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I am the Momma of 8 children. Seven here on earth and 1 precious little Angel in Heaven. My children range in age from 2 months to 25 years. My 6 year old was born with a laundry list of complex medical conditions. He has Trisomy 21 (Down Syndrome), a rare brain malformation, which resulted from a mutation of the PAX-6 gene, bilateral anophthalmia, which means that he was born without any eyes, so he is totally blind. At the age of 2 1/2 months old he had to have a tracheostomy to help aid in his breathing. He is hearing impaired, with normal hearing in his left ear and has profound deafness in his right. At 3 1/2 years he had surgery to have a Mic-Key button placed in his stomach (feeding Tube), which is mainly used to give him his medications. He also has insulin dependant diabetes and wears an insulin pump, which gives him a continuous dose of insulin. Even with his many dis"abilities," including being globally developmentally delayed, he has accomplished more than anyone would have ever believed that he could. Join us in our journey living with a Dis"Abled" child....

Monday, December 28, 2009

Still Sick....

I've been a bit behind on proof reading my previous posts and getting them posted. SORRY! Things here in the past week has just been sooo CRAZY! And since Timmy gETTING sick on Christmas Eve, I have once again joined the sleep deprived population of parents of special needs kiddos.

Timmy is still sick. As of Saturday he has been requiring 2 liters of oxygen just to keep his oxygen saturations in the low 90's. I tok him to the walk-in at his Pediatricians office yesterday. She sent Timmy over to the hospital to have a chest X-ray. Thamk Goodness Timmy doesn't have pneumonia. His illness is viral. I was so scared that we were looking at a possible bout of aspiration pneumonia from his episode of spitting up on Thursday evening.

The Doc has increased his antibotic dose to twice a day and started him on Albuterol and Pulmocort nebulizer treatments.

As of today, I was able to get Timmy weaned down to needing only 1 liter of oxygen. He has also been laughing and enjoying sucking his thumb. So he is on the mends. I hope that the remainer of this illness passes fast, so that we can get down to enjoying our vacation from Daddy and Emily before time runs out.

Thursday, December 24, 2009

A Visit From Mr. Scrooge

I spoke with Santa earlier this week about coming to visit us a day early, being that Floyd and Emily are leaving early tomorrow morning, Friday (Christmas Day), to go to IL to visit with Grandma and family. Everyone had a great Christmas. The kids got almost everything that they asked Santa for.

Except for Poor Timmy he got more than he asked for. Mr. Scrooge stopped by and left Timmy with a yucky upper respiratory infection. We took Timmy to the Pediatrician this morning when he woke up with a temperature of 102.8! He prescribed Omnicef once a day for 10 days. At this point, Timmy's lungs sound clear, so hopefully this is just viral.

Poor thing he has been spitting up and has had a temperature as high as 105.1! Yeah I agree, YIKES!!! Luckily we were able to aviod a visit to the ER. We gave him several COLD baths, which of course "TimmyLocks" absolutely hated! And we rotated the doses of Tylenol and Motrin every 3 hours. So far he isn't requiring any oxygen, so this in itself is a good sign. I'm not a Doc, but I strongly suspect that he has caught what Emily had only 6 days earlier.

The worst part about this whole thing is when we had his script filled at our local Ma and Pa pharmacy the powder that was used to mix the medication expired 1/09! I have been using this pharmacy for over 18 years and have NEVER seen anything like this happen before. I would expect something like this from one of the mass marketing pharmacies, but not this pharmacy. Their reputation in our area is too good. I honestly want to believe that this was an oversight, but the expiration date is printed clearly on the bottle. So how could it have been??? So now that all of the pharmacies are closed for Christmas and no one is open tomorrow, Timmy will have to wait til Saturday to get any medications to help fight this yucky illness. I just hate that we didn't notice this error sooner. One lesson learned, when getting ANY medication filled, ALWAYS check the expiration date of the medication BEFORE leaving the pharmacy...

This is Timmy's 1st illness since his trach being removed. Hopefully this won't be too bad. Please, if you believe in prayer, Pray for no hospitalization!

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Visit with Doc

I had my OB interview today with a nurse and a visit with an OB (Dr. Chalk) to go over my blood glucose levels. I have gained 1lb already. Yikes! I'm about 7.6 weeks along. I have a pregnancy dating ultrasound scheduled for Jan. 18th. With the Holidays and Floyd being out of town this was the earliest that I could get in. Without the ultrasound the OB estimates that my due date is Aug. 4th. According to my calculations going by when I ovulated, I say my due date is closer to Aug 12th. The Doc kept my insulin dose the same, 20u of Humilin N along with 10u of Humilin R in the morning and 7u of each N&R in the evening. We also discussed the 1st trimester blood testing. I agreed to the tests, only because IF something should be wrong it will give us and the Docs even more info to work with to help p0lan in the treatment and care of the baby. My next OB visit is scheduled for Jan 28th. At this time a full pelvic exam will be preformed. Yuck!

Monday, December 21, 2009

A Day Filled With Doc Visits

Today was a busy day filled with Doc visits for me and Timmy. I had a visit with my Cornea Specialists. Everything looks great. The Doc took me off of all of my glaucoma eye meds, steroid eye meds and 1 of my opthalmic antibotic eye medications. I now only have to take Vancomycin, which is an opthalmic maintance antibotic. I'm at a high risk for infection of the eye due to my Keratoprosthesis (artificial cornea and lens). I have a follow up appointment in January to check my eye pressure. If the eye pressure is high the Doc may have to reconsider putting me back on 1 of my glaucoma medications.

Timmy had an upper GI study with barium to check on his suspected reflux, due to a possible failure of his Nissen Fundoplacation. Over the past several months. we have seen Timmy spit up, he is able to burp, his ENT noticed some esophagus irriataion during one of Timmy's bronch surgeries and following meals Timmy tends to shove his fingers/hands soo far down his throat, as if he is trying to releive pain due to possible reflux. What do you think the study showed??? Absolutely Nothing Wrong! The radiologist even had Timmy swallow some of the barium while lying flat on his back. And still NOTHING! The Nissen is perfectly intact! The only explaination that the radiologist and GI Doc could give us is that If the pressure builds up to much in Timmy's stomach, it is possible for him to be able to burp and spit up. So now we sit and wait til Timmy's GI appointment in Feb. to see if there are other test that can be done to possibly get to the bottom of Timmy's GI problems. Because we aren't buying the explaination given us. Something is wrong somewhere, but where???

Timmy also had a urology visit. We discussed with the Urologist about having Timmy circumcised. When Timmy was alot younger he use to have reoccuring UTI's. He was put on a maintance antibotic to try to help prevent the reoccuring UTI's. At around age 2 Timmy's Endocrinologist gave him 4 months of testerone to help with his micro-"Winkie" (Just keeping things clean for any very young readers. Don't want any parents to start freaking out.). Timmy's "Winkie" is still small, but not as small as it once was. We felt that the reoccuring UTI's was due to Timmy's small "Winkie," but of course the Urologist wouldn't agree. Timmy has had 3-4 UTI's in 2009. So we are starting to see an unwanted pattern. We feel that being Timmy's foreskin is soo tight that we just aren't able to completely clean underneath it. Even though we do the best that we can and it appears to be clean. Of course the Urologist disagrees that the foreskin isn't too tight. Anyway by the end of the visit the Urologist agreed to try to schedule the circumcision in Jan. during Timmy's scheduled eye surgery. If this time isn't possible we will have to schedule a different surgery. Thank goodness this eye surgery isn't suppose to be so invasive and stressful. I can't imagine having both ends operated on at once!

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Poor Emily

Do you ever feel as though there aren't enough hours in a day? That is how we felt yesterday. Floyd stayed up until 2am making DVD's of the Holiday Preformance for Timmy's classmates and his teachers. I was just going to send the DVD's to school with Timmy being that we already had sooo much to get done. But Floyd felt that it would be nicer if we delivered them to the class personally. I was nice to be able to see the joy in the faces of the children and the teachers. One of Timmy's classmates, Laura enjoyed the DVD so much that she watched it over and over while we were there.

After leaving Timmy's school we stopped back by our house to have a quick bite of lunch before heading back out to Emily's school for her classes Holiday Party. Just as we were about to leave, I get a call from Emily's teacher asking that we come to get Emily from school because she was "really" sick! Poor thing! verytime it seems that there is something special going on at Emily's school we have something else that HAS to be taken care of or she gets sick. So no pictures or videos of her Holiday Class Party. :0(

Floyd goes to get Emily from school and takes her to see the Doc. My little girl isn't really little anymore. She weighs 50lbs! Yes at the tender age of 4, she is the size of an average 6 year old! Emily is very tall. She has definately inherited her daddy's genes. The nurse at the Doc office didn't get a heigh but I would be willing to wager a good guess that she is very close to 4 feet tall. She has a mild case of walking pneumonia. The Doc prescribed Amoxicilin for 10 days. It seems to be helping. She woke up this morning FULL of energy and with a good appetite.

With all of this going on, my sister needed help decorating the outside of her house so that it would look nice for my neice's Christmas party. Household chores that have been neglected for a few days that need to be completed. Kids to keep entertained so that they don't kill each other or get themselves into trouble. Preparations for Timmy's Nurses Appreciation Party on Sunday. Whew, I'm exhausted again just from typing this! :0)

ONLY 5 more days and Floyd and Emily will be on their way to visit grandma for a little over 2 weeks! The week of Dec. 21-27 Zachary, my 13 year old ADHD trouble maker (I say that with love.) will be spending time with his dad! I'm really looking forward to just mine and Timmy's time alone. With lots of cuddling and napping. Aaaahhhhh, if only I could fast forward time......

Friday, December 18, 2009

Holiday Preformance

Below is a video of Timmy's Class Holiday Preformance. It is a bit long, sorry. Mrs. Bishop, Timmy's teacher reads the poem from the book before all of the children preform their individual parts, which is basically a repeat of her description. To see the children preform just fast forward the video. Just remember to first mute the music on the site before starting the video. Just scroll down to the bottom to mute the music.

This is Mrs. Bishop's first year having her students put on a preformance of any kind. She is the ONLY teacher in our or the surrounding school systems to go to such extreme in using adapted technology with communication switches to help her students to be able to communicate and to preform this very touching Christmas program.

Even though some things had to be changed at the very last moment, due to a major power outage, which was caused by a traffic accident that caused power outages for most of our town. This being the first time Mrs. Bishop had tried anything like this with her students. They ALL did a GREAT job!


Tuesday, December 15, 2009

6 Weeks 2 Days

I had my OB visit today. I just LOVE the scales at the Docs. They truly showed me some mercy today. They have me weighing 142lbs.

I'm actually further along than I thought. The Doc I saw did a quick ultrasound just to try to get a more accurate due date and check for viability of the pregnancy. Our little Poppy Seed measured 6 weeks 2 days. And had a heart rate of 130bpm. According to myths, a low fetal heart rate is a predictor of a baby boy. Honestly, I don't care what the sex of the baby is. All I want is a Healthy baby.  But Emily on the other hand wants a baby sister. How do I know this when currently only those who read this blog know I'm pregnant. Because for the past 2 months Emily has been going around telling EVERYONE that she is pregnant and going to have a baby sister. Kids sure say the darnest things. Can you imagine the looks we get when she tells strangers this while we are at the park or store? We've tried to explain to her that if she has a baby it won't be her sister but her little girl and that mommy and daddy would be Grandma and Grandpa. She disagrees by saying that we can't be MiMi and PaPa cause she already has one.  I'll wager my guess at the baby's sex after a couple more OB visits when I can see if there is a steady trend to the heart rate.

Why is it when a mom is pregnant and she wants to do right during her pregnancy and it goes against the Docs beliefs, they look at you like you have grown 2 extra heads??? The initial reason for scheduling this appointment so quickly was to discuss other medication options for my diabetes. I was taking Metformin, which is an oral medication that is used to help the pancreas to produce more insulin. According to my extensive research, like ALL other oral diabetic medications, they have not been adaquately studied in women who are pregnant. I also obtained the knowledge and opinion of 2 Endocrinologists, whose opinions I truly trust and admire. Both Endocrinologist agreed that ALL oral diabetic medications are definately a NO, NO during pregnancy.

When I told the Doc I would rather try to continue to control my blood glucose levels with diet and exercise before being put on ANY oral diabetic medication. The Doc excused himself from the room to go get the Chief of Obstretics to talk to me. The Chief has been at this clinic for 27 years. My oldest daughter is 24 and was delivered by Docs from this clinic. The Chief walks in scratching his bald head and says to me "The info you have about oral diabetic medications is incorrect. They are safe." I pulled out my Handy Dandy up-to-date Medications Guide and pointed out that ALL of the info in this book says that oral diabetic medications SHOULD NOT be taken during pregnancy. Both Docs mouths dropped to the floor. I told them that I prefer not to be used as a "test patient" I want PURE insulin. All the Chief could muster up to respond was "Ok, if you really want to stick yourself multiple times a day." I responded with "I'll do anything for the well being of my unborn baby!" Sooo, I was given a script for Humilin R, 10u in the AM / 7u in the PM and Humilin N, 20u in the AM / 7u in the PM.

I have an appointment on Dec. 23rd with the OB so that they can review my blood glucose levels and adjust my insulin dose if necessary.

Only 10 more days left BEFORE Floyd and Emily leave to go to visit Grandma in Chicago for Christmas. Timmy and I are looking forward to some much needed mommy and son time alone! The plan as of now, Grandma will be coming back with Floyd and Emily, so that she can spend some time with Timmy. We feel that the winter weather is just too brutal for Timmy. We sure don't want him to get sick if we can prevent it.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Do You Know What This Means?????



I have been contemplating whether I should share this news now, wait until after the Holidays or until I'm further along in my pregnancy. I asked myself, why not go ahead and share this WONDERFUL news? By sharing the news now, all of our family and friends who will have insensitive and rude comments can get their opinions out in the open BEFORE the Holidays. This way we will be able to put the remarks behind us and go on to have a Love filled Holiday together. Also by going ahead

Being I'm...ummm lets just say I'm of advanced maternal age, this WILL be our last baby.

I honestly didn't believe that I was pregnant. Not this month anyway. It was our Christmas shopping trip to Wal-Mart and Floyd's persistance that made me start thinking differently and decide to test. Our local Wal-Mart has a Subway Sandwich Shop inside. I don't know what they were cooking up on Tuesday morning, but one whif sent me running to find the nearest bathroom! After gathering our few items, we couldn't get through check-out fast enough, before I had to go running again from the smell coming from Subway.

Boy what a pleasant surprise I received early Tuesday morning! Before the 5 seconds were up while preforming the test, 2 bright red lines appeared. I was so in shock, I had to take the test to 3 different rooms and use 3 different types of lighting to convince myself what I was seeing was true. When I showed the test to Floyd his first remark was, "I told you you were pregnant."

From my calculations I'm 4 weeks pregnant from the date of conception and 7 weeks from the first day of my last menstrual cycle.

I went to my PCP (Primary Care Physician) and he confirmed that I am indeed pregnant. My first set of HCG numbers was 26,793.

My pregnancy symptoms are frequent urination, nausea (especially at night), DEFINATELY smell aversions, persistant hunger and tiredness. All in all though I feel pretty good.

I have an appointment tomorrow with my OB to discuss medication options to help control my diabetes during this pregnancy. I also have my initial OB appointment scheduled for Dec. 23rd, where they obtain family history information, calculate a due date, will review my blood glucose levels and discuss blood tests that are necessary during early pregnancy. Hopefully they will also schedule me an ultrasound to check the viability and to get a more accurate gestational age of this pregnancy.

If you pray, please pray for a Happy and Healthy baby for us. And that our family and friends will see our side of reasoning of why we felt that yet another baby would help make our family complete.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Deck The Halls




















My Husband has a thing for decorating for Christmas, Can you tell? There are 44,000 lights here. This doesn't include the 5,000 lights that were used to decorate Timmy's wheelchair ramp, which can't be seen in this picture. Thank goodness my parents live next door or there would be alot of complaints from our neighbors about all of the bright lights disturbing them. All of this wouldn't have been possible without the help from my dad, who is an electrician. It took 4 outlets pushed to their max to supply the electricity to run these lights. Thanks Dad!!!

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Patrick Henry Hughes - A Talented Young Man

This in one Talented and Amazing Young Man!

Patrick Henry Hughes also has a book "I AM Potential." This book can be purchased Here.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Disabled Musicians Make Up Band 'Flame' -

I watched "Miracle On 34th Street" last night, like I try to do every year. And every year, even though I know what is going to happen with each scene in the movie, I find myself crying. Especially during the scene where a mother of a deaf little girl (Sammy) takes her daughter to see Santa and Santa uses sign language to communicate with the little girl.

Before Timmy was born, I could sit through movies like this and not shed a tear. No, wasn't and am not a cold hearted person. I believe it was because I never realized just how uncaring and cruel this World is to the disabled. Until a person is walking in the same shoes of a person, who is having to deal with and face the day-to-day care and struggles of a loved one, it is sometimes hard for those on the outside looking in to understand the cruelity and difficulties that the disabled individuals and their families face.

I was watching "Good Morning America" this morning and this news story really got to me as well.

Disabled Musicians Make Up Band 'Flame' - ABC News

Even though I'm the type of person, who perfers the original singers/bands to preform the original version of my favorite songs. These disabled individuals are pretty good.

I just hope that one day that their dreams of Making It To The Top comes True.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Things That I'm Thankful For.....


Thanksgiving is my favorite time of the year. Even though my hips and waist scream at me at this time every year, I look forward to my dad cooking the turkey stuffed with his yummy homemade oyster stuffing, the candied yams, the cranberry sauce and I can't forget the collards. YUMMMMMY!!!!

This year there is a lot that I have to be Thankful for. I'm Thankful For.....

1. Finding a Cornea Specialist, despite my genetic eye disorder, was willing to preform a Boston Keratoprosthesis, which has restored my vision to the point where I can now read the 2nd line of an eye chart.

2. Timmy not having any major complications following surgery to remove his tonsils and adnoids.

3. Timmy continuing to do so WONDERFULLY following the removal of his trach in July!

4. Timmy's starting Kindergarten and having the WORLD'S GREATEST teacher!  Who has many, many, many years of experience of working with children who have multiple and varying degrees of disabilities.

5. Timmy's physical, mental, oral and cognitive inchstone development since school started.

6. Emily's developmental growth and maturity. Her loving and caring nature toward Timmy.

7. For all of my 7 children. Gwendolynn 24 years, Tamarah 22 years, Linwood Jr. 18 years, Zachary 13 years, Timothy 6 years, Emily 4 years and our ^Angel^ Josiah who graced our life for 1 short month almost 3 years ago. Each of my children have touched my life in their own special way. Filling my Heart and Life with Lots of Love and Memories that I will Cherish Forever!

8. For Floyd. Even though he has caused me some grief during the year, he has been My rock. My support and he has showered me with Lots of Love!

9. For Timmy's Home Health Nurses, Merry, Dottie, Julie and Amy. Thank You, so much for your support, dedication, love, care, time and patience with having to put up with not just Timmy's needs, but those of Emily, Zachary, myself and Floyd.

HAPPY THANKSGIVING EVERYONE!!!!!



Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Tuesday Cuteness



This is Emily's Fall of 2009 JPre-K picture. Isn't she just the cutest? Ya gotta love her big bright smile and her curly red hair. Just think, she was blessed with the $200 hair doo that most women would die for!


These pictures were taken last Wednesday, November 18th, during Emily's class "Being Thankful" Feast at school. We were unable to attend, due to the fact that I had a Doc appointment that I needed to keep. Thank goodness Emily's teacher was nice enough to have taken some pictures and printed them off for those of us parents who were unable to attend. Don't all of the children look adorable in their pilgrim costumes that they made?


All of the kiddos in Timmy's class got a really fun treat last week. Cory, one of the student teachers from UNCW, our local college, brought his motorcycle to school for the kids to see and explore. Timmy had a blast! In the picture, Timmy appears to be very serious. He is intently listening to Cory discribe all of the aspects of the motorcycle to him. The BIGGEST thrill for Timmy was when Cory actually started up the motorcycle while Timmy was sitting on it!

Monday, November 23, 2009

A Change of Heart

This morning Timmy's CAP-C case manager stopped by to drop off a belated birthday gift for Timmy, before she headed off to the hospital to undergo surgery to repair a torn rotator cuff in her shoulder.

This was such a wonderful gesture, being that buying gifts for her clients isn't something that she typically does. Because she feels that if for some reason (finances, illness), she is unable to purchase something for one of her clients it would be unfair to that person.  

I guess like the majority of people in which Timmy has come in contact with, he has stolen her heart strings and wrapped them tightly around his little finger.

Timmy's amazing strength and willingness to fight and overcome illnesses and obstacles in his life, his ability to give love without a single spoken word or gesture, his personality, his bright smile that will light up any room and his contageous laughter is sure to steal the hearts of anyone.

Once Timmy's CAP-C case manager had left, Emily immediately volunteered to help Timmy open his present. By this time, it was time to put Emily on the school bus. So we promised that Timmy would wait til this afternoon to open his present, so that she could be there to help.

On Mondays and Wednesdays, Timmy and Emily arrive home from school about the same time (1:30-1:45PM). Today Timmy arrived home about 30 minute before Emily. Once Emily got home she immediately wanted to sing Happy Birthday To Timmy and help him to open his present.

Emily insisted that everyone participate in singing Happy Birthday. If she caught someone not singing, if someone sneezed or coughed, or spoke to another person, she would start singing the Birthday Song from the beginning. After 4 attempts, we FINALLY got the song sang to her satisfaction.

Once the present was opened, As an adult, I'm ashamed to admit, my very 1st thought was a very ungrateful one. "What in the world is a non verbal special needs child going to do with a set of Walkie Talkies?" I can't explain why I had such an ungrateful thought. Honestly, I'm not typically an ungrateful person. I can usually find the best in anything and anyone. I knew that the gift was bought with a lot of thought, by a mom who understands disabilities. Timmy's CAP-C case manager has a son, who has a visual impairment, developmental delays and other special needs.

It was at that moment that I had a virtual slap in the face or a bump on my noggin. Of course, Walkie Talkies are a perfect gift for a non verbal special needs child. How? Well, with the help from an adult or a sibling, the vocalizations that Timmy makes, even though they aren't words, CAN be taken as conversation. And the holder of the 2nd Walkie Talkie can carry on a conversation with Timmy. Which hopefully will help him to understand the pattern to a meaningful conversation and possibly pick up new words.

At about this same time, I guess it was the force of the virtual slap or bump on my noggin that gave me two ideas for uses of the Walkie Talkies. We have a baby monitor in Timmy's room, Unfortunately his monitor doesn;'t have intercom capabilities. So if one of us happens to be downstairs with Timmy while the other parent is upstairs, one of us has to come to the bottom of the stairs and yell up stairs to have questions answered. The same goes if both of us happens to be upstairs and one of Timmy's nurses has a question or concern that needs addressing.

Timmy's monitor is always on if one or both of us is upstairs. So we could use the Walkie Talkies to talk to each other while still being able to tend to Timmy's needs and not having to run to the stairs and yell up to have questions answered.

The moral of this story is; When someone does something nice for you or someone that you love, instead of being ungrateful and finding faught in the gift; Look closely at the gift and try to find something positive within it. If you look long and hard enough, you will surely find something positive that will truely turn our ungrateful frown upside down. SMILE!

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Developmental Gains

I would like to take a few minutes to answer a couple of questions that I have been asked recently.  What do you attriubte to Timmy's developmental bursts that he has had? Do you think removing the trach helped?

Let me answer the second question first, only because its answer is more simple. Timmy has only had his trach out for almost 3 1/2 months (YAY!), so I don't feel that it has recently attributed to Timmy's developmental bursts. But in the scheme of things to come, I do feel that by having the trach out, it is going to help Timmy tremendously. How? Well, first off, it gives him less on his body to explore and focus on. Not that him exploring his body is a bad thing, but Timmy was at times obsessed with playing with his trach, pulling out the trach and removing his Passy-Muir (speaking valve) that we were unable to get him to focus on anything else.

Now to help you better understand "How and Why" I feel that over the past year or so Timmy has made such great developmental gains, I will have to go back quite a ways. When Timmy was born he was very critical. Timmy's initial diagnosis at birth was respiratory failure, pneumothorax (hole in his lung), sepsis, congenital anomilities (brain and eyes), insulin dependant diabetes, and kidney failure. Immediately following his birth Timmy was placed on an osculator to help him breathe, where he spent the first few weeks of his life before being switched over to a ventilator. It wasn't until Timmy was 2 1/2 months old before it was discovered that both of his nasal passages were blocked, hence the reason he couldn't be weaned off the ventilator and subsequently had to have a tracheostomy placed.

                          4 Months Old                                  
Even before Timmy's birth we were told "Don't expect him to live longer than a few hours, due to all of his medical complications." After seeing him in such critical shape following his birth and being told that we only had a short time with him, when we brought him home from the NICU at 4 1/2 months of age, he was on continuous oxygen, continuous pulse oximeter and apnea monitoring. Still we felt very blessed to finally have him home with us.

At about 6 months of age Timmy started receiving PT (physical therapy) and OT (occupational therapy) once a week at home. We didn't let the therapist "push" Timmy to his fullest potential, because we felt that by over stimulating him and stressing him would lessen our time with him. So when the therapist would come for their visit, if Timmy was asleep we requested that the therapist just let him sleep. And if Timmy seemed to be having a "bad" day we would cancel therapy. Also during the months leading up to Timmy's 1st year of life, after being discharged from the hospital, Timmy had a lot of Doc appointments, so this too prevented him from having weekly therapy sessions on a regular basis.

                                                                 9 1/2 Months Old
By a year of age Timmy had some small developmental gains. He could roll over in both directions and could hold his head up very well when lying on his tummy. But even though we were seeing these small gains, we let our fear of losing Timmy stop us from pushing him. When I look back, I now realize that at the first sign of development we should have really pushed Timmy to his fullest potential. I feel by not doing so, we have somehow, even in a small way, hindered his brain from developing neurons necessary for him to be able to preform certain task. \



Timmy had the World's GREATEST Neonatologist! On Timmy's 1st. birthday we took Timmy to see the staff of the NICU, who had become emotionally attached to Timmy the 4 1/2 months that he was in the NICU. I had a looong heart felt conversation with Timmy's Neonatologist, who sternly, but lovingly pointed out, that we were doing more harm to Timmy by not pushing him to his fullest potential by restricting his therapies. He also reminded me that I had once said to him that I would do ANYTHING to prove the medical professionals wrong. That Timmy WOULD go far in life. Following the Holidays and our move in March of 2005, I requested that Timmy start having PT, OT, and ST (speech therapy) 2x a week. From April to July of 2005, Timmy received all of his therapies 2x a week. In mid July Timmy started attending Easter Seals UCP a few hours a day each week. During this time we didn't see much in the way of  developmental gains. However he was starting to sit up better while in his highchair. Timmy was still wanting to sleep a lot. I'm not sure if it was due to over stimulation, stress or his nightly sleep patterns at night, or maybe I should say lack thereof.


                                                               May 2005
In mid October 2005, Timmy was hospitalized for 2 weeks due to some type of infection. After being sent home with a PIC line and antibotics, we felt that maybe once the illness was behind him, we could start pushing Timmy to his fullest potential in therapy once again. Around this time we had started Timmy on Melatonin and it was helping him to be able to sleep better at night. Within 4 days fo being home, Timmy was back in the hospital with what was later diagnosed as Pseudomonus Pneumonia with possible aspiration pneumonia. Timmy spent 53 days in the PICU. When Timmy finally came home, he was on a ventilator and continuous oxygen. So here again, we had a child who was very frail. So the therapists couldn't do much of any type of therapy with Timmy except for passive range of motion.

By mid March 2006 we had Timmy weaned off of the oxygen and he no longer needed the ventilator. What little gains we and the therapists had made with Timmy before his illness, had been lost. So we had to start back from square one.


                                                                 August 2006
By August Timmy was able to tolerate being in his stander once again for 20-30 minutes at a time. Timmy had beaten the odds once again, by being able to recover from such a serious bout of pneumonia. Timmy was getting his therapies PT, OT, ST twice a week and we even felt that it in Timmy's best interest so we added vision therapy. We spent alot of time playing with and singing to Timmy. Slowly but surely developmental gains started to emerge. He was starting to tolerate oral stimulation, his muscle tone was improving, his balance was improving and he was a very happy boy.

In late March 2007, Timmy had yet another setback, due to a 3 week hospitalization from having Ecoli pneumonia and yet again the possibility of aspiration pneumonia. I feel that the aspiration wasn't due to the consistancy of food and liquids that he was consuming, but rather from the severe reflux, that at the time, Timmy suffered from.  During this hospitalization Timmy had his G-Tube placed and a Nissen Fundoplacation procedure. 

In July 2007 we moved to a different part of our state so that we could be closer to Timmy's Specialists. Timmy's new therapists had a different outlook as to what and how we should proceed with Timmy's therapies. They felt that we needed to give up the over use of the stander, positioning seating devices and to use "play therapy" throughout the day to stimulate Timmy. I was very skeptical at this approach at first, but I was willing to give it a try. I had been told for the past almost 4 years that Timmy needed special devices to help with standing, posture and play. So we continued to use the stander and his highchair for support and positioning ONLY while playing, when we needed Timmy to be able to use both of his hands for play.

                                                               
                                                        Mid August 2007
Before August we had tried to work with Timmy to get him to drink from a cup, but didn't have much success.  After our move in July, Timmy absolutely refused to drink from his bottle. I was adamant and was not going to relent and let the nurses syringe all of Timmy's liquids in via his Mic-key button. I knew how important it was for Timmy to keep hydrated, but yet on the other hand, Timmy is a stubborn child and one who tends to want to take the easy way out. So we kept offering him his bottle and the cup at each feeding. One day Timmy just decided that he wanted the cup. I could be wrong on my guess, but I attribute Timmy's refusal of his bottle to maturity and him not wanting his new nurses and therapists to view him as a baby.

November 2007
By Timmy's 4th birthday he was able to sit unsupported for a few seconds, even if it was what I call "taco style" sitting. The first of December 2007, we moved back to our old hometown, so that we could be closer to our support team (my parents and our friends). Due to finances when we moved back home, we had to move in with my parents for a while (Dec. 2007- April 2008). Timmy's therapies didn't start back until Mid January 2008, due to having to have all of his services transferred back to the county in which we had moved, the Holidays and our trip to Chicago to visit Grandma. Luckily, we were able to get the same PT and ST that Timmy had before our move, to come back to work with him.

I asked Timmy's PT her thoughts about not using the stander, a positioning device for sitting and incooperating play therapy with his reguolar therapy throughout the day. She agreed that it was worth a try. The PT was amazed that Timmy was able to sit unsupported for only a few seconds, because he wasn't able to do this before our move.

Once we moved into our own place in May 2008, we were better able to implement a therapy regiment that we felt best suitable for Timmy. Throughout the years we have learned that Timmy learns best with routine and repetition. So we set up our daily therapy and play activities along these lines. By using this approach we had to be very attentive to Timmy's communication cues, vocalizations and facial expressions, because in a sense he is the one who was totally in charge of his daily therapy session if it was going to work. We also had to know when his vocalizations and facial expressions we just him trying to get out of doing an activity.

Every waking hour of Timmy's day is spent doing something theraputic and/or educational. Like the picture above, Timmy is playing with small toys in a bowl of cool water. We count the toys, sing songs in relation to the objects i.e. if one of the toys is a rabbit, we might sing Little Bunny FuFu or Do Your Ears Hang Low.

We incooperate many different smells, textures, taste and sounds into play during the day. We sing, count, and say the ABC's over and over during the day. We practice stacking, sorting and putting objects into and taking objects out of a container.

Instead of using a stander we use the couch, Timmy's bed, or Emily and Timmy's play table to have Timmy stand up beside, to aid in weight bearing and to have him to "have" to use the muscles necessary for this skill. In turn this helps to strengthen these muscles.

Instead of having Timmy to spend a majority of his day sitting in his KidKart or another chair that offers support and positioning, we have him to sit on the floor, prop and side sitting. This also helps strengthen muscles necessary for independant sitting and helps with balance.

We use an exercise ball to help with balance and to strengthen neck muscles by having him to lay across the ball while holding up his head.

The unsupported standing, sitting and the use of the exercise ball ALL help in strengthening muscles, gaining better muscle control and balance.

 
Timmy LOVES to swing. So when he is in the swing we sing songs, ABC's, count, and use the opportunity to teach Stop/Go, Close/far, back/forward,  and body parts. We will touch a body part on Timmy as he swings forward toward us and say "I touched you -----." (Fill in the bland.) Then we may ask him "Can you show me where your ----- is?" (Fill in the blank) H

Timmy ABSOLUTELY hates oral stimulation. So instead of using our fingers or a flavored stick, we let Timmy use a lollypop to stimulate himself for a while first. After a few minutes he is more willing to let us stimulate him orally.



Our experience with the Pre-K program through our local school district last year wasn't a good experience. Timmy was placed into a Special Education Class, but unfortunately he was the ONLY child who was non-ambulatory. In my observation of the other children, most of their problems seemed to be behavioral. All of the other children could walk, run, see, hear and talk. So being that the other children were your typical active 4 year olds, this made time that the teacher could spend with Timmy one-on-one very limited. Even though there was 1 Teacher's Aid in the classroom, most of the time they both were having to tend to a child who was having a behavior issue. The classroom was too small for his KidKart to be manouvered around in. And even though the Teacher supposedly had some Special Education Training, she didn't have ANY training in dealing with a student with as complex learning difficulties that Timmy has.

The three things that I attribute the most to Timmy's developmental burst are....

1. Timmy's Kindergarten teacher this year is the World's GREATEST!!! She has many, many, many years of experience teaching special needs children with varying degrees of disabilities. Mrs. Bishop is very receptive to Timmy's communication gestures, vocalizations and facial expressions. She is a teacher who believes in work BEFORE play. She uses materials, stategies and techniques that center around Timmy's interest to help keep him focused and interested in wanting to learn. And as a Special Education Teacher she realizes that she has to be in charge of each individual student and the class as a whole in order for each child to be able to learn and to reach their full potential. Being that Timmy will remain in this same teacher's class throughout his elementary years, I'm anxious to see just how far this teacher will be able to carry Timmy developmentally.

2. As for physical therapy. Timmy has had the same physical therapist for almost 5 years. I feel that Timmy having the same therapist for so many years and being able to form a trusting relationship with her has played a major part in Timmy's development. The therapist is a very Down to Earth yet serious person. She has learned ALL of Timmy's tricks of the trade for trying to get out of doing his therapy, like pretending to be asleep, crying, having a "Timmy" tantrum, you name it Mr. Timmy has tried it. While working with Timmy fingers/hands in the mouth are a DEFINATE No, No! She tries to make therapy fun by playing music, making up silly rhymes, or singing some of his favorite songs to a silly tune, like her Hip-Hop version of Row, Row, Row Your Boat.

3. To get Timmy to where he is developmentally today took ALOT of hard Work, Patience, Persistance, routine, repetitiveness and most definately even MORE Patience. We have done away with his stander, the adaptive walker, the floor sitter. We "have" or better yet "MAKE" Timmy sit up without support as much as possible. We give him every opportunity to stand up. We MAKE him HAVE to use his muscles that are needed to do these activities. By him having to use these muscles he is strengthing the muscles and gaining better control of them. We stopped using an exercise mat while doing therapy with Timmy. An exercise mat is squishy and not the same type of surface that Timmy would be preforming on If/When he learns to crawl, walk, etc. So we chose to make the therapy surface as natural for him as possible.

Also, Timmy's overall good health, except for a couple of very minor setbacks, a reaction to Baclofen in the Spring of last year and recovery time from having his tonsils and adnoids removed earlier this year, has played a BIG role in his developmental gains.

As the old saying goes "With Age Comes Maturity." Let's just hope that this statement is true as well in Timmy's overall developmental gains.

Monday, November 9, 2009

American Journal Of Medical Genetics

Here is an article that was written and published following our visit to NIH, in December 2008. It briefly describes the PAX6 gene mutation that Timmy inherited from both his dad and myself. And how this mutation affects each of us. In the article it states that Timmy's brother "possibly" inherited both mutated copies of the PAX6 gene. I would like to clarify that Josiah passed away due to a ruptured bowel and NOT because of the "possibility" of him having inherited 2 copies of the mutated gene. My glucose level that was evaluated was not a fasting glucose level. I had forgotten that I had eaten just before the blood draw. (A busy day, stress and age all played a part in my memory lapse!) :0) During my visit to NIH in August 2009, I have been daignosed with Type 2 diabetes. My blood glucose levels are currently being controlled by exercise and a Metformin tablet 3x a day.

NOTE: Two additional MRI pictures can be viewed on previous post dated Nov 8th.
   
                               AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS

CLINICAL REPORT

Compound Heterozygosity for Mutations in PAX6 in a Patient With Complex Brain Anomaly, Neonatal Diabetes Mellitus, and Microophthalmia

Benjamin D. Solomon,1 Daniel E. Pineda-Alvarez,1 Joan Z. Balog,1 Donald Hadley,1 Andrea L. Gropman,1,2 Radha Nandagopal,3 Joan C. Han,3 Jin S. Hahn,4 Delphine Blain,5,6 Brian Brooks,5 and Maximilian Muenke1*

1National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland
2Children’s National Medical Center, Washington, District of Columbia
3Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland
4Stanford University, Palo Alto, California
5National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland
6MedStar Research Institute, Hyattsville, Maryland

Received 22 July 2009; Accepted 2 August 2009

We report on a patient with trisomy 21, microophthalmia, neonatal diabetes mellitus, hypopituitarism, and a complex structural brain anomaly who was a member of a large bilineal family with eye anomalies. The patient inherited a different mutation in PAX6 from each parent and is the only known living and second reported patient with compound heterozygosity for mutations in PAX6. PAX6 is a transcription factor involved in eye and brain development and has roles in pancreatic and pituitary development. Clinical evaluation of the propositus and his parents demonstrated the effects of mutations of differing severity in multiple individuals. Published 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Key words: PAX6; microophthalmia; aniridia; neonatal diabetes mellitus

How to Cite this Article: Solomon BD, Pineda-Alvarez DE, Balog JZ, Hadley D, Gropman AL, Nandagopal R, Han JC, Hahn JS, Blain D, Brooks B, Muenke M. 2009. Compound heterozygosity for mutations in PAX6 in a patient with complex brain anomaly, neonatal diabetes mellitus, and microophthalmia. Am J Med Genet Part A 149A:2543–2546.

INTRODUCTION

PAX6, located on chromosome 11p13, is a highly evolutionarily conserved transcription factor involved in ocular and neural development [Hanson et al., 1999; Simpson and Price, 2002].
Heterozygous deletions or loss-of-function mutations in PAX6 can result in ocular anomalies [Jordan et al., 1992; Robinson et al., 2008]. Truncating mutations in the open-reading frame are more commonly associated with aniridia; missense mutations occur with variable eye anomalies including keratopathy, congenital optic nerve defects, cataracts, isolated foveal hypoplasia, iris hypoplasia, and (rarely) microophthalmia [Tzoulaki et al., 2005].
    PAX6 is expressed in the pancreas, and mutations in PAX6 may result in abnormal glucose metabolism and defective processing of proinsulin [Wen et al., 2009]. In the human embryo, PAX6 is expressed in the pituitary gland, and in mice, appears to play a role in pituitary development and function [Bentley et al., 1999; Kioussi et al., 1999; Terzic and Saraga-Babic, 1999]. Finally, heterozygous mutations in PAX6 may also result in auditory processing deficits related to corpus callosum anomalies [Bamiou et al., 2007].
    One individual has previously been described with compound heterozygous nonsense mutations in PAX6 [Glaser et al., 1994]. That patient, who died at 1 week of age, had anophthalmia with fused eyelids, choanal atresia, microcephaly, and a complex brain anomaly described as a large midline cavity with an absent corpus callosum, hypoplastic brainstem, near-absent olfactory bulbs, and polymicrogyria. Facial dysmorphisms included a small, malformed nose, a high-arched palate, and micrognathia. No other organ anomalies were noted on full autopsy, and endocrinologic abnormalities were not described.

   We describe a 4-year-old male who additionally had trisomy 21 and who is the second reported patient (and the only to survive the neonatal period) with mutations in both PAX6 alleles. We also depict a four-generation pedigree in which there was clinical and molecular evidence that numerous relatives were PAX6 mutation heterozygotes. This family provides evidence for the wide phenotypic spectrum associated with mutations in PAX6. The father’s missense mutation resulted in much milder ophthalmologic anomalies than the mother’s nonsense mutation, while the presence of both mutations in the propositus (and likely, his deceased brother) resulted in severe ophthalmologic, neurologic, and endocrinologic manifestations, the last of which has not previously been described in a human with two PAX6 mutations.

Published 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. {This article is a US Government work and, as such, is in the public domain in the United States of America.

Grant sponsor: National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health.
*Correspondence To:
Prof. Maximilian Muenke, National Institutes of Health, Building 35,
Room 1B-203, MSC 3717, Bethesda, MD 20892.
E-mail: mamuenke@mail.nih.gov
Published online 26 October 2009 in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com)

METHODS

The patient and his parents participated in our comprehensive clinical study on holoprosencephaly and related neurological disorders at the National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health. Appropriate consent was obtained for all participants, including for photo publication. Sequence analysis for SHH, ZIC2, SIX3, and TGIF, the four most common holoprosencephaly-associated genes, was performed by methods previously described [Roessler et al., 1996; Brown et al., 1998; Wallis et al., 1999; Gripp et al., 2000]. Sequence analysis of PAX6 was performed commercially (GeneDx, Gaithersburg, MD).

CLINICAL REPORT

When evaluated by us, the propositus was a 4-year-old Caucasian male with prenatally diagnosed trisomy 21. He was initially diagnosed as having lobar holoprosencephaly. His complex medical history additionally included bilateral microophthalmia, choanal atresia, severe developmental delay, and renal dysplasia with recurrent urinary tract infections. Evidence for hypopituitaris included central hypothyroidism, secondary adrenal insufficiency, and a history of cryptorchidism and micropenis (now status—post-testosterone treatment) making gonadotropin deficiency likely. He had neonatal-onset insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus which was very difficult to control, but abdominal MRI revealed no pancreatic anomalies.
     Review of the propositus’s brain MRI showed structural abnormalities not consistent with holoprosencephaly because of the lack of hemispheric fusion, but included multiple anomalies including agenesis of the corpus callosum, midline interhemispheric cyst, hypoplastic pons, and vermis (absent inferiorly), possible Dandy–Walker malformation, dysplastic tectum, pituitary and hypothalamic hypoplasia, and a globular (though not fused) basal ganglia. The thalamic nuclei were well separated by a large third ventricle. Microcephaly and asymmetric microophthalmia were also evident (Fig. 1).

 
 On physical examination, the child displayed physical features consistent with his diagnosis of trisomy 21, as well as bilateral severe microophthalmia, extreme microcephaly (head circumference 50th centile for a 1-month-old with Down syndrome), and a smooth philtrum (Fig. 1).


Propositus with compound heterozygosity for mutations in PAX6. Facial features were consistent with trisomy 21 and were also notable for extreme microcephaly, microophthalmia, and a smooth philtrum. Axial, coronal, and sagittal (from top) brain MRI demonstrates complex structural brain anomaly in propositus. (SEE ABOVE MRI PHOTO).


The propositus’s mother had a history of aniridia, but reported no other medical problems. She had an extensive family history of autosomal-dominant aniridia, though no previous genetic study had been initiated. On physical examination, no extraocular anomalies were appreciated. Ophthalmological examination showed bilateral aniridia, glaucoma, and corneal opacifications, as well as a dense cataract in the right eye. While she had not been previously diagnosed with diabetes, she had an elevated fasting glucose on our evaluation.

The propositus’s father reported a history of cataracts in early childhood and eventual blindness, as well as hearing loss. He also had an extensive family history of similar visual problems and hearing loss. On examination, he had a high palate and dental crowding in addition to ocular anomalies. Ophthalmological examination showed bilateral microcornea, a right eye cataract, and left aphakia (absent lens). He also had subtle iris hypoplasia and corectopia.

The propositus’s brother, on whom DNA was not available for testing, was described as having very similar structural brain anomalies to the propositus. He additionally had neonatal diabetes mellitus and anophthalmia, and died in infancy.

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS PART A

MOLECULAR TESTING



Sequence analysis for mutations in the four most common holoprosencephaly-associated genes (SHH, ZIC2, SIX3, and TGIF) was negative.

The patient’s father had a nonconservative missense mutation (c.112C>T, resulting in p.R38W) in the paired box domain of PAX6. This mutation has previously been reported in a patient with microphthalmia and aniridia [Henderson et al., 2007]. This is a highly evolutionarily conserved residue which mediates sequence specific DNA binding [Hanson et al., 1999; Xu et al., 1999].

The patient’s mother had a nonsense mutation (c.718C>T, resulting in p.R240X) in the homeobox domain of PAX6. This mutation has previously been reported in a patient with aniridia. The premature insertion of a stop codon in the homeobox domain is predicted to result in nonsense-mediated decay and a consequently functionally null allele [Wilson et al., 1995; Tzoulaki et al., 2005].

The propositus inherited both the maternal and paternal mutations in PAX6.

DISCUSSION

This is the second reported and the only known surviving patient with mutations in both PAX6 alleles. Analysis of the findings provides a unique example of the phenotypic effects of compound heterozygosity of mutations of PAX6. The propositus’s hypopituitarism, diabetes mellitus, and brain and ophthalmologic anomalies can all be explained by the PAX6 mutations. The mutations also explain the ophthalmologic phenotype in his parents, and additionally may explain impaired glucose tolerance in the propositus’s mother.

The previously reported patient, who had a nonsense mutation in each PAX6 allele, survived to the eighth day of life [Glaser et al.,1994]. The propositus’s brother, who was described as having near identical brain and ophthalmologic anomalies as the propositus, died in early infancy and was not available for genetic testing. However, given the similar phenotypes and the 25% chance that the parents would give birth to a child with both mutations, it is likely that the deceased sibling inherited both mutant alleles. The morbidity associated with inheriting two mutations and the fact that the propositus additionally had trisomy 21 make his survival and relative good health an especially rare event.

Finally, this case highlights the importance of a multidisciplinary approach which includes the evaluation of multiple family members in the diagnosis of unusual and complex patients.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We are extremely grateful to the family presented in this report. This research was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the National HumanGenome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health.

REFERENCES

Bamiou DE, Free SL, Sisodiya SM, Chong WK, Musiek F, Williamson KA, van Heyningen V, Moore AT, Gadian D, Luxon LM. 2007. Auditory interhemispheric transfer deficits, hearing difficulties, and brain magnetic resonance imaging abnormalities in children with congenital aniridia due to PAX6 mutations. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 161:463---469

Bentley CA, Zidehsarai MP, Grindley JC, Parlow AF, Barth-Hall S, Roberts VJ. 1999. Pax6 is implicated in murine pituitary endocrine function. Endocrine 10:171–177.

Brown SA, Warburton D, Brown LY, Yu CY, Roeder ER, Stengel-Rutkowski S, Hennekam RC, Muenke M. 1998. Holoprosencephaly due to mutations in ZIC2, a homologue of Drosophila odd-paired. Nat Genet 20:180–183.

Glaser T, Jepeal L, Edwards JG, Young SR, Favor J, Maas RL. 1994. PAX6 gene dosage effect in a family with congenital cataracts, aniridia, anophthalmia and central nervous system defects. Nat Genet 7:463–471.

Gripp KW, Wotton D, Edwards MC, Roessler E, Ades L, Meinecke P, Richieri-Costa A, Zackai EH, Massague J, Muenke M, Elledge SJ. 2000. Mutations in TGIF cause holoprosencephaly and link NODAL signalling to human neural axis determination. Nat Genet 25:205–208.

Hanson I, Churchill A, Love J, Axton R, Moore T, Clarke M, Meire F, van Heyningen V. 1999. Missense mutations in the most ancient residues of the PAX6 paired domain underlie a spectrum of human congenital eye malformations. Hum Mol Genet 8:165–172.

Henderson RA, Williamson K, Cumming S, Clarke MP, Lynch SA, Hanson IM, FitzPatrick DR, Sisodiya S, van Heyningen V. 2007. Inherited PAX6, NF1 and OTX2 mutations in a child with microphthalmia and aniridia. Eur J Hum Genet 15:898–901.

Jordan T, Hanson I, Zaletayev D, Hodgson S, Prosser J, Seawright A, Hastie N, van Heyningen V. 1992. The human PAX6 gene is mutated in two patients with aniridia. Nat Genet 1:328–332.

Kioussi C, O’Connell S, St-Onge L, Treier M, Gleiberman AS, Gruss P, Rosenfeld MG. 1999. Pax6 is essential for establishing ventral-dorsal cell boundaries in pituitary gland development. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 96:14378–14382.

Robinson DO, Howarth RJ, Williamson KA, van Heyningen V, Beal SJ, Crolla JA. 2008. Genetic analysis of chromosome 11p13 and the PAX6 gene in a series of 125 cases referred with aniridia.AmJ Med Genet Part A 146A:558–569.

Roessler E, Belloni E, Gaudenz K, Jay P, Berta P, Scherer SW, Tsui LC, Muenke M. 1996. Mutations in the human Sonic Hedgehog gene cause holoprosencephaly. Nat Genet 14:357–360.

Simpson TI, Price DJ. 2002. Pax6; a pleiotropic player in development. Bioessays 24:1041–1051.

Terzic J, Saraga-Babic M. 1999. Expression pattern of PAX3 and PAX6 genes during human embryogenesis. Int J Dev Biol 43:501–508.

Tzoulaki I, White IM, Hanson IM. 2005. PAX6 mutations: Genotypephenotype correlations. BMC Genet 6:27.

Wallis DE, Roessler E, Hehr U, Nanni L, Wiltshire T, Richieri-Costa A, Gillessen-Kaesbach G, Zackai EH, Rommens J, Muenke M. 1999. Mutations in the homeodomain of the human SIX3 gene cause holoprosencephaly. Nat Genet 22:196–198.

Wen JH, Chen YY, Song SJ, Ding J, Gao Y, Hu QK, Feng RP, Liu YZ, Ren GC, Zhang CY, Hong TP, Gao X, Li LS. 2009. Paired box 6 (PAX6) regulates glucose metabolism via proinsulin processing mediated by prohormone convertase 1/3 (PC1/3). Diabetologia 52:504–513.

Wilson DS, Guenther B, Desplan C, Kuriyan J. 1995. High resolution crystal structure of a paired (Pax) class cooperative homeodomain dimer on DNA. Cell 82:709–719.

Xu HE, Rould MA, Xu W, Epstein JA, Maas RL, Pabo CO. 1999. Crystal structure of the human Pax6 paired domain-DNA complex reveals specific roles for the linker region and carboxy-terminal subdomain in DNA binding. Genes Dev 13:1263–1275.

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Timmy's MRI Report

In December 2008, when we were at NIH, they sent Timmy's MRI to the Carter Center for review. Below is the finding from the Carter Center, that we just recently obtained from NIH. I don't know what any of this really means. Timmy has a Neurology appointment on Nov. 13th and at this time, I'm hoping that the Neurologist can explain some if not all of this to us. Maybe some of you can understand what is being described here.

                  CC Neuroradiology Report

Date of Exam         Age at Exam (yr)     Date of Review
7/14/2008                         4.7                   1/23/2009

Exam Type          Exam Media          Referral Source (CC)
MRI                      DICOM CD/DVD       Other

Image Diagnosis
Other

Comments

Not HPE. Multiple anomalies including agenesis corpus callosum, hypoplastic pons, vermis (absent inferiorly), possible Dandy-Walker. Tectum dysplastic. Hypoplastic pituitary and hypothal.
Microcephalics. Asymmetric microophthalmia. Basal ganglia abnormal, globular (but not fused). Given eye, cortical malformation, post fossa anomalies, raises question of CMD/MEB spectrum.

Detailed Findings (For Internal Research Use Only )

Pituitary                                 Hypothalamus
1 (partial)                               Dysgenetic
                                          
Caudate                                Mesencephalon
0 (seperated)                       0 (Normal)

Lentiform                             Thalmi
0 (separated)                       0 (seperated)

Hemispheric Fusion           Hemisph Fused Portions
Absent                                  Not HPE, therefore

*Anterior Falx Present         *Posterior Falx Present

Ant CC/Genu Present            Ant. Body CC Present

Post Body CC Present         Post CC/Splenium Present


- CC Comment -
Complete ACC

Cortical Malformation             Optic Chiasm
Present                                     Dysgenetic

Orbits                                       Olfactory Bulb
                                                 Absent
Olfactory Sulci

Absent                                    IHC-
                                                Present w/comm - type 1
Dorsal Cyst
Absent                                 VP Shunt
                                             Absent

Myelination

Age Appropriate             Vessels
                                         0 (Normal)
Aquaduct
Patent

Ventricular System and Cyst Comments

Midline interhemispheric fissure vs cyst is enlarged. Thalami are separated by enlarged 3rd vent with posterior commissure connecting the two thalami. Asymmetric large temporal horns, R>L.




Interpreted By:

Patrick Barnes, M.D., Professor of Radiology-Diagnostic Radiology
Jin Hahn, M.D., Professor of Neurology and Pediatrics
Stanford School of Medicine & Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital
Stanford, California, 94305-5235
Tel: (650) 723-6841. Email hpe@stanford.edu

Friday, November 6, 2009

Birthday Party

We had Timmy's 6th birthday party at school today. Even though the Circus Theme that I had planned on using had to be replaced by SpongeBob, the party was a success! The kids really had fun with the Fishing Game, the Tatoos and bouncing in the Bounce House! I didn't get as many pictures as I had hoped. One reason was because Dad's digital camera was having mechanical problems. (Saaanta, I want a Digital Camera For Christmas. Pleeeease!) And also because Dad was behind the camera taking the pictures. For some reason the men in my life, just don't know how to take a variety of pictures. Maybe for this reason, that is why I haven't seen too many male photographers in my lifetime? Anyway I hope that you enjoy the pictures.....















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