The ECV this morning was successful! After a dose of terbutaline (which relaxes the womb), Amy took a deep breath and the doctor proceeded to knead her belly, gradually pushing first the head, then the feet, into a head-down position. It took two attempts, but the baby finally turned. Amy showed incredible strength during what looked pretty darn uncomfortable. We then stayed in the labor and delivery room to monitor the baby. The expected outcome is a fairly active baby after the procedure, but Baby Trotz stayed very quiet for quite a while. An IV sugar drip was one attempt at kick-starting activity, and then, a small drip of petosin, to see how the baby would tolerate actual labor. If they saw anything negative at that point in the baby’s heartbeat, they would have induced right then and there! While we were mentally ready for a Cesearean, we had no concept we might have a vaginal birth today. Obviously, things turned out fine, and the doc was happy with Baby Trotz’s reactions to mild contractions, so they fed us some yummy hospital food and sent us on our way. Stay tuned!
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Time to Rotate
Just a quick note – we’re going in at 9am tomorrow for the ECV to see if this stubborn baby will turn or not. The doctor says it’s 50% effective – and we’ll know quickly. And, reassuringly, less than 1% of ECVs result in fetal distress, so Amy and I are both reassured. It’s a very slim chance baby Trotz will arrive tomorrow from complications. But if the ECV doesn’t ‘take,’ we’ll will likely schedule the Cesearean birth between March 21st and 31st. Mark your calendars!
Breech Baby, Breech Baby
So, we’re in week 37. Can you believe it? But baby Trotz has decided that nestling transversely across Amy’s pelvis is the place to be. We are heading into the doctor’s today to determine if a external cephalic version (ECV) is in order – that’s when the doc tells you to take a deep breath, and manually pushes the baby around in your womb to try to get them head first. In preparation for this, Amy has been lying more or less on her head (supposedly makes the baby move around to a more comfortable position). But any slight moves by the baby in the right direction seem to go away as soon as Amy starts playing her horn. Baby Trotz seems to want to turn their head right back to the bell! A budding musician, I guess. Did I mention that our house smells like an opium den now?
Last night Amy broke out a Chinese herbal ‘do it yourself’ solution. The heat from burning moxa sticks can also be used to stimulate the baby’s movements and encourage it to turn. There’s a great site which explains the procedure, and the basis for the process in Eastern medicine.
Traditional Chinese medicine uses moxibustion (burning herbs to stimulate acupuncture points) of acupoint BL 67 (Zhiyin, located beside the outer corner of the fifth toenail), to promote version of fetuses in breech presentation.
The process involves burning these sticks less than 1″ away from the little toes on either foot (see photo). I hope it works, cause they stink up the house something awful! Anyway, this treatment is succesful with approximately 70% of patients.
New Aimee Coming Soon
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More good music news. Aimee Mann is releasing her latests CD, The Forgotten Arm. This will be her first ‘concept’ album (although one might argue that her soundtrack to the great film Magnolia was also a concept disc). This is her fifth solo release, and an email to her fans describes it like this:
a dozen songs that tell, rather loosely, the story of John and Caroline as they meet, fall in love and road trip across America.
Best of all, you can listen to three new tunes from the disc for the next four weeks, released on AimeeMann.com