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[Following Blog post written by Mark Bonnema]
A sincere thanks to all who have offered their thoughts, prayers, and love these last few days. Ashley continues to be hospitalized at the University of Minnesota Fairview Hospital with an exacerbation of a pulmonary infection. Her care team is uncertain if the problematic culprit is an antibiotic resistant bacterial infection, or an intractable fungal infection. Regardless the cause, Ashley's lungs continue to feel and act like a wet sponge... so inflamed and full of fluid and mucous that they repel oxygen rich air. Her lung function continues to fall, reaching new lows for her. Shortness of breath, headaches, and extreme fatigue are the current norm. Ashley is beginning to wonder if she will ever be able to walk down the hall or up a single flight of stairs again without feeling like she will pass out.
Most hospitalizations for Ashley start out with the same routine... Ashley politely declines to wear a hospital gown in favor of her own clothes, she tells the hospital staff she has not traveled out of the country or been in contact with anyone displaying ebola symptoms, and... she provides a sputum sample. The hospital lab then takes the sputum (i.e. phlegm or lung mucous) sample and cultures it, allowing any bacteria or fungus present to grow on a nutrient rich petri dish. Any bacteria or fungi that grow are identified, and then a sensitivity test is conducted, where the microbes are exposed to different antibiotic and anti fungal medications to see if they are resistant or susceptible to each medication. Ashley has progressed deep enough into her journey with CF that the bacteria that she cultures in her sputum are resistant to almost all available antibiotics. She has had to use the common antibiotics too often, and the bacteria have learned to survive in the presence of such antibiotics. (Not to worry, these bacteria are usually harmless to the general public with intact immune systems, hence I won't hesitate to steal a kiss from her without worry of becoming infected or developing pneumonia myself).
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CF, as a chronic disease, is often characterized by a slow decline in health and lung function and an even slower improvement. When a lung infection is at its worst and lung function has reached its lowest, it can seem an impossible task to wait for the treatments and antibiotics to do their work, all the while wondering if they will even work at all. Days and weeks may pass with little or no change.
Today was the first day of Advent - a season of waiting in the Christian faith. Ashley and I have passed through the spiritual and mental process that this holy season requires many times. It is usually with joy and anticipation that we enter this season of waiting upon the birth of Jesus Christ. But never before have we been forced to practice and experience waiting like this. It is no longer a mental or spiritual exercise when each and every one of Ashley's labored breaths yearns and pines for relief. Waiting for breath is difficult, it is painful and disheartening, and agonizingly real.
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Your continued love, prayers, and support help us endure the wait. Thank you.
Wait in joy, heartache, and hope for what tomorrow may bring.