Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Noreen in better mood





Shes happy when she is full and clean....can't resist posting picture -

This afternoon when I placed Noreen on my lap and cuddle her, she gave me a cheeky smile, the smile melt my heart to the point that tears over flowed my eyes. The powerful effect from such a tiny baby. Her smile makes all the trouble in the world disappear in a blink of an eye. I've never felt this way in my life, I guess this is the feeling everyone had told me about, you'll know how wonderful when you've a baby of your own. I can search through all the words in the dictionary but I can never find the words that accurately express the joy in my heart. Its amazing and truly the greatest gifts from God.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Lita and Noreen



Watching Lita and Noreen makes me feel so happy and contended, I've been through a lot in life, going through multiple hard times and dissapointment sometimes to the extend I question if this life is worth all this. After I came to know Lita and now she had given me Noreen, I sincerely thank God that the journey of my life had came to this phase and I can tell myself that it was really all worth it.

I love both of them and I'm glad that God had not given me up.




Friday, July 10, 2009

10th July




Noreen has been a naughty girl, refusing to sleep alone at night, she wants to sleep beside Lita and she will feel secure and sleep.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

3rd day

Mui Jie and Noreen sunbathing

Noreen's skin has a slight yellowish tinge, Mui Jie says this is baby's Jaundice and its pretty common. I've heard and read all about this before Noreen was born, but when its happening to your baby our heart really were in the caution mode. Took Noreen to her paed, and did blood test, reading was 180, which paed told us if 200 she would need to go under photo therapy. told us to sunbath and come back 5 days to retest. Mui Jie told us the remedy is early morning sunbathing. So Noreen's first sunbathing and unfortunately she doesnt enjoy it a bit, she was crying from the beginning until she falls asleep. Poor baby. Mui Jie had her eyes covered to protect against direct sunlight as this would damage her young eyes.

Today is also the day Noreens umblical cord finally falls off, we kept it in an ang pow, I duno why we keep it as I dun think so she wants it when she is older. I guess this is just new baby's syndrome where everything is so precious to us.

She also had her first bath which she does not enjoy every minute of it.


Tuesday, July 7, 2009

1st Day home

Today Noreen finally came back to her home sweet home, she sleeps most of the time. She will wake up when she is hungry or when she had poo poo. I guess thats what baby's are born to do. We appoint her as our C.O.O (Chief of Orr see Orr niu)

Lucky we had arrange for a confinement lady, otherwise it would be chaotic, we had absolutely no experience and know zero about taking care of baby's. Mui Jie has been in this trade for about 10 years. She is very responsible, very clean and most important very experience. She gave us a lot of advise and the do's and don't. Her cooking is nice and its easier to get along with her. Its not easy suddenly you have to share your life with a stranger even tho for just 28 days.

The hospital Bill came up to RM6,450, I think its reasonable. The nurse and staff are very friendly, the food unfortunately, not nice.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

I had splitting headache from the over excitement, came home at 8pm and knock-out at 9pm. Had a good 12 hour sleep and would be back to see my daughter at lunch time.

here are more photos of Noreen:






Saturday, July 4, 2009

The 4th of July 2009


Today Noreen Elena Lee was born at Pantai Indah Hospital, she is a beautiful living doll weighting 2.85kg. I was standing right outside the operating room and waiting anxiously to hear her cry. I waited for about 45minutes and I heard her loud cry and I knew it was my baby. The feeling settle and I was more anxious to see her, I met her in a tiny baby cubicle when the nurse wheel her out, I laid eyes on my little princess. The feeling is fantastic, the first thing I asked the nurse was, Boy or Girl? she refuse to answer and say lemme surprise you, she remove the towel and she was a girl.

I followed them to the nursery and they did a simple test and then weight her, gave her the Vitamin K injections. Then when they;'re done I went in and touch my baby for the first time. I was overwhelm and happy tears filled my eyes. I finally met Noreen, after waiting all my life. She was so beautiful, she look like a doll. I was there when she opened her eyes for the first time and I'm glad the first person she saw was me.

I waited in Lita's room and she came out about 1.5 hours later, I'm glad that they;re both ok, it was a suspend but it is over.


Wednesday, July 1, 2009

3 Days to the 4th of July

We've chosen this day for our baby's birthday. Its just 3 days away and the excitement is building up momentum. Just cant believe I'll be a father, its seem so unreal. Lita has opt for Caesarian and we'll have to check in on Sat morning 7am.

This will be the day that I get to meet my baby, the feeling is like setting up a meeting with a long long time cyber friend. You wonder how she look like, you wonder how she react, its like getting to a another person you know you're very close to but surprisingly you had never met in your life. The feeling is just plain weird.

The most important thing now is she gets to be a healthy baby, nothing else matters anymore to me. I offer my prayer to our Lord Jesus Christ that everything will be fine.

Our Father who art in Heaven
Hallowed be thy name
Thy Kingdom come Thy will be done
On earth as it is in Heaven
Give us this day our daily bread
And forgive us our sins
As we forgive others who sin against us
Do not lead us into temptations
But delivery from evil.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Vitamin K at birth: to inject or not to inject?

Reprinted from International Chiropractic Pediatric Association Newsletter
September/October 2002 Issue

by Linda Folden Palmer, DC


UPDATE to below article: A very large 2003 study in the British Journal of Cancer (Fear et al.) has suggested that there is no link between bolus vitamin K provision at birth and leukemia or other cancers. (The study eliminated 2% of cancer cases in their study group that were diagnosed prior to 3 months of age. They additionally did not count Down's syndrome babies and some others.) I'm inclined to believe that the risk is slight if it exists. Still, the conflicts in findings lead me to want to see an analysis of premature babies only, as any effect will be enhanced in this set and may provide a more definitive answer for older babies --- not to question provision in preemies as the benefits of vitamin K administration are more important in premature infants.

Newborn infants routinely receive a vitamin K shot after birth in order to prevent (or slow) a rare problem of bleeding into the brain weeks after birth. Vitamin K promotes blood clotting. The fetus has low levels of vitamin K as well as other factors needed in clotting. The body maintains these levels very precisely.1 Supplementation of vitamin K to the pregnant mother does not change the K status of the fetus, confirming the importance of its specific levels.

Toward the end of gestation, the fetus begins developing some of the other clotting factors, developing two key factors just before term birth.2 It has recently been shown that Vitamin K is involved in regulating the rate of cell division in the fetus. It's possible that abnormally high levels of vitamin K can allow cell division to get out of hand, leading to cancer.


What's the Concern?

The problem of bleeding into the brain occurs mainly from 3 to 7 weeks after birth in just over 5 out of 100,000 births (without vitamin K injections); 90% of those cases are breastfed infants,3 because formulas are supplemented with unnaturally high levels of vitamin K. Forty percent of these infants suffer permanent brain damage or death.

The cause of this bleeding trauma is generally liver disease that has not been detected until the bleeding occurs. Several liver problems can reduce the liver's ability to make blood-clotting factors out of vitamin K; therefore extra K helps this situation. Infants exposed to drugs or alcohol through any means are especially at risk, and those from mothers on anti-epileptic medications are at very high risk and need special attention.

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Such complications reduce the effectiveness of vitamin K, and in these cases, a higher level of available K could prevent the tragic intracranial bleeding. This rare bleeding disorder has been found to be highly preventable by a large-dose injection of vitamin K at birth.

The downside of this practice however is a possibly 80% increased risk of developing childhood leukemia. While a few studies have refuted this suggestion, several tightly controlled studies have shown this correlation to be most likely.4,5 A more recent analysis of six different studies suggests it may be a 10 or 20% increased risk. This is still a significant number of avoidable cancers.6

Apparently the cell division that continues to be quite rapid after birth continues to depend on precise amounts of vitamin K to proceed at the proper rate. Introduction of levels that are 20,000 times the newborn level, the amount usually injected, can have devastating consequences.


The Newborn's Diet

Nursing raises the infant's vitamin K levels very gradually after birth so that no disregulation occurs that would encourage leukemia development. Additionally, the clotting system of the healthy newborn is well planned, and healthy breastfed infants do not suffer bleeding complications, even without any supplementation.7

While breastfed infants demonstrate lower blood levels of vitamin K than the "recommended" amount, they show no signs of vitamin K deficiency (leading one to wonder where the "recommended" level for infants came from). But with vitamin K injections at birth, harmful consequences of some rare disorders can be averted.

Infant formulas are supplemented with high levels of vitamin K, generally sufficient to prevent intracranial bleeding in the case of a liver disorder and in some other rare bleeding disorders. Although formula feeding is seen to increase overall childhood cancer rates by 80%, this is likely not related to the added vitamin K.


The Numbers

Extracting data from available literature reveals that there are 1.5 extra cases of leukemia per 100,000 children due to vitamin K injections, and 1.8 more permanent injuries or deaths per 100,000 due to brain bleeding without injections. Adding the risk of infection or damage from the injections, including a local skin disease called "scleroderma" that is seen rarely with K injections,8 and even adding the possibility of healthy survival from leukemia, the scales remain tipped toward breastfed infants receiving a prophylactic vitamin K supplementation. However, there are better options than the .5 or 1 milligram injections typically given to newborns.


A Better Solution
The breastfed infant can be supplemented with several low oral doses of liquid vitamin K9 (possibly 200 micrograms per week for 5 weeks, totaling 1 milligram, even more gradual introduction may be better). Alternatively, the nursing mother can take vitamin K supplements daily or twice weekly for 10 weeks. (Supplementation of the pregnant mother does not alter fetal levels but supplementation of the nursing mother does increase breastmilk and infant levels.)

Either of these provides a much safer rate of vitamin K supplementation. Maternal supplementation of 2.5 mg per day, recommended by one author, provides a higher level of vitamin K through breastmilk than does formula,10 and may be much more than necessary.

Formula provides 10 times the U.S. recommended daily allowance," and this RDA is about 2 times the level in unsupplemented human milk. One milligram per day for 10 weeks for mother provides a cumulative extra 1 milligram to her infant over the important period and seems reasonable. Neither mother nor infant require supplementation if the infant is injected at birth.11


The Bottom Line
There is no overwhelming reason to discontinue this routine prophylactic injection for breastfed infants. Providing information about alternatives to allow informed parents to refuse would be reasonable. These parents may then decide to provide some gradual supplementation, or, for an entirely healthy term infant, they may simply provide diligent watchfulness for any signs of jaundice (yellowing of eyes or skin) or easy bleeding.

There appears to be no harm in supplementing this vitamin in a gradual manner however. Currently, injections are provided to infants intended for formula feeding as well, although there appears to be no need as formula provides good gradual supplementation. Discontinuing routine injections for this group alone could reduce cases of leukemia.

One more curious look at childhood leukemia is the finding that when any nation lowers its rate of infant deaths, their rate of childhood leukemia increases.12 Vitamin K injections may be responsible for some part of this number, but other factors are surely involved, about which we can only speculate.


Source: http://babyreference.com/VitaminKinjectORnot.htm

Nowadays with biotechnology advancing faster than research of consequenses, we are at risk of more mistake option than non. I think I'll most probably go for the oral option which feels to be the safer method.


Update:

Spoke to Dr.Sudha about the vitamin K injection. Seems this is the standard practice in malaysia for quite some time now. Was included in my ceasarian package too. I brought up about vitamin K alarming 20,000X over dose and the possibility of raising the chances of leukimia, and the alternative of oral dosage instead. She told me she will check with her pediatrician.

I was thinking to opt for oral dosage if its anyway possible.

Another note from Dr. Sudha, she says vitamin K is very crucial and must be given no matter in which form as without the boost there are risk when they cut the cord or when giving any injection and the bleeding wont stop.

Monday, June 8, 2009

35 weeks




Lita at 35 weeks