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Our 13 year old was afflicted with severe onset MF variant
rendering him completely paralyzed in 16 hours.
Alex woke up on the morning of August 6, 2002,
with severe vomiting. He couldn't hold down water. By noon,
his voice had changed, with slurred speech. He was spitting
out his own saliva, because he couldn't swallow. In retrospect,
he was experiencing decending paralysis, but, of course, we
didn't know it at the time.
That evening, we took him to the ER at Children's
Hospital, Seattle. They ran a plethora of tests and couldn't
figure it out. His breathing became more difficult and he
was eventually intubated and admitted to PICU. He was paralyzed
from the nose down.
Children's Hospital, Seattle, sees about 20
GB cases a year and personnel are familiar with the process.
By day 4 they had narrowed the differential diagnosis to GB,
MF, rabies or botulism. An EMG ruled out all but the GB or
MF. He was started the next day on a five day course of IVIg.
We are not entirely sure if Alex had MF since
we did not let the hospital do a second lumbar puncture to
confirm the diagnosis. However, Alex initially experienced
decending (as opposed to acending) paralysis. He did have
double vision for a short period of time, but this cleared
pretty quickly.
Some weeks prior to Alex's onset, I had a lengthy
discussion with a chiropractor who believed that brain swelling
or inflamation takes place in most disease processes. After
Alex was affected, my wife Lauren and I discussed having this
doctor come to the hospital and adjust Alex. We both came
to the conclusion that the worst that would happen was nothing.
I spoke with the chiroparactor, who specialises
in cranio-sacral adjustments, and he adjusted Alex's cranial
plates several times over the next three weeks. My wife Lauren,
also a chiropractor, adjusted Alex's spine and neck, so in
addition to standard medical treatment, Alex received weekly
cranio-sacral adjustments as well as weekly spinal and neck
adjustments.
I noticed the effect almost immediately. His
face seemed more relaxed and not lopsided as it had been appearing.
Small levels of function started to return.
Chiropractic manipulation specifically affects
the nervous system. It doesn't really add anything and nothing
is taken away. Therefore, the worst it's likely to do is nothing.
That's a very small risk compared to the overall potential
benefit. If GB/MF is an inflamatory process, anything that
would relieve or lessen the inflamation, should help in bringing
about healing.
I am not discounting the IVIg or other therapies that helped
keep our son alive while he healed. But, I do believe that
there are adjuncts that can help the body heal.
Alex could not speak, for 2 reasons: first,
his throat was paralyzed, and second, the breathing tube is
placed between the vocal cords preventing vibration.
In terms of communication, I discovered that he could partially
blink one eye and we used that as his signal for responding
to questions. He could not close his eyes completely, though,
even while sleeping.
We communicated through story boards and simple
yes no questions. We started asking simple yes-no questions
in broad topic ranges and then would narrow down the questions
to close in on what he wanted. For instance, "Is it something
to do with your body?" If he responded that it was, then
the questioning would become more refined, "Are you in
pain?" If yes, then "Is it something to do with
your head? Chest? Legs?" etc. We also used storyboards
with pictures and an alphabet. These were of some use and
were provided by the hospital.
Alex has some food allergies, especially high
fructose corn syrup, milk and eggs. The liquid they fed him
through the NG tube contained the very stuff he was sensitive
to and we eventually found a soy based product that the hospital
approved. Once we started on that formula, his gastric upset
quieted over a short period of time.
In addition to IVIg, Alex was on a number of
drugs including regalen, beta blockers for severe spiking
blood pressure, tylenol, morphine (later methadone) and ativan.
We had Alex adjusted regularly, kept him as comfortable as
possible and went through total hell.
We lived at the hospital and became the corporate memory for
the various doctors, nurses and specialists. We were Alex's
advocate. We kept many doctors away from him (which is important
in a teaching hospital), tried to get him some rest, and prayed.
His breathing function slowly got better and by the end of
the third week, he was extubated and breathing on his own.
He was now moved from PICU to rehab. He started
daily courses of PT, OT and speech. His swallow reflex slowly
returned as did gag and cough. Most of the meds were weaned.
However, when they weaned the ativan, it was done too quickly
and Alex had a seizure. It scared the hell out of us. They
restarted a prophylactic dose of ativan and weaned him slowly
with no further seizures by day 40.
He was discharged on day 50.
He was now off all meds. He had some outpatient
PT for 4 weeks and has been at home since, going to school
several hours a day, about 3-4 days a week.
He recovered to about 95% of pre-onset condition within 90
days.
November 2002
Alex now has good and bad days with bouts of fatigue and nerve
pain being the common side effects of this disease. He is
experiencing the typical post GB/MF nerve regeneration pain
as the myelin recoats the nerve sheaths.
He continues to get the cranial and spinal adjustments with
good effect. He goes to school, plays with friends, plays
video games constantly (like before) and is fairly normal.
We have been and are very honest with Alex about his condition
and he understands his limitations.
I would highly reccomend cranial and spinal
adjustments as an adjunct therapy for GB and MF patients.
I have no proof that it does anything, but I also know what
I've seen. There is no data or any other test that can confirm
what I know subjectively, these adjustments did a great deal
of good in helping him heal and have been a beneficial compliment
to traditional treatment.
We have been blessed with our son's life and
health, and we pray for and work toward his full recovery.
I hope that this short history helps others realize that there
is hope for a full recovery.
Jeffrey J. Donchez
Received 12.2003
"Alex was examined by the Chief of Rehabilitation at
Children's on November 20, 2002. He was given a clean bill
of health and discharged from clinic.
Alex returned to school full time on December
2. We have received our early Christmas present and are grateful".
Jeffrey
Received 03.2002
Alex has made a good recovery, thank God. It is now March
2, 2003.
Alex was discharged from the hospital September
26, 2002, after 59 days in the hospital. At discharge, he
was able to walk some and perform most activities of daily
living, albeit slow and with fatigue.
For the first 60 days he slept a lot. He had lost 1/4th of
his body weight, about 30 lbs. We encouraged him to eat when
he was hungry and sleep when he was tired. We conferenced
with his school to admit him for 2 hours per day. In the beginning,
he only went 2-3 days out of 5. Around the beginning of December
'02, his strength started to pick up and we switched to full
days at school. He made it to school about 3-4 days a week.
Currently he averages 4-5 full days a week, plays basketball
with his friends, rides his bike and does most normal activities.
The fatigue is still there and manifests itself when he over-exerts
himself, although the "wall" of fatigue is further
out now.
Several messages are important.
First, trust your child's instincts and give the child the
benefit of the doubt. Find the balance between pushing the
child to do more and allowing them the rest they will need
to recover. When in doubt, keep the big picture/goal in mind
- their full and complete recovery. We decided to err on the
side of caution and trust that when he said he was tired and
didn't want to go to school, that it was OK to stay home.
I'm sure there are days when he could go to school but doesn't
want to. So what. In the long run, it won't matter.
Second, find/develop support mechanisms to take
some of the burden from you. Friends, family, others are willing
to help, but need you to ask them. Different people's energies
will help the child and give the child perspectives that are
different from your own. While my wife and I are still recovering
from our experiences with him in the hospital, we got on with
our lives as much as the situation would allow. Cement relationships
between husband and wife and family. Deal with fears of relapse
and get counseling, if necessary, to deal with the post traumatic
stress issues that invariably arise. Take care of your child,
but as important, take care of yourself. If you are not well,
you can't take care of yourself or anyone else.
Third, continue support in the form of supplements
that support and build the nervous system, chiropractic care,
massage, the child's favorite meals or movies. Finally, try
to have some fun and laugh. Keep the big picture in mind and
have faith that all will work out in time.
I hope this helps.
Jeffrey J. Donchez
3/2/02
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