Cecilia’s Story

Site created on March 9, 2019

Welcome to our CaringBridge website. We are using it to keep family and friends updated in one place. We appreciate your support and words of hope and encouragement. Thank you for visiting.


Cece has already had quite the start to life. Born at 29 weeks 3 days, she spent 44 long days in the NICU before finally getting to come home on January 12. Everything was going great at home!....until a cold bug made its way to the Valentine household and infected Mom, Dad, and Cece’s 3 older siblings. At first, all Cece got was a stuffy nose that Mom and Dad were constantly sucking out so she could breathe. 


Then one day, Mom picked Cece up from Daycare and noticed Cece wasn’t quite acting like herself. Mom ignored it, thinking maybe she was just tired from a day at Daycare. Later that evening, Mom noticed Cece was breathing harder and faster than normal. At first, Mom was going to wait until the next day and bring Cece into urgent care. But then she noticed Cece was retracting while she was breathing, and her mom gut told her something wasn’t right. 


Cece was brought to Essentia Duluth ER for evaluation and immediately admitted as she was struggling to keep her sats up and needed some oxygen. A chest x-ray and a nasal swab determined Cece has Bronchiolitis, possible pneumonia, and she tested positive for two cold viruses: the rhinovirus and another one that when combined with the rhinovirus can be very dangerous, especially to children under the age of one. 


Cece was admitted to the peds unit and things quickly escalated as her condition deteriorated. She had to get an IV as she was too tired to eat from fighting to breathe. Her lab work came back showing a possible systemic infection. And she was working harder and harder to breathe and was expending all her energy. She was moved to the PICU for closer monitoring and  originally was going to be intubated. The intensive peds doctor instead decided to try her on a sipap machine instead to help reduce the work Cece was doing to breathe.  He told Mom and dad the next 24-48 hours and how Cece responded to the machine would be critical in deciding the next step. 


And now here we are.  Cece had a hard time at first with the sipap and was fighting it and still breathing too fast. She was given medicine to make her sleepy and help relax her and let the sipap help her breathe, but she would still get feisty and knock the mask loose. We are still in the gray area, but are hopeful the sipap will do the trick and our precious, feisty baby girl will be home with us soon. 

Newest Update

Journal entry by Amanda Valentine

One step forward, two steps back. It’s our common jig nowadays. 
Cece started off really great yesterday off the cpap and on high flow O2. Her NG feedings we’re slowly increased to 20ml/hr continuously and she was tolerating it well. Last night she was due at 2am for her IV cefepime, but the IV in her hand had stopped working. No biggie, she’d had it in since Friday anyways. It took 4 nurses and about 8-10 pokes before a NICU nurse came up and was able to start another IV in her scalp. Cece peacefully slept through all the pokes while sucking away on her pacifier.

Todag, her respirations were really fast, between 80-120. She also pulled her NG tube out once, then coughed it out the second time. I noticed too while I was holding her that she sounded more congested and like her lungs had more gunk and she was coughing more. Another chest x-Ray was done, and it showed her lungs had again worsened with increased atelectasis in the upper right lobe and lower left lobe. The doctor showed me the x-Ray from yesterday where her lungs looked beautiful and clear, and then the one done this evening, and the change was drastic and very noticeable.

So back on the cpap she went. And let me tell ya: our 9lb pipsqueak did not make it easy for that respiratory therapist to put the mask back on her! She had just been bragging about how she has no problem hooking up babies by herself, and then Cece was having none of it today. It took another nurse and myself assisting to get her hooked back up, and the whole time she was thrashing and throwing little baby punches. Mini but mighty, that’s for sure for our feisty girl. 

After that battle, Cece was worn out and promptly passed out, which was good because her scalp IV had infiltrated in the process of getting her back on the cpap. So she endured some more pokes, and slept through all of them. Her veins are so tiny and apparently she has tough skin, making it difficult to start an IV. She ended up with another scalp IV on her right side now, and they had to shave some of her hair to ensure the tegaderm and tape sticks and the IV doses t dislodge. I was sad about her losing some hair, but I also don’t want her to be poked anymore, so whatever it takes I guess to keep this IV in place! 

She is now sleeping soundly, and we will see what tomorrow brings. Hopefully our feisty girl’s lungs will improve again and stay improved so we can move onto a new dance. At least I got to hold her briefly today in case it’s a few more days before I’ll get to hold her again. 
Patients and caregivers love hearing from you; add a comment to show your support.
Help Cecilia Stay Connected to Family and Friends

A $25 donation to CaringBridge powers a site like Cecilia's for two weeks. Will you make a gift to help ensure that this site stays online for them and for you?

Comments Hide comments

Show Your Support

See the Ways to Help page to get even more involved.

SVG_Icons_Back_To_Top
Top