So I've had an extremely complicated pregnancy and LO is hovering just above the 10the percentile now, is an SUA baby, has borderline oligohydraminos, and I've lost 9 pounds in three weeks (now only 2 pounds over my starting weight of 115 and I'm 5'8"). My OB really really wanted to get me to 38 weeks for brain and lung development purposes and this Thursday I'm being induced at 11am when I finally reach the goal mark.
Our last growth scan showed about 5 and a half pounds but I know that means nothing as they can be wildly inaccurate....but we do know she will be small because she only gained 3-4 ounces in two weeks. I'm not dilated but am 30% effaced as of last Friday. Baby has been at station 0 for over a week. Not a favorable Bishop score but my OB (chief of the dept) and my perinatologist have agreed waiting any longer will put my LO at too high a risk for stillbirth due to the SUA, near IUGR, low fluid, as well as my rapid weight loss. LO has also been non-reactive on about 1/4 of 10 NST's. I'm ok with the induction as I just want her out safely (history of late term loss).
So....1 day and 9 hours until I check in to L&D to be induced. I've had so many issues with this pregnancy, literally all the nurses who work in that department know me by name (my doctor always sends me down there after appts; I've only gone once on my own because I didn't want to be that person that goes in for every little thing).
I'm getting increasingly nervous about the induction process as I do not handle pain well, have a history of a multiple vertebral fracture, and LO is sunny side up (I'm aware she can flip on a dime though). For any STM's, I'd love to hear your induction stories (good or bad) just so I'm prepared for what can happen and how long it really takes start to finish. I know I'll need a cervical softener and then Pitocin (I'm definitely getting an epidural). I'm one of those people who needs real-life anecdotes to truly "get" what is going to occur. I've educated myself as much as possible through my doctor, Internet research, etc but would love any tips or information from women who have already undergone this process; especially if your pregnancy issues/history are somewhat close to my own.
Thank you in advance. *i did use the search function but didn't find it helpful*
Re: Being induced on Thursday 11/19: any helpful info from STMs? *loss briefly mentioned*
I was induced with my first and it was a long process... However HOW long it took was contingent on a few things that we realized later. I was 24 at the time and opted for pain meds as soon as they offered them to me, but the two options were demerol mixed with phenergan or Stadol. I was afraid of the phenergan because it has made me super sick in the past so I refused it. I now know that Stadol is used to help slow or stop labor, so it contradicted the pitocin. I had my intense contractions but my body didn't want to dilate. So at about 32 hours of labor I agreed to try the Demerol and then finally got my epidural.. I was able to vaginally 5 hour later. I basically went from a 4 to a 10 as soon as they quit using the one drug.
This time I am being induced at 39 weeks (Dec 9) and whereas I'm a bit nervous and will make a final decision based on where I'm dilated to the week before, I plan to go as long as I can stand it without the pain meds and hoping for a much shorter labor.
Keep us posted!
My first induction was a train wreck. Mostly because I figured that since it was an induced labor that my "options" for declining certain things or requesting certain things were limited at best. I know way better now. My second one was smooth sailing and ended in a quick, text book delivery.
I am going to share both experiences with you because they were vastly different. Be prepared, this will be long and the first induction story is a little ugly.
Anyways, the process was "standard" - I had a not so hot Bishop's score (0 station, fingertip dilated 50% effaced) so they placed a foley bulb in the night before delivery to help get me dilated. The bulb is designed to get you to a three or four depending on the size they insert. It wasn't uncomfortable at all and it stayed in almost all night before falling out on its own around 4am. They checked me before starting the pitocin and said I was at 3cm. I declined the epi and the nurses told me (repeatedly) that they never saw a mom make it through an induction without the meds and I should just get it as soon as I could. Still declined it. Managed the contractions very well for five hours though the nurses kept coming in my room to put me back to bed (the fetal monitor would slip, they said) and to let me know I wasn't "acting painful enough" every time they cranked up the pitocin. General policy is a pitocin increase every two hours - we started at every two hours but because I wasn't "painful" they stepped it up to every hour. At around noon, the nurse asked if we could go ahead and break my water to speed things up and I said I wasn't comfortable with that until I had reached 4-5cm (I knew I could still "walk away" and try again another day if they didn't break my water but that I would have to deliver no matter what if they did). She checked me and said I was a very stretch 4/4.5cm so I consented. The midwife came in, also commented that I was "managing the pain too well" and broke my water. She then checked me and told the nurse I was still at 0 station and dilated at a tight three externally and a two internally and 70% effaced. I started bawling because I knew right then the nurse had totally lied to me to get me to consent to having my water broken. The midwife commented there was slight meconium in my water. Then the next contraction hit while everyone was still in the room and I thought I was going to explode, it hurt so badly. After my water broke they went from being manageable 4-5 pain scale to a whopping 7-8. I went to get up and walk because my body was literally screaming at me to and I was (gently) pushed back down and told I couldn't get up for at least an hour since I was a fall risk for slipping in the fluids. That hour was the most miserable hour of my life. I kept begging the nurse to let me at least get up and sit on the birthing ball because I had not way to cope with my contractions and she said no, I had to stay in bed. When the hour mark passed, I rang for her again and she sent in a student who told me she couldn't authorize me to do or not do anything - all she could help me with was shifting positions in the bed or getting me some ice. This happened three more times until I told her I *was* getting up to use the restroom and could either help get me unhooked from everything or I could rip it all off. The student helped me up and to the bathroom and kept telling me how sorry she was. When I made it back to the bed I told her to let the nurse know I'd consent to the epi since I wasn't allowed out of bed anyways. She left and the nurse (who had been unavailable while I was begging for someone to let me up or sit or something) immediately popped in the room with extra fluid to prep me for the epi. The epi went smoothly - almost instant relief. Hardest part was timing it between contractions since the pitocin had me going every one to two minutes at that point. I was able to sleep/rest for about two/three hours afterwards. Around 10:50pm my midwife showed back up and checked me. I was at a 9, fully effaced with a lip. She gave me the option to start pushing or to just have a c-section and said if I couldn't get the lip to go away with some pushing I'd end up getting one anyways. I opted to push. Then I got really nauseous and started vomiting every time I would bear down (the midwife joked at one point that three more good retches and I'd deliver the baby). I pushed hard for about thirty minutes. The midwife had inserted an internal monitor to gauge how effective my contractions and my pushes were since I had the epi placed and couldn't tell her if the baby was moving down when I would push. What I *could* feel was the baby frantically thrashing around. I told the midwife that and she just glanced up at me and told me to keep pushing. I very badly wanted to roll on to all fours at this point and was told I could not because of the epi (even though I had leg control and was able to roll side to side and lift my legs and back). My kid had an astounding amount of hair and because my water broke so early it was a 'dry' birth so her hair was keeping her from crowning. They got a bottle of olive oil and liberally doused us with it. That did the trick and her head delivered the next two pushes. Then shit hit the fan. That thrashing I felt was her trying to get into position because she had an arm up by her face. In turn, this caused her left shoulder to wedge itself under my pubic bone. I was directed to push (and push and push) as hard as I could while the midwife pulled on her and a nurse pressed on my fundus externally. As they where wheeling me to the OR, I felt a "pop" and my baby finally delivered. She was in bad shape and I was in bad shape (my BP had reached critical levels, I was so exhausted I couldn't lift my head up and I was convinced that my baby hadn't made it). They got her going and then noticed her breathing was off so rushed her to the nursery after holding her in front of my face for two seconds. The midwife started patching me up - an emergency 4th degree episiotomy had been done so she had to stitch a lot. My baby ended up transferred to another hospital and admitted in the NICU with PPH (a condition where the blood gas exchange doesn't happen in the lungs) and was sedated and placed on a ventilator and she also developed sepsis from a GBS infection even though I tested negative for it. She recovered after a month stint in the NICU and is a thriving three year old now. I had a billion stitches, the "pop" was the cartilage in my pelvis separating and my tailbone broke so I was in a wheelchair for a long time. Total process from start of pitocin to delivery was 16.5 hours.
Second induction I was pretty much an emotional wreck since I had almost daily flashbacks of my last delivery for the past two years. I started off with a good Bishop's score and used a breast pump in the hospital to get things going. That got my contractions started and dilated me to a three all around. Started pitocin and antibiotics for GBS around 10pm. Made it to 7 centimeters before asking for the epi (mainly because I had a panic attack about whether the baby would get stuck or not during delivery and then the pain got away from me). Epi went not so well - placement was wrong and I knew it right away. Ended up getting pulled out and repositioned. Still wasn't right and only worked a little on my right side. The midwife overseeing my delivery stopped my pitocin at this point (which shocked me but was awesome). Water broke on its own an hour after the epi was placed. By 11am baby's heartrate was dropping along with contractions. They suspected a compressed cord so added a catheter with fluid pumped into the birth canal which did the trick. I needed to roll on all fours again and I did with no flak from nurses or staff. About twenty minutes after I did that I told the nurse I needed to push. The midwife came in to check me and asked if I wanted my OB to deliver me (I had requested that when we checked in). I told her if my OB could get there right away then yes, but I wasn't going to wait for her to get there. The midwife barely had enough time to snap her second glove on before my baby shot out of me on the third push. Happy, healthy mom and baby
Very much hoping for a repeat of #2 with this baby.
I, too, was induced due to pre-e with my son.
I wasn't dialated at all. Arrived on a Tuesday night after not progressing past 3cm over the next day & a half I opted for a c-section Thursday morning. It was definitely the right choice for us at that point & my recovery was pretty easy. Hoping for another easy recovery from #2 c-section!
I've been up all night vomiting (well really dry heaving bits of bile and Quest protein bar since I couldn't really eat anything else yesterday) I'm so nervous
Thank you everyone again for your kind replies and the realistic stories of your experience. I appreciate the lack of sugar coating because I want to be prepared for the not so great side of things.
Can't wait to meet the LO and just trying to focus on the fact that it's pain with a purpose. I may be vomiting my way through this entire day but as long as the LO is healthy I could care less how long it takes or which route she comes into the world. I promise to update when she's here.
You all are such an amazing group of people and I just want to express my appreciation for not only the replies to this post but literally getting me through this whole pregnancy.
BFP #1 April 14th, 2014 MMC at 17weeks with a baby boy D&E
BFP # 2 March 23rd, Rainbow Baby Boy Jayce Michael born 12/9/15
BFP#3 January 26th EDD October 9th! Hoping for my girl!
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