Amy Peedle shares her journey with her daughter, Aliyah.

January 12, 2016 6:31 pm 2 Comments 14

Amy Peedle: Aliyah was born March 9th, 2001.  She weighed 3lb 10oz. She has the VCTE of the VACTERL Association

(V) = vertebral abnormalities
(A) = anal atresia
(C) = cardiac (heart) defects
(T) = tracheal anomalies including tracheoesophageal fistula
(E) = esophageal atresia
(R) = renal (kidney) and radial abnormalities
(L) = (other) limb abnormalities

2118_49989195987_8953_n (1)She Tested positive for Methamphetamines when she was born and was then taken from her birth mother. As far as I know, she was born at 31 weeks and was born with Esophageal atresia/ tracheoesophageal fistula type c, had a bleed on her brain and a hole in her heart.

She was born in Ogden but was taken to PCMC within hours and had surgery to fix the EA/TEF. The birth mom was arrested, so this sweet baby only had the love and care of the kind nurses in the NICU. She was in the NICU for almost 4 weeks then went to an emergency shelter home for about 3 days. We found out about her and her 2 year old sister when we were asked to be their foster parents. She was about 5lbs when we got her. Aliyah came to us with an apnea monitor on. We were told by the state and her doctors that she would out grow all her health problems by the time she was one. She was diagnosed with GERD, Reactive airway, Tracheomalacia, Two fused ribs,Two fused vertebrae, Asthma. We adopted both girls when Aliyah was about 18 months old. She was diagnosed not long after that with failure to thrive. She also got RSV, Pneumonia, and influenza all at the same time. That is when they told us she had IGA deficiency. She has been life flighted and went septic on us. She was always sick and so we spent a lot of time in the hospital.

14191_10152206347670988_7005760648571583080_n (1)75033_10151161270090988_641474255_nShe has had an NG or NJ tube for many years until 2006 when they did a nissen on her. Because she was refluxing and aspirating so much. A Ph probe showed she had acid up to the top of her throat 138 times in 24 hours and 18% of the time it was going in her lungs. After the nissen, they put a G tube in which has since been changed to a GJ tube. Doing the nissen seemed to set off a different set of problems. She could not swallow her own saliva and would choke and aspirate that for hours and hours each night. She then had 15 surgeries in 18 months trying to resolve these problems. They dilated and redid the nissen to loosen it but nothing helped, they took it down part way (toupet, which is a half wrap) and did Bronchoalveolar lavages to see how much she was aspirating into her lungs. Then they took down the nissen most of the way.(Thal, which is a fold on to the esophagus) It was either have her aspirate stomach acid or aspirate saliva and anything she tried to eat or drink. At one point, they told us to never let her eat or drink by mouth again because the stuff she could get down her esophagus would go into her lungs and the stuff that wouldn’t go into her lungs wouldn’t go down her esophagus either. We said how do you sit at a table as a family and tell one of your children they cannot eat? How do you not let them have their birthday cake even if it is only a couple bites. Every Holiday, event, church activity, school activity involves food. It was then we decided to let her eat what she wants even if it is just a nibble. Within reason, of course, she can’t eat a big juicy steak. We learned to tell people if you can and would feed it to a 1 year old, then you should be OK giving it to Aliyah, as a general rule of thumb.

IMG_20141104_102900In March 2012, I found out on Facebook about the EA team in Boston. We did some fundraisers and went out there to see them in June 2012. In Boston, Aliyah met her very first EA/TEF child. Finally, someone like her. She met many more in the years we have been going out there for treatment. They found she had severe tracheomalacia still, her aorta was collapsing her trachea with every heart beat so they did an aortaplexy ( tied her aorta to her sternum). Then a few months later, they took her nissen all the way down and found and fixed a Paraesophageal Hernia. They also did manometry testing while in Boston and found she has zero motility in her esophagus, her stomach is paralyzed ( gastroparesis) and she has little to no motility in her intestinal tract.

She had an Appendicostomy surgery done in Oct 2013, where we inserted a cath into a hole in her abdomen and flush her system and bowels out each night and that seems to be working well for her. In Nov 2014, we went back to Boston because they found an extra hole between her lungs and she was still sick a lot with aspiration pneumonia. IMG_20140825_101850They also found her tracheomalacia was still very bad so they went into her chest cavity (thoracotomy) and closed the hole and did a tracheopexy (tied her trachea to her spine to keep it open). 12510348_10153214245095988_5500266697372348482_n To date, she has had about 75 surgeries with all the dilations, bronchoscopies,and major surgeries. She still has a GJ and appendicostomy, she has gastroparesis, Esophageal dismotility, esophageal dysphagia, two fused ribs and 2 fused vertebrae, prolonged qt syndrome, and a mild case of cerebral palsy .
1622007_10153214245180988_3587984370531073407_nDespite all these challenges Aliyah is a bright, happy girl who is a blessing to each person that knows her. She loves to bake for whoever she can, although she doesn’t eat any of it. She has a bunny she named Tef and she loves him to pieces. She loves to sing and was in her first talent show July 2013 and in her first community play Dec 2013 She sang at the county fair in 2014 & 2015. Music is a big part of her life and brings her much happiness. She has a very big heart and had raised some money by baking and selling cupcakes for a family who’s father had terminal brain cancer. It has not been easy to watch her face so many challenges and suffer so much, at times she will say mom I just wish I was normal. I told her every ones normal is different. God has a special plan for this strong girl. She has defied all the odds that were stacked against her from day one. If this girl doesn’t give you hope I don’t know what will. I am honored to be her mother and have learned that through great trials come greater blessings.

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Scars from some of her many surgeries, she likes to call her scars freckles and will sing this song:
“Cause a face without freckles is like a sky without stars
Why waste a second not loving who you are
Those little imperfections make you beautiful, lovable, valuable,
They show your personality inside your heart
Reflecting who you are.”

For More on Aliyah and her family:

Hospital’s Parent Coordinator Gets a High 5