June 6, 2013

Time for an update.

UPDATE: I felt the need to come back and update this post as we have learned that Audrena's Usher Syndrome diagnosis was a mistake. Here is the post where we learned she does not have Usher Syndrome.

It has been awhile, so I thought it would be a good time to update! We have just been so busy! Audrena is really taking to being bilateral. She knows when the headpiece falls off, and she either puts it back on by herself, or she comes to us and pats her ear to let us know. We do have the alert beep as well, so we usually know before she reaches us. However, we are trying to teach her to be independent with her implants.

We did have some question as to whether she was getting much from the new implant yet since we're still on the first set of programs. Daddy took Audrena to her programming appointment yesterday, and she repeated "bird" to him after he had said it. That was with just the new implant turned on. So it's good to know things are at least starting to sound ok to her. Sometimes it does take awhile for the brain to adapt to the new implant.

They took her into the sound booth, and of course she was just not into it. Audrena rarely cooperates in the booth. She would rather be exploring. Even with that, she did cooperate just enough for them to determine that she is at least at 35-40 decibels with just the new implant on her first sort of generic MAPP, 30-40 with the first implant, and 30-40 with both. Dr. M. from USD has always said (and others have told us as well) that 30-40 decibels is sort of the best expectation for cochlear implant recipients. We do know it's possible to do better. We know plenty of implant patients who hear at 15-25 decibels, and that is our goal for Audrena once she gets old enough to give the Audiologist some verbal information about how she is hearing during programming. Also, we have gotten booth tests with her first implant that showed 20-30. That, combined with what we see at home, are enough for us to believe that she is hearing better than yesterday's test suggests. Both of our Audiologists (Boys Town and USD) have said she could very well be hearing those softer sounds, but she is just not paying enough attention to them to be motivated to turn away from her toy when she hears them.

Also, I forgot to include in some of my previous posts that Audrena heard birds (this was before the second implant)! She heard them before she saw them! We were at the police department's Bike Rodeo at the high school, and there were finches in the rafters of the lunch room. We were eating, and suddenly Audrena looked up (way up) at the birds, pointed, and said, "Tweet tweet!" She had to have heard them because she had not been looking up at all. She was eating. When we first found out that Audrena was deaf, I would take her for a walk, listen to the birds, and wallow in self-pity that my baby girl would never hear those beautiful outdoor sounds like birds chirping. Birds are generally about 15 decibels on the audiogram (although the chart below shows them even softer), so I never expected that she would hear them with implants either. That moment in the high school lunch room was a really defining moment for me, one of those WOW moments that just takes my breath away whenever I think back on it.

Here is an audiogram chart so you can see what I am talking about. The yellow area is the speech banana, or the range that speech sounds fall into.


From firstyears.org


Another little hiccup to report...we may be headed back to the operating room. Yesterday, Dr. M. couldn't find the tube in Audrena's left ear. That's the one Dr. L. inserted in March. Granted, her tools may not magnify quite as much as an ENT's tools, and those tubes are tiny. But she is good, so I trust that if it was there she would have found it. We have an ENT appointment tomorrow morning to check it out. If it's not there, then Dr. L. will need to insert another one. It's such a minor procedure, but it would be the 6th ear surgery and the 7th time under anesthesia for Audrena. And there is always the possibility that she will need a tube in her right ear in the future. So if you are the praying type, say a little prayer that the tube is in place tomorrow, although I don't have much hope that it is. Next week is also our appointment at University of Iowa with the Pediatric Ophthalmologist who will monitor her Usher Syndrome and the doctor with the genetics laboratory that conducted the genetic testing. So please keep Audrena in your prayers that everything turns out well there, too!

On a more positive note, Audrena is really on a role with her speech and language, and she is making progress with her balance! She is saying new words all the time and starting to put them together. She is beginning to understand that there are different words for the same thing, and starting to use them interchangeably. For example, "woof woof," "puppy," and "dog." She also says, "Look at that," or "Look at those." Here are a few of her favorite words/phrases lately.

Look at that/those!
What's that?
Where go? (Where Daddy go?)
Get down!
Good job!/Very good!
NO!
Stop!
Mine!
And when you call her name, she answers with, "What?"
She has also learned "Kelton, "Ana" (for Reyana), and "Zach" (my nephew).

Although we always question whether we could be doing more for her, or whether there is something we are missing, we are so pleased with Audrena's progress!

1 comment:

  1. Yeah (for the good stuff) ! And I hope the next few Dr visits bring good news....I am so glad to read she is doing well with her second implant already. I hope Peter can get his second ear in July, and reading about those on the journey just ahead of us is so exciting!

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