Well, we had our paed appointment today.
The GP had printed out all the height/weight info she’s kept and been charting so we could give it to the paed. I also had copies of all his blood work – amazingly the only thing he’s actually deficient in is iron despite being on an iron supplement! There are a few things which are on the low side of normal though. I don’t know how he’s managed to keep his biochemistry in balance over this time of no weight gain/abysmal eating!
All the kids have been sick and just to be different W's had a tummy bug which, touch wood, none of the other kids have got! My hands are soooo dry from all the washing as I go between kids but if I can stop T getting a tummy bug then it’s all worth it!
I just needed the paed to take T’s eating seriously and actually start moving towards some kind of a resolution to this nightmare. It’s nearly 5 months of no weight gain and he was on the 3rd centile before he started this no gain thing.
So acc to their scales T had gained a bit from their last weight which was way out on the last one from the GP.
So we gave the paed the GP’s weights, growth assessment, chart copies etc and she was concerned enough to at least say we have to do something – no, really?!
She looked at his food diary, paged their dietician and got the info to start him on Polycal added to his Neocate Advance. Those two combined will give him total nutrition and boosted calories – assuming he drinks enough of the stuff!
She’s referring him to the dietician with the feeding team at the hospital so she and the feeding therapist have to work together – T's normal dietician isn’t returning my calls any more! She can’t make him eat any of her suggestions so she’s given up!
So the paed described T to their dietician as one of those kids who have learnt not to eat. She wants to see him in 3 months and see how he’s going with the increased calories. The Polycal plus formula should give us a safety net now to actually get a serious team together to get him to relearn to eat. We do still have to fight the reflux monster as he’s only taking the omeprazole solution around 50 % of the time and so we continue with the cisapride. I personally don’t believe he’s going to win the reflux fight and so the feeding fight, without help – like surgery. But if we can get more calories into him then I’m happier to wait, and by the time we see the paed in 3 months time T will have been on omeprazole for 4 months, nearly the 6 months the surgeon suggested!
At least I feel like T is safer. It’s not a proper answer but that’s only going to happen with time and I knew it was never going to be quick. If we can get a dietician to work with the feeding therapist then we’ll get past the ridiculous suggestions of cutting calories to get him to eat. Now T at least should start gaining again and can continue on his development while we play around with everything else.