Once Betsy got settled in the room, they brought Ian in to us. The grandparents saw him, then left us alone. We tried to feed Ian, but he was much more interested in sleeping. We assumed he was exhausted from that whole trip down the birth canal thing. His head was completely black and blue, so clearly he had been using that as a battering ram for a couple of days on Betsy's pelvis. Not much fun for Ian or Betsy.
Ian wanted to sleep, and so did we. He was a little limp, so we decided to send him back to the nursery. The nurse said she would send him back to our room when it was time to feed him again around 11:00. At midnight, we became a little concerned that we had not heard back from the nursery. We called down there and they told us Ian was under a heat lamp. Apparently he had been unable to keep his temperature up and they needed to make sure he was warm enough. Ok, that sounds reasonable. The nurse told us he would spend an hour on the lamp and then two hours off and he could come back to the room.
Betsy and I were a little concerned, so we walked down the nursery just to look through the glass and see Ian under his heat lamp. The nurse came to talk to us, but wouldn't give us much information.
I went back to the nursery a couple of times during the night and each time Ian was still under the heat lamps. This was becoming concerning. At some point the nurse told me that we would have to wait until our pediatrician came in the morning to know what was going to happen with Ian.
Our pediatrician showed up around 7:00 AM. We happened to go by the nursery when she was there. She said he wanted to talk to us about what was going on and followed us to our room.
It turns out they had given Ian three chances to warm up under the light and he still could not maintain his temperature. Apparently babies tend to get low temperatures rather than high fevers, but it is essentially the same thing. The most likely cause of the low temperature was some kind of infection, but they had no idea what. The really bad news was that Ian was going to have to spend some time in the neonatal ICU. He would have to get blood work done including a spinal tap. We would not know the results of the test for 72 hours and then if there was an infection, it could be another 7-10 days of antibiotics and Ian living in the NICU. Needless to say, there were a lot of tears and a lot of concern.
At around 10:00, we were able to go visit him after his spinal tap. Again, a lot of tears and concern. He had started IV antibiotics and was fairly limp, but he seemed to have a little more color than he did in the nursery. He had to spend 6 hours under the lights in the transition period before they would test his ability to maintain his temperature. We kept visiting him as often as possible, but we couldn't hold him or feed him until he was out from under the heat lamps.
Everyone, including our OB was surprised Ian was having this problem. He was an unlikely candidate for an infection. Luckily, Ian was able to hold his temperature and he was eating well and going to the bathroom well. Everything seemed to be checking out.

Eventually, we started doing Ian's feedings and held him as much as possible. Every time they pulled out the thermometer, we held our breath, and each time, he passed the test. On Thursday, Betsy was released from the hospital, but Ian had to stay. We thought he would be coming home on Saturday at the earliest. His tests kept coming back negative and if the cultures were clean after 72 hours, they told us he could probably come home. It was really tough to come home without Ian, but we didn't have much of a choice. The nurses let us stay at the hospital as late as we wanted on Thursday.

The next morning, we went to the NICU and met with the staff Dr. She said Ian looked good, but they needed to wait the 72 hours, which would have been Saturday morning, before sending him home. I then realized she seemed to be looking for any reason to send him home and eventually decided that since Saturday was Yom Kippur, she should send him home on Friday. We were thrilled, but nervous. We didn't want to get him home only to find out later that he had an infection requiring antibiotics and a trip to Texas Children's.
We went home to prepare the house for Ian and picked him up at around 4:00. He has been home for a little over 24 hours now and he seems to be just fine. He is doing everything a baby is supposed to do. He eats, sleeps, and poops.

Not that any of them are going to read this, but I do want to say that the nurses and other staff at the hospital were really amazing. The nurses in the NICU we had were incredibly compassionate and helpful. Not only did they take great care of Ian, but they also took great care of us. They even spent time with us teaching us how to change diapers, feed, bathe and otherwise take care of Ian. I don't know if every nurse in this hospital is great, but every one we dealt with was.
Ok, this is probably the last post that will be this long and this serious, unless there is another occasion that calls for it.
I promise some more entertaining posts soon.
