I had my last major obstetrical appointment today. The baby is 6lbs 8oz so far... and although I will be full term as of Sunday, I still have about three weeks to go, so still on track for about an 8-9lb baby. Yikes. From here on out they plan to check my blood pressure to make sure I don't develop sudden preeclampsia, and then we "wait and see". Any day now. Ack.

But today I also met with the anaesthetist, and I'm a little nervous. I really feel like if I am not able to have a natural delivery, I'm going to be kind of screwed. This is mostly because I'm obese. Actually, I meet the clinical definition of morbidly obese but most people can't tell I had a pre-pregnancy BMI of over 40. Basically, the doctors are going in under the assumption that I will eventually have to have a C-section, something I very much don't want for a variety of reasons. They assume this because most obese women need C-sections due to a variety of health complications... complications I don't have. Actually, I'm really healthy. I have no breathing problems or deformities in the back of my throat or jaw, I have excellent muscle tone, I do not have diabetes in any of its forms, I gained a reasonable amount of weight (25lbs) and I most certainly don't have high blood pressure (and seriously, if my blood pressure spikes to 130/80 after encountering several cases of "teh dumb" on the road, it's not likely to get dangerous anytime soon). I'm surprisingly active and athletic... taking yoga classes and salsa lessons until last week, and still, I'm probably going to undergo unnecessary medical procedures because most women of my height and weight are not active people who generally eat a balanced diet.

Some things they want to do is get an epidural catheter in my back ASAP, regardless of if I want epidural anaesthesia or not.... and that alone carries some serious risks. They also want to put in an IV right away in case they screw up the catheter and need to do the C-section under a general. This too is problematic since I generally have low blood pressure and tend to collapse veins with IVs in them; average lifespan is 3 hours. This may not be so bad, but I only have 3 veins that nurses have ever been able to use for IVs. I don't like the math. And I'm allergic to the tape. Boo. And don't get me started on the anaesthetic, it just sounds like bad news to me. At least we both agreed that narcotics are an exceptionally bad idea, so I won't have someone shooting me full of them insisting that there was no way I could be still in pain. Nitrous is still a go.

I've resolved to deliver my first baby the same way my mom delivered me. Eight hours, start to finish, no complications.

Here's to hoping.

From: [identity profile] waterspyder.livejournal.com


I acknowledge that they may become necessary, but they won't know that at first, and by popping a needle in my spine and missing the veins in my arms and hands a few times, they're just going to get me stressed which in turn will actually make their scenario more likely to happen.

From: [identity profile] zenten.livejournal.com


Ok, we need to talk about this more I think, just to figure out exactly what I should be doing.

From: [identity profile] waterspyder.livejournal.com


We consult with the anaesthetist, and if he says "now", we say "Can we wait and see for 1 or 2 hours?"

From: [identity profile] zenten.livejournal.com


OK.

I'll also probably look at how much pain you're in. If you're not really in much, and you don't want pain relief, why give it to you?

From: [identity profile] zenten.livejournal.com


Then don't have it. Simple as that. If they try to give you grief, just point them at me.
.

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