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<hr><i>Originally posted by: <b>Anonymous</b></i>
My son is 15 years old. He has Cystic Fibrosis and insulin dependent diabetes. He is in the hospital right now with a lung infection. Over the last year or so the doctors have been wanting to give my son the feeding tube, he has resisted. Now with his weight only at 89 lbs. they are pretty much giving no other option but to get the g-tube. My son, like most CF patients already go thru so much and take numerous drugs already that adding one more thing is making me and my son overwhelmed. I would like to know if there is someone that could give some advise on this subject. I don't know much about the feeding tube. I would like to know the pros and cons that other cf patients have experienced with the g-tube. Thank you so much. Crista<hr></blockquote>
Well, you don't really have a choice here sadly. If your son needs it, then he needs it.
I refused mine till age 17, and it really wasn't the best idea to refuse it for so long..... It helped alot for a while, and got me out of the dangerously low weight area. So it was a good idea.
Now, even though I don't need it, I still keep it in.
I mainly just use it now for doing certain liquid medications... (namly the krystalos/go-lightly)
I also keep it in becuase it really compliments my looks. <img src="i/expressions/face-icon-small-tongue.gif" border="0">
The down sides to a G-Tube can be annoying though...
Like doing the treatments well trying to sleep... Arg... The horrid times I had with that... Waking up with the peptimein all over my bed, ruining my sheets, and almost ruining my matress.... It always seemed to come out. It also makes you go the bathroom more, feel a little bloated well doing it, and can wake you up alot to go the bathroom.
If you wanna do it in the day instead of the night (if you actually have the time to spair), then it's about an 8 hour treatment... It also makes it hard to be mobile with...
The bolases can be really annoying too. Not really painful, but it will give an akward/uncomfortable feeling. Like you ate something bad.
Then there's also your sons social life. Having a tube in his stomach may make him feel crappy about doing things like swimming, or having friends over to find a hospital type pole/pump in his room. Ofcourse, this dosen't matter if your son has some solid self esteem, and friends that already know/understand all of this.
Then there's the fact that it can leak... Around it will just kinda ooze, and a puss type crap, that almost reminds you of what you blow out of your nose, will come around it, unless you keep it REALLY clean, and clean it about 2x a day.
This could also cuase the skin to dry, and crack, and bleed around it, which means you will most likly get something called "Triamcinolone Acetonide Cream" to keep that from happening, which also has to be applied often.
Then you also have to have it replaced sometimes, which can be semi painful, and really annoying. Unless you have the new one that's held in by the little water pouch... Then it's pretty easy, but still can be a little irritating feeling.
Overall, the tube is a good idea if your son needs it, but it does need a good deal of maitinance and attention, and can infact be a big hassle.
The worst thing will be getting it in. It's gonna feel like he was shot in the stomach, and hurt for about a week. Just don't let the nurses try to turn it well he's in the hospital after it's put in. Turning it when it's just put in is the worst...
I'm sorry if alot of this post contained things that you probably didn't wanna hear, but it's been the reality of my experience with the G-Tube that im telling you about. I just want you and your son to be ready if you do get it.
I wish you both the best.