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| Pediatric Tracheostomies For parents and caregivers of children with tracheostomies. Please limit discussion to seeking and sharing of information pertaining to tracheostomy care, medical issues, special needs, disabilities, networking and moral support. |

03-11-2002, 04:53 PM
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Member
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Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Atlanta, Georgia USA
Posts: 464
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You guys are way too brave for me. Â*I'm a little squeamish at the thought of putting Lily in a pool or lake unless I could guarantee there was no way of her getting pool/lake water into her trach. Â*Think about pool/lake water and all the stuff that could be in it (besides the nasty chlorine)--would you wash your kid's trach with water that had been sitting outside for days or that other kids had swum in, or that had chemicals in it or animals living in it? Â*Ewww! Â*Water getting in her trach doesn't scare me that much, but all the other stuff doesn't seem like it would be good to bathe her trachea and lungs in! Â*
Of course, that being said, I can remember when I was a kid and inhaled plenty of pool and lake water, and I seemed to have turned out okay.
Erica (Lily's Mom)
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Our fabulous Lily was born 5-26-01 with partial trisomy 7q, Pierre-Robin sequence, VSD, GER; had trach, GT, Nissen at 4 weeks, cleft palate repair at 6 months and 18 months. Decannulated 11-15-04. Proud big sister to Benjamin 10-10-03, baby Vivienne 3-5-07!
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03-12-2002, 06:28 AM
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Administrator
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Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Grafton, MA
Posts: 4,176
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Some kids with trachs do swim. For kids who can cap their tubes (don't have an obstructed upper airways), it's a bit less risky. However, swimming with a trach is not recommended. The danger of drowning, near drowning (brain damage), and aspiration pneumonia is just too great. When a child has a trach the water goes directly into the lungs. There is no gag reflex to prevent aspiration. (nurse reply)
Enjoyed the photos! Peter, I love the sand page! Really cool. The most we allowed Aaron to do with a trach was to play in a kiddie pool with very close supervision. Water can be so dangerous, even for kids without trachs. (mom reply)
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Cindy - Mom to Aaron (age 19), trached for 4 years, subglottic stenosis, ADHD, learning disability, former 26 week preemie and identical twin to Eric (age 19), spastic quad CP, moderate MR, seizure disorder; Anthony (age 19), spastic quad CP, g-tube, seizure disorder, cortical vision impairment, profound MR; and Natasha (age 6) CP, cortical blindness, seizure disorder, profound MR, shunt, g-tube.
Home Page: http://www.bissells.com
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05-04-2006, 08:40 AM
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Junior Member
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Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Rancho Mirage, CA
Posts: 56
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Hi,
I was hoping to ask some questions of the person who started this post, as my son also has Goldenhar Syndrome.
(He does go in the pool, but only with my husband or I holding him, which is becoming MUCH more difficult now that he's getting so big, and so much stronger. Last summer, we used a floating ring with leg holes, but his "little boys" were getting really squooshed, so we stopped. If anyone has any suggestions for another type of floating device, let me know. He's only 3 1/2 and doesn't fully understand the limitations of having a trach. I think if we let him go in the pool--even with floaties--he'd get his trach under the water, which I wouldn't allow).
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Danielle Cohen-Bautista,
mother of Jet Bautista: DOB October/2002
Goldenhar Syndrome: VSD, tracheal stenosis, hearing deficiency and underdeveloped outer ear; pericardial patch tracheoplasty, tracheotomy, reflux, Nissen, g-tube
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