Last week it was blood work, and this week it was an MRI. I was a little nervous about the MRI because Emma has a tendency to be somewhat claustrophobic. One year, she climbed into the box for our artificial Christmas tree and the 2 cardboard lids closed her in and she SCREAMED. Huge panic attack. Another time she had a spaz because she somehow locked herself into the bathroom and couldn’t get out. So I was a little unsure of how she would feel about being slid into a relatively small tunnel.
When the booking person at Sick Kids called to talk to us about the appointment, she recommended that we at least try to do it without sedation. It takes longer to get an appointment if your child has to be sedated because they only do those during regular business hours, rather than during evenings or weekends. We definitely wanted a sooner appointment, so we decided to just prep Emma well ahead of time and see how she did.
Our check in for registration was at 8:30 pm, so we dropped Will and Lauren off at Ken and Lynn’s and gave ourselves plenty of time to get downtown. We haven’t been to Sick Kids for a long time (thank goodness), and we weren’t 100% sure where it was, and how the parking would be, etc. We made great time and had a chance to walk around a bit and check the place out. What a beautiful hospital! As terrible as it would be to have a sick child, you couldn’t ask for a better environment. Everything is so cheery and bright, and there are so many amenities. The main floor really doesn’t look anything like a hospital at all.
So we sat and had our snack from Tim Horton’s and chatted about things until it was time to go. We headed down to the MRI department, where we filled in a couple of forms and Emma changed into her hospital nightie. She quite liked it and was interested in taking it home, although she wasn’t too keen on the back of it being open. We passed some time in the waiting room doing some reading and looking at pictures on daddy’s pocket PC, and then Emma decided to give her penguin an MRI.
Emma was finally called for her scan at about 9:15 or so. The MRI room was quite cold, so after she lay down on the stretcher part of the machine, she had a blanket tucked around her (and her penguin) and she was strapped in. She had to wear a big set of headphones because the MRI machine makes so much noise, and then there was a helmet-type thing that went on over top. (I told her she looked like a Storm Trooper, which she thought was funny). There was a mirror on it so that the technician would be able to see her face and make sure she was okay throughout the test. I sat in the room with her and sported a big pair of headphones too. I nearly jumped out of my skin when the testing started. It’s not one long test, per se, but a number of pictures being taken in succession. Each one can take anywhere from 30 seconds to 4 minutes, and the patient has to be perfectly still throughout. Emma did her “sleeping beauty” thing for almost a whole hour! That’s a LONG time for a little kid to lie still. Heck, it would be a long time for me to lie still.
I asked her afterwards if she had been afraid, and she said she was a little bit nervous, but mostly her back was sore from lying on the stretcher thing. I saw her smiling a couple of times, and when I asked her what had made her smile, she said that some of the noises had sounded like farts. It doesn’t matter what the situation is…my kids will find bathroom humor in it somewhere!
I think we're done now, in terms of investigations. Emma has an appointment with the pediatric neurologist in September, and we hope to hear good things there. We're just trusting the Lord with her every day. She's really been quite oblivious to all the worry, and in fact has enjoyed having "her own" doctor. Her biggest concern about the MRI was whether it would show that she had a small brain. (how embarrassing, right?!) :)