
Definition: Tracheomalacia in a newborn occurs when the cartilage in the windpipe (trachea) has not developed properly. Instead of being rigid, the walls of the trachea are floppy. Because the windpipe is the main airway, breathing difficulties begin soon after birth. Congenital tracheomalacia is very uncommon.
Symptoms
- Breathing noises that may change with position and improve during sleep
- Breathing problems that get worse with coughing, crying, feeding, or upper respiratory infections
- High-pitched breathing
- Rattling, noisy breaths
Outlook (Prognosis)
Congenital tracheomalacia generally goes away on its own by the age of 18-24 months. As the tracheal cartilage gets stronger and the trachea grows, the noisy respirations and breathing difficulties gradually stop.
So...Grace has this. Luckily, her doctor didn't seem too worried about it at all. We are scheduled to see an otolaryngologist (that means an ear, nose, and throat doctor--hooray for a new vocabulary word, though I wish I could have learned about it under different circumstances) on December 2nd to make sure that there aren't any complications. I wasn't worried about it at all until I stupidly decided to look up "tracheomalacia" on the internet and found all of the possible serious complications. Silly me. Now I'm a little worried.
But...I've decided to continue having Grace's care in the hands of professionals instead of turning it over to the internet. I read that in the Reader's Digest once--doctors hate it when you trust the internet more than them. :0) So...we're hoping for the best. I think everything should be just fine. It's just kind of scary to have a doctor tell you that your cute little baby has any kind of problem that is hard to pronounce and has more than ten letters. Scary mommy moment number one. Our doctor said that her having this explains why she has not been gaining a whole lot of weight. Everyone who sees her says she is so small and many have asked if she was a preemie with a low birthweight. And, uh, we all know she was exactly the opposite. Yeah.
Grace is still just as cute as ever and is laughing a lot these days. She also makes these really sweet little gurgling noises when she's happy. We love those. And...she rolled over for the third official time tonight. Hooray! She's great and we love her. More to come...