She was about halfway through her pregnancy when her baby
was given a devastating diagnosis. The ultrasound revealed what doctors thought
to be malformed brain tissue.
Arrian and Drew Corpstein sought a second opinion. That
doctor determined their unborn baby, whom they named Matthew, had formed more
than a brainstem, but said his brain had not divided into two halves, according
to the Des Moines Register.
The best outcome, according Dr. Jona Conklin, who worked
with the Corpsteins, “was the baby would only live a few days.” So doctors gave
the couple a few options, the primary being abortion.
But the Corpsteins are devout Christians and knew from the
beginning terminating the pregnancy was not an option for them. Arrian
Corpstein said aborting their unborn son “didn’t feel like it was my decision
to make.”
“We knew that our baby was probably not going to be born
alive,” she said. “Whatever happens, it’s in God’s hands.”
And that is exactly where the Corpsteins put their faith and
hope — in God’s hands.
Arrian Corpstein carried their baby to term, chronicling her
pregnancy alongside her husband. Then, after three days of labor, she gave
birth to Matthew on Sunday, July 29.
He’s still alive today.
Drew Corpstein delivered their baby boy. Moments after his
birth, he placed their newborn child on Arrian Corpstein’s chest, where he
immediately exceeded expectations. Little Matthew latched onto his mother’s
breast almost instantly.
“The nurses rated him a 10 out of 10 on that,” Arrian
Corpstein recalled. “They told us normal newborns don’t do that well.”
After consulting with the neonatal intensive care unit, the
Corpsteins reluctantly decided to allow doctors to give their little boy an
MRI. Drew Corpstein said he thought their time with Matthew “was limited,” so
he didn’t want to give him up for the length of the test.
Jan Fick, a nurse who has helped deliver 3,500 babies and
changed 800,000 diapers in her 36 years of experience, convinced them it was
important for Matthew to have an MRI.
And she was right. The test proved the baby had been
misdiagnosed.
Little Matthew’s brain was completely formed, but he did
have fluid buildup in his skull that pushed his brain to the side of his head.
A neurosurgeon said the problem could be fixed by inserting a shunt to drain
the fluid.
“He said he performed 30 of these surgeries a year and that he
believed Matthew’s brain would return to its normal position,” Arrian Corpstein
said. “He said Matthew had every chance at a normal life.”
Conklin noted that this is a “very rare case,” adding most
prenatal diagnoses are correct.
Baby Matthew returned to the neonatal intensive care unit on
Aug. 19, where he will likely stay for a few weeks. Not long after he was born,
he developed meningitis — inflammation of the brain — and his shunt had to be
temporarily removed.
On Sunday, Drew Corpstein said their son is improving.
If you or anyone you know would like to donate to Matthew’s
medical care, you can do so through this GoFundMe page.
http://www.faithwire.com/2018/08/31/couple-defies-doctors-advice-to-abort-baby-now-they-have-a-tiny-miracle/
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