“How I Had Emergency C-Section & Health Complications After Delivery“ – Serena William Reveals

 

Serena Williams and Alexis Olympia Ohanian, Jr. for Vogue
Serena Williams and Alexis Olympia Ohanian, Jr. for Vogue
Mario Testino

Days after Serena Williams announced she had withdrawn from competing in the Australian Open, the 36-year-old mother shared an adorable photo of her 4-month-old daughter Alexis Olympia

January 10, 2018:  Serena Williams may have had an easy pregnancy while carrying 4-month-old daughter Alexis Olympia, but giving birth to her first child came with some major health complications for the tennis star.

In the cover story to Vogue‘s February issue, Williams reveals that her plummeting heart rate reached dangerously low levels during contractions, leading to an emergency cesarean section.

Though the surgery went well, what followed was a six-day battle with a pulmonary embolism that led to multiple surgeries and a handful of additional medical troubles for Williams.

“That was an amazing feeling,” Williams, 36, recalls of having a crying newborn fall silent when laid on her mother’s chest seconds after birth. “And then everything went bad.”

Symptoms for Williams’ problems began the day after her daughter’s birth, as Williams experienced sudden shortness of breath while recovering in the hospital.

Having had blood clots in the past and because she wasn’t taking blood thinners due to her c-section, she knew that the breathing problems she was experiencing were due to another pulmonary embolism and immediately told the nearest nurse (between gasps for breath) that she needed a CT scan with contrast and IV heparin.

The nurse, however, thought Williams was just feeling confused from her pain medication. Instead, doctors performed an ultrasound of her legs, which ultimately revealed nothing.

“I was like, ‘A Doppler? I told you, I need a CT scan and a heparin drip,’ ” Williams remembers.

When they finally listened, the CT turned up several small blood clots, which had settled into her lungs. “I was like, ‘Listen to Dr. Williams!’ ” she jokes as she was put on the blood thinner drip.

Alexis Olympia Ohanian, Jr. and Serena Williams for Vogue
Alexis Olympia Ohanian, Jr. and Serena Williams for Vogue
Mario Testino

Dr. Williams couldn’t have imagined what would happen next, though.

Intense coughing spells sparked by the pulmonary embolism would cause her c-section wounds to pop open, leading to a return to the operating room. During surgery, doctors found a large hematoma flooding her abdomen that had been caused by hemorrhaging at the site of her c-section. In order to prevent more clots from dislodging and moving into her lungs, she returned to surgery for a third time to have a filter inserted into a major vein.

A week later, she was home — though was unable to get out of bed for six weeks and didn’t have a night nurse to help take care of Olympia.

“I was happy to change diapers,” now-husband Alexis Ohanian explains to Vogue.“But on top of everything she was going through, the feeling of not being able to help made it even harder. Consider for a moment that your body is one of the greatest things on this planet, and you’re trapped in it.”

Serena Wililams and Alexis Olympia Ohanian, Jr. for Vogue

Serena Wililams and Alexis Olympia Ohanian, Jr. for Vogue
Vogue

That’s just one of the ways the first couple of months of motherhood tested Williams, and she admits to not always feeling as though she could pass those tests.

“Sometimes I get really down and feel like, man, I can’t do this,” Williams says. “It’s that same negative attitude I have on the court sometimes. I guess that’s just who I am. No one talks about the low moments — the pressure you feel, the incredible letdown every time you hear the baby cry.”

She adds, “I’ve broken down I don’t know how many times. Or I’ll get angry about the crying, then sad about being angry, and then guilty, like, ‘Why do I feel so sad when I have a beautiful baby?’ The emotions are insane.”

People.com