatment with antihypertensive drugs, and early
delivery may be required."
On the treatment side, there is some hope -- at least in terms of prevention
It turns out that small doses of aspirin can substantially reduce the risk
for preeclampsia. However, aspirin should NOT be taken unless a women
is at high risk for the condition, because aspirin itself can be harmful,
especially during the 1st trimester.
At-risk factors associated with preeclampsia, include preeclampsia during a
prior pregnancy, first births, multiple births, diabetes, preexisting high
blood pressure, very young mothers, "very old" mothers, and family history
of preeclampsia. However, "even among women who meet more than one of
[these conditions] .., only a fraction will develop preeclampsia."
Unfortunately, no good tests yet exist to identify women who are at risk.
|
246.7 | Two Beautiful Sons ! | DPDMAI::CAMPAGNA | Where is Harvard Yard AT? | Tue Apr 16 1991 12:45 | 25 |
|
I had pre-eclamsia with both of my pregnancies. My first son was
delivered by c section after 13 hours of non-progressive labor. He was
about 3 weeks early. I had been on left side rest at work for about six
weeks, and on total bedrest for two weeks after that.
My second son was only 5 days early, but I had been in the hospital for
the pre-eclampsia for two weeks before. (This in addition to being
pulled out of work and on total bed rest for five weeks before that....)
He had to be recessitated in the delivery room, and have to have chest
xrays and spinal taps due to the magnesium sulfate, but was ok. The second
child was a vbac, due to the eclamsia (believe me, I was BEGGING for a
repeat c-section !). I also had magnesium sulfate, so my labor was 25
hours, with two hours of pushing ! My OB said that I would have a 100 %
chance of getting pre-ecalmpsia again with a third pregnancy.
I also had liver and kidney issues - they tested for this constantly.
PLEASE do what you doctor says - no cheating - and let us know how you
are doing !
If you want to talk off line, my DTN is 483-4297.
Leeann Campagna
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