Some days are good…
March 3, 2008 at 4:29 am (Seizure)
Tags: infant, Infantile Spasms, Seizure
…and some days aren’t.
The seizures have started again. We went 2 days being seizure free. I guess her levels of Topamax still aren’t where they need to be. I went to get the Klonopin but found that it’s not a common drug to keep in stock at the dosage that was prescribed. They had to order it. Dr. McCormick also wrote it is DAW (dispense as written) and used the brand name and not the generic drug. I’m not sure if there’s a difference, but the pharmacy is going to order both until we can find out Monday.
I know that watching Emma seize is hard for Jon. You can see by the look on his face how helpless he feels.
I feel the same way. There are so many days that are great. Emma gets her meds and is happy, talkative, and smiley. And then there are these days when the seizures come back.
It’s hard to watch Emma seize. The faces she makes. The movements she does over and over again. We try to do the best for our kids. Breastfeed because it’s so good for them. Make our own baby food. Try to not over medicate. Keep them safe. But I can’t stop the look of pain on her face, even though seizures aren’t supposed to be painful. I can’t stop the shivering and the repetitive motions.
I can’t fix this.
I just can’t.
Hopefully the first of many…
February 28, 2008 at 10:09 pm (General)
Tags: infant, Infantile Spasms
…many times that Emma rolls over on her own!!!
Not once, but twice, did Emma roll from her back to her belly…..and then back again. And she did it twice! Did I mention it was all on her own? And that she did it twice?!
I’m a little excited, if you didn’t notice.
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Colgate & Children’s Hospital
February 28, 2008 at 7:30 pm (General)
Today is the last day to vote! Please go vote and tell everyone you know to help out. Detroit is in 2nd place at the moment with 31.45%. The first place has 32.21% of the vote. It is possible for Detroit to win! Thank you all for voting!!!
Boy is there a lot to tell
February 20, 2008 at 9:26 pm (Food, Neurologist, Ophtamologist, Physical Therapy)
Tags: infant, Infantile Spasms, neurology, ophtamology, Physical Therapy
I am so far behind. I know I have a hard time keeping up with this blog. Thank you all for putting up with me.
There is so much new stuff to tell. Let’s see if I can remember it all.
Food
Emma is really taking to eating her food. She has mostly stopped pushing it out with her tongue. She does have a knack for only pushing out the larger chunks that I’ve missed with the blender. Her favorites are mostly the orange foods: carrots, squash, sweet potatoes. She did like the macaroni & cheese I made for her and the carrots & potatoes I cooked with the roast. I’ve blended up some roast to give her, so we’ll see how she likes that. Fork-smashed peas were not her favorite, though I’m not sure if it was the flavor or the texture.
Neuro
So far, our neuro appointments have been going well. We’ve had an EEG that came back normal. Dr. McCormick was pleased with her changes. Obviously, Emma is still behind, but the progress she’s been making is great.
We decided that due to Emma’s inconsistency in responding to noise, we would give her a better hearing test. The brainstem auditory evoked response (BAER) test is performed to help diagnose nervous system abnormalities and hearing losses, and to assess neurological functions. The test required her to be sedated. We kept her up late and got her up early. After getting the very small dose of sedative, she was out. The tech hooked up 4 electrodes to Emma’s head and put a set of headphones on her ears. For 30-40 minutes, different sounds and tones were played in each ear and the electrodes were able to tell if the sounds were making it through the proper channels to her brain. We will find out the results of this test at our next neuro appointment at the end of February.
Ophtamology
We had another visit with Dr. Baker. With her exam and dilation of her eyes, Dr. Baker determined that her vision was worse than our previous visit. We discussed Emma’s use of Vigabitrin and how it could effect her peripheral vision. Dr. Baker said he would talk to some colleagues in Canada about this, since they would know more about the drug. Vigabitrin is the drug that Emma takes to keep the IS seizures suppressed. Dr. Baker mentioned that we may want to do a ERG (electroretinogram) to measure the electrical responses of various cell types in her retina. This would give us a better idea of how the Vigabitrin was effecting her.
PT / Early On
Emma has been making tremendous progress with her PT. At least as a mom and dad who watched our baby go from being a relatively normal 3 month old progress and regress over the next 4 months, we think it’s amazing.
Emma’s PTs and OT comment each time about the progress she’s making. At the beginning of our Early On sessions, the people involved did an assessment of Emma and the things she was capable of. It was these assessments that qualified her for both PT and OT each week. The PT, OT, and general coordinator each set 3 goals for Emma to reach over the next year. The PT has stated that Emma has reached the PT goals already. At the moment, I’m not sure what the new goals will be.
Emma can hold her head up more consistently while on her belly, will sit up straight with support at her hips and lower back, has much better head control, will hold an item for a few seconds, sometimes makes consonant and vowel combinations, and reaches out to explore the world around her. Emma also has no problem expressing herself with fussing and crying, something that we went months without hearing.
Genetics
We had our first appointment with a genetic counselor last week. With the high hydro phenyl acedic acid in her urine, Dr. McCormick wanted us to talk to a geneticist, Dr. Bawle. After giving a family history, Dr. Bawle examined Emma. She explained to us that it was possible that a genetic mutation could cause Emma’s IS. A usual symptom of such a mutation can manifest in a physical way, facial features being different or other deformities, however small, on the rest of her body. Emma doesn’t really have anything like that on her body, so Dr. Bawle didn’t think it was a genetic deformity. But to be on the safe side, she suggested getting a chromosomal screen done the next time we have blood drawn for tests. They also ran another urinalysis and the results came back the same as the other tests. There was a high amount of the aforementioned acedic acid, though it wasn’t as high as the other tests. It is possible that the acedic acid is a by product of the phenobarbital that Emma is taking. We have been weaning her off of the phenobarb. The lower level could be indicative of the weaning.
Overall, Emma is doing great!!!! She is very alert and loves to look around and take in her environment. She has even moved on to smiling and the occasional laugh, something I wasn’t sure we would hear again, or at least not for a very long time. We continue to take each day at a time and are so happy at each little milestone she reaches. It gets easier each day to be hopeful that Emma will make it through it all and be an amazing, beautiful little girl.
Children’s Hospital of Michigan
February 9, 2008 at 1:56 am (General)
Please go vote here. Colgate is donating a Fun Center to all of the hospitals on the list. However, whoever receives the most votes will receive an extra Fun Center.
Fun Centers are mobile units that provide endless entertainment and help turn worry into laughter and weariness into delight! Fun Centers feature a flat screen monitor, DVD player and a Nintendo® Wii. The Centers roll right up to a child’s bedside to provide hours of game play and movie watching.
In 3.5 months, Emma and I have been in the hospital 3 times. We are hopeful that we are done with those experiences, however, we know that it is likely we will have to go back at any time. And while Emma is too young to use one of the Fun Centers, the children we’ve seen in the hospital definitely deserve this welcome distraction.
Even though we don’t know what is wrong with Emma and each visit has been a scary ordeal for us, each time we have gone, I feel like we are so lucky. Emma has no idea why she’s in the hospital and has spent most of the time sleeping. The older children that have been there don’t have that luxury. They are there, some in pain, and need something to take their minds off of where they are. Children’s Hospital of Michigan does the best they can to provide distractions for the kids, but any extra help is always welcome.
Please go vote! And vote every day!
http://www.colgate.com/app/Colgate/US/Corp/CommunityPrograms/show-the-love.cvsp
Diagnosis mistake explained
January 25, 2008 at 6:42 pm (Neurologist)
We had a neurologist appointment on January 22, which generally went well. One item that we learned during that appointment was the explanation for the initial Canavan’s diagnosis. The diagnosis came about due to the high level of NAA in the urinalysis that was run at the hospital. After the contradictory results from the MRS, the urinalysis was re-examined. In fact, the NAA levels were not high, but were the result of a misreading: the level of another chemical was mistaken for the level of NAA. Then, since Emma was still doing poorly after her bout of seizures, the physical exam seemed supportive of the Canavan’s diagnosis.
Those six days were a nightmare, and by far the worst in our lives. However, neither of us hold anything against the doctors for this mistake. Errors happen, and the doctors followed up appropriately. We suffered from a bad combination of events, starting with the misread of the urinalysis, compounded by how poorly Emma was doing that day, extended by the radiologist leaving before we had results (he didn’t know we were waiting for them), and finally extended even further by the holiday weekend. Almost any other time that this could have happened, the mistake would have been caught in a day or two.
The doctors involved apologize for the mistake, and we warmly accept the apology. As we have expressed, we would rather they think they found something, tell us, and go through the process of confirming or disproving it, rather than miss something and make things worse in the future.
Diagnosis – pt 3
January 9, 2008 at 3:46 pm (Neurologist, Pediatric, Seizure)
Tags: canavan's disease, infant, Infantile Spasms, pediatric neurology, Seizure
I write this blog not only as an update for all of our family and friends, but as a journal for Jon & I to keep track of things that have happened and when they happened. This post is what happened December 29 to January 2. For 6 days we lived with this diagnosis. In those 6 days we informed our families and a couple of friends of the nightmare that we were going through. We all grieved for what we thought we had lost. I am thankful and elated to say that Emma’s second diagnosis is now false. While we suffered through it, further test results show that she while she suffers from the IS, we still do not know what is causing it.
If you are going to read further, I will give you a warning. You may want to grab a box of tissues.
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December 29 was a quiet day at home for us.
December 30, we were to go to Fostoria to my parents for our family Christmas. We had decided to tell our families the news. Because of this being a genetic condition, it was possible for both of my sisters and Jon’s brothers to be carriers. We wanted to make sure they knew before anyone could get pregnant again.
We suffered through the day. Any little mention of Emma’s future would bring a tear to our eyes and a quiet glance at each other from across the room. We tried to be festive and enjoy the day. We had decided to tell everyone after Matthew had gone to bed. Matthew still had no idea what was going on and we had no idea how to tell him.
All was going as relatively well, until we opened gifts. At the end, my mom opened a beautiful box from my sister Kim. Inside was a pacifier. Kim was 3 months pregnant. As soon as I saw the pacifier, I couldn’t stop the tears. It was going to be even harder to tell our family after hearing this wonderful news. It was also even more important that we tell them; Kim needed to be tested as soon as possible. If she was a carrier, then her husband needed to be tested as well.
After Matthew went to bed, we gathered everyone around. As I asked for the TV to be turned off, my voice cracked and I wimpered that I couldn’t say the words. Jon, being my rock, did all the explaining. As he explained the diagnosis, the tears rolled down his cheeks. All the girls cried and the guys were being so strong. It was definitely the hardest thing I’ve ever had to tell my family. We explained the genetic connection and gave Kim the information she would need at her next doctor’s appointment.
The only thing capable of breaking the silence were Matthew’s cries. He had come down with Emma’s stomach bug.
The next day, we got up and had breakfast. Matthew seemed to be better and we slowly fed him. After checking with Jon’s mom, we had lunch and headed out on the road to Lansing. Jon’s brother Steve was coming to town. His other brother, Rich, and their family had decided to stay in Grand Rapids due to illness.
We waited until New Years Day to tell everyone. The kids were asleep so we had a small gathering in the kitchen where we broke the news. These days were very hard to get through. We went home that night after many tears and hugs.
January 2. We needed to get a DNA test for Emma to verify the Canavan’s diagnosis. It is currently the definitive test. As I was at the hospital, there was a question as to which vial to put the blood sample in. While I waited for Baylor University to call back regarding the information, we went down for some lunch. When I came back, I check in again. The lab tech came in and said I was to call Dr. McCormick right now. They had called her to see if she knew which vial to use and Dr. McCormick said she needed to speak to me right away. The doctor had canceled the DNA test and wanted another urine sample. I was extremely confused.
I called and get her right away. She was so happy to tell me that Emma’s MRI was normal. There was no sign of spongy brain matter, a sure sign of the Canavan’s. The MRS also showed normal levels of NAA. It was for sure … Emma did NOT have Canavan’s!
After we attached a PUCK (little plastic baggy with sticky stuff) to Emma to collect the urine sample (no turkey bag for her this time), I found the closest spot in the hospital with cell phone reception and called Jon with the amazing news. We couldn’t believe it!!! A miracle had happened. We spent the rest of the day calling family and letting them know our wonderful news. I don’t think Jon could get home fast enough to hug his little girl. She was going to live!
However, we still had no idea what was causing the IS. But, as we had been told so many times before, not being able to find the cause is the best answer. It is better for it to be a mystery and therefore, likely to go away on its own. A reason for the IS would mean that there was a more pressing problem.
So for now, we are working with the IS diagnosis. Her seizures are under control. Currently she is on Phenobarbital, Keppra, Topamax, and Vigabatrin. We are slowly weaning Emma off of the Phenobarb, 1 ml per week. After that is gone, the Keppra will be next. Emma is on a low dose (15 mg twice a day) of Topamax and a low dose of Vigabatrin (250 mg twice a day). As long as she remains seizure free, she will stay on those doses.
At the moment, we are hoping that Emma falls into the 15% of kids with IS that have no future problems. But the IS diagnosis is better than the Canavan’s diagnosis. Our baby girl will still be with us in the years to come.
Diagnosis – pt 2
January 9, 2008 at 3:45 pm (Neurologist, Pediatric, Seizure)
Tags: canavan's disease, infant, Infantile Spasms, pediatric neurology, Seizure
I write this blog not only as an update for all of our family and friends, but as a journal for Jon & I to keep track of things that have happened and when they happened. This post is what happened from December 26 to December 28; the next post will cover December 29 to January 2. For 6 days we lived with this diagnosis. In those 6 days we informed our families and a couple of friends of the nightmare that we were going through. We all grieved for what we thought we had lost. I am thankful and elated to say that Emma’s second diagnosis is now false. While we suffered through it, further test results show that she while she suffers from the IS, we still do not know what is causing it.
If you are going to read further, I will give you a warning. You may want to grab a box of tissues.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We woke up on December 26 to find that Santa had indeed made his extra special stop at our house. Jon & I discussed with Santa that since Mommy & Emma were in the hospital, that he would wait and visit our house as soon as we were home. Thankfully, Emma also seemed to be over her stomach bug and we did not have to rush back to the hospital. We opened gifts and watched Christmas shows. While we enjoyed our day, the neurologist we saw in the hospital called us.
He wanted to inform us that the urinalysis had come back with an abnormal result. Her urine showed an extremely high level of NAA (N-acetylaspartic acid). This test was telling us that Emma had Canavan’s Disease.
Canavan’s Disease is a degenerative neurological disease. This disease is always fatal.
Our world stopped.
We had an appointment with Dr. McCormick the next day. The neurologist from the hospital was going to call her and let her know the results as well. We looked up as much information as possible and were pretty much up to speed when we walked into her office on December 28.
Canavan’s typically shows up from 3-6 months of age. Symptoms include developmental delay, enlargement of the head, loss of muscle tone, poor head control, apathy, and severe feeding problems. As the it progresses, seizures, blindness, paralysis, deafness, and inability to swallow may also occur. Children die in the first decade of life, most usually between the ages of 2 and 4 years.
In the last month, we had seen Emma regress. We believed it to be due to high doses of medication to control the seizures. With this diagnosis, the pieces fell into place and we believed that she was showing signs of Canavan’s. She had been experiencing the delay, loss of muscle tone, lack of head control, and of course, the seizures. Also, we couldn’t remember the last time we had heard her cry in any sort of discomfort. She sleeps through the night without eating. Upon waking, she did not cry or fuss to be fed. She would eat in the morning, stay awake for a couple of hours, and then sleep for 3-4 hours. Upon waking, 6-8 hours after she had last eaten, she would not cry to be fed.
Canavan’s is a pretty rare disease. There are only about 500 cases in the United States …. 4,000 in the world. It is relatively common for the Ashkenazi Jews. They have a 1 in 40 chance of being a carrier. It is also common to Eastern Europe and Saudi Arabian descent.
Sadly, there is no treatment for Canavan’s. There is one study being conducted in gene therapy. The therapy includes brain surgery to inject millions of virus into the brain with the hope that they will infect the cells and replace the bad gene with the corrected gene.
Because this is a genetic disease, it meant that Jon and I were both carriers of the defective recessive gene. Because of this, there was a 25% chance that each child we had would have Canavan’s. There was a 50% chance that any child we have would be a carrier. Thankfully, Matthew does not show any signs of Canavan’s. However, he could be a carrier. We would have to decide if and when to have him tested. Any more children we decided to have would also fall into these statistics.
Not only were we mourning Emma leaving our lives long before she should have, we were faced with the weighing the odds of having any more children.
We spoke with Dr. McCormick. She did an examination of Emma. She scratched her nail up Emma’s foot hard enough to leave a white mark. Three times she did this, and on the third time, Emma moved her foot like we had tickled her. Dr. McCormick also rang a bell and clapped her hands a foot from Emma’s ear. Emma did not react. Based on the overall exam and the things that we had told her had been going on, she agreed with the diagnosis of Canavan’s.
She had wanted a MRI and a MRS done on Emma, which we had done just before our appointment. If this was Canavan’s, the MRI would show that she had spongy brain matter and the MRS would show a spike in the NAA in her brain. We were to call the office on January 2 to find out the results and to let the doctor know how Emma was doing. She told us that she desperately hoped that they were wrong.
We left that appointment with our hearts broken. Just the day before we were crushed to learn of the IS. I had been grieving for her and the things she may not be able to experience. Simple things….first kiss, first date, driving a car, prom, college, husband, kids. As we left, we were grieving for our daughter, who was going to slowly deteriorate until she couldn’t move, eat, see, or even process the world around her. We were also grieving for a brother who loved his baby sister but would never be able to know her.
Home now
December 27, 2007 at 5:02 am (General)
Andi and Emma are home now. They were discharged from the hospital on Tuesday afternoon. Sorry for the delay in the update. We have been enjoying a nice quiet day at home, especially after Santa made a special trip to our house last night. We spent the morning opening presents, playing with the presents, and watching Christmas shows.
We have an appointment with our neurologist on Friday. We are also starting Emma on a new drug tomorrow, as well as wean her off of the phenobarbital.
Hopefully Andi can manage an update this weekend. She’s pretty slow on that stuff.
Emma's Grace