Friday, March 23, 2007

Another long one

Has it really been almost two weeks since my last post?! I guess time flies when you're overwhelmed. I will be making up for lost time with this blog post:

  • JF's surgery
  • HSP
  • Waking up dry
  • Starting Lamictal
  • Progress on the house
  • Scratching at daycare
  • Starving Brains
JF's surgery

We rescheduled JF's hydrocele/hernia surgery because of his recent illness. It's now scheduled for Monday, April 2.

HSP

As I mentioned in my previous post, JF was diagnosed with Henoch Schonlein purpura (HSP). I'm still not sure what this really means, but he seems to be back to his normal self now. (I can't say he's all better. He hasn't been "all better" since his allergies first became apparent over a year ago.)

JF seems to get sick less often now that he's on Pulmicort, but this was a doozy. I think he broke a record for the number of symptoms/diagnoses he went through in less than a week: runny/stuffy nose, sneezing, coughing, rash on his legs/feet, fever, microscopic amounts of blood in his urine, HSP, refusing to eat, throwing up, stomach virus, double ear infection, slight iron deficiency, and (drumroll please) pinkeye! This required one trip to the ER on Sunday and two trips to the pediatrician during the week. The double ear infection earned him ten days of Augmentin, which he has almost finished and which seemed to clear up everything.

Is there some kind of trade-off going on here? He's sick less often on Pulmicort, but ridiculously worse than usual when he does get sick. If there is a trade-off, maybe we should reconsider whether the Pulmicort is a good idea.

Waking up dry

JF has been waking up dry every morning for about a week. After the first few days of this, we stopped putting him in a diaper for night-night. I still can't believe it. It makes me wonder if we parents really are involved in the potty training process at all!

Now he just needs to figure out pooping in the potty!

Starting Lamictal

JF started taking Lamictal for his mini-seizures on Tuesday. For the first two weeks, we're giving him one chewable tablet in the morning and a half tablet in the evening. Over the next 15 weeks, he'll work his way up to five tablets twice a day. And we have to watch for any rash.

I had to make a chart of his daily medications to help us remember what to give him and when:

Morning:

  • 2 Gummy Vites or 1 ML PolyViSol (alternating until we run out of PolyViSol)
  • 0.6 ML FerInSol (iron supplement because of the deficiency mentioned above)
  • 1 tsp Augmentin
  • Lamictal (as directed by the neurologist)
  • Pulmicort

Evening:

  • 1 tsp Augmentin
  • Lamictal (as directed by the neurologist)
  • Pulmicort
  • 1.5 tsp Zyrtec

Isn't this ridiculous?

We still need to schedule the MRI and the follow up with the neurologist.

JF's PEP teacher came over last night for a home visit, and we showed her the neurologist's MRI order (from 3/2/07). She pointed out that it says, "R/O dysplasia, mass" and translated that to mean, "Rule out dysplasia or mass." Great. One more thing to worry about!

Progress on the house

This morning, AF was trying to figure out how much painting he has left to do on the house before we can put it on the market. He was estimating that he was two-thirds done because he just has to do the entire upstairs and a few touch-ups downstairs. I pointed out that he still needs to do the kitchen. He said, "Okay, so I'm only half-done."

I think he's been working on the house for a month, with one week off because of JF's illness. So maybe we'll be able to put the house on the market in another month?

AF has developed a good work strategy: During the day, while JF is at daycare and I'm at work, he paints and loads up the minivan with furniture and boxes of stuff. (It's amazing how much stuff we can live without for a few months.) Then, when I come home and take over with the boy, AF hauls the minivan to Jessup. It's a lot of work, but it's an efficient use of time.

Scratching at daycare

The director of JF's daycare called me today to say that his scratching/pinching is getting out of control. She said that she had seen three of his classmates with scratches on their faces. JF's teacher had been notifying us now & then that JF was still doing this, but she always reassured us that it's a phase he'll grow out of. Now the director has asked me or AF to spend two days at the daycare with JF.

AF is willing to take time off from painting to sit with JF at the daycare on Monday and Tuesday, but we're frustrated that it has come to this. JF hasn't displayed any of these aggressive behaviors at home in weeks, and I don't know if he ever displayed them in the PEP class. His PEP teacher knows how to nip it in the bud.

I sent an e-mail message to JF's PEP teacher about this right away. Her response was quite long. Her theory is that "he doesn't know how to say 'come play with me' or 'let's play' so he is grabbing his classmates in an attempt to engage them." She agreed with the idea of AF attending daycare with JF for two days. She also volunteered to visit the daycare on Wednesday herself. The rest of her message was about what the daycare should do about it:

  • Move him from the twos class to the threes class. (This is long overdue: He will be four in May.) These kids "will be better able to tell him to cut it out when he looks to squeeze their faces to get attention."
  • "Structure his play somewhat - i.e. set up kids for him to play with - even when they have free time and make sure he is within their sight to monitor how he is playing."
  • "When he behaves inappropriately he needs to hear a stern harsh voice....He should almost begin to cry when reprimanded because that will mean that he gets it."
  • "He should also have to sit in a 'time out' or 'get ready' area for at least 4 minutes, apologize for his actions, and then be allowed to return to an activity."

I wish we could take this PEP teacher with us when we move. The daycare did move him to the threes class, and he is apparently happy about it. I hope all of this works, because I'm afraid they might kick him out of daycare otherwise.

Starving Brains

I have finally finished reading Children with Starving Brains by Jaquelyn McCandless, MD. At first I was very skeptical, but by the time I had read about 2/3 of the book, I became convinced that:

  • Mercury, in the form of thimerosol in vaccines, can trigger autism.
  • Multiple vaccines, such as MMR, can trigger autism.
  • Kids with autism tend to have a decreased ability to detoxify themselves. Mercury decreases one's ability to detoxify oneself. (Which came first, the decreased ability or the toxin?)
  • Autism is more than just a genetic disorder, and it impacts more than just behavior and language.
  • Treating autism requires healing the gut, improving nutrition, and removing toxins (such as mercury).
  • Many kids with autism can't fully digest proteins, such as gluten or casein.
  • Many kids with autism have leaky guts, which allows large food protein molecules to reach the bloodstream and the brain.
  • The body's immune system responds to these large molecules and the child becomes oversensitive to these foods. The child has diarrhea, constipation, or both. (JF alternates between both.)
  • Some of the large food proteins act like morphine in the brain.
  • Kids with autism tend to crave the very foods that they should be avoiding. (JF loves anything made from dairy or grains, but is very picky about anything else. Clue!)
  • Kids with autism tend to have other auto-immune diseases such as allergies and asthma, and tend to get sick more often. (Sounds like JF!)

I wanted to try everything that this book recommended, but I know that we should try only one thing at a time. But still, I figured we could get the ball rolling on some of the things that would take a long time, and try one thing on JF while we waited for those other things to pan out.

The book recommends starting with the GFCF diet, and it even says it's one of the few things that parents can do without a doctor's supervision. I was afraid that my husband would be reluctant to change JF's diet, so I decided to compromise and just try him on a casein-free diet. We bought a carton of almond milk and dove in head-first.

We were dealing with the change well enough, until we went to my nephew's birthday party. JF could not have any pizza, dip, salad (because it had a creamy dressing on it), or birthday cake. JF didn't seem to miss any of it. He filled up on peanuts, corn chips, and chicken. But AF was very upset.

We talked it over. I realized that I had left my husband behind in my enthusiasm. I need his full support, if not his full partnership, on this endeavor. I need to take the time to discuss it with him, have a meeting of minds about it. (Where's a Vulcan mind-meld when you need one?) I need to stop being a bull-dozer.

AF made a good point that we should enlist the help of a doctor in this dietary change (in spite of what the book says), to make sure that we don't do JF any harm. I believe that we need only to give JF calcium supplements, but maybe there is more to consider.

So I called JF's pediatrician and told him about everything that I've been reading in the Starving Brains book. His response was essentially, "I'm not an autism expert, but I can recommend one." He seemed unwilling to participate in a biomedical approach to autism, claiming that he didn't have the expertise. The doctor that he recommended is on the DAN web site's list of doctors, but she doesn't participate in any health care plan. And my health care plan doesn't cover out-of-network doctors, at all.

So I decided to call the original DAN doctor that I had found over a month ago. (This one is in-network.) But the one time I had spoken to him on the phone, he had said that I should (1) find out whether any of JF's vaccines had mercury, and (2) make an appointment for a consultation. I was afraid to try the second without having done the first. I started making phone calls:
  • The hospital where JF was born promised to fax the records to a doctor for me.
  • The second pediatrician said, "Only the flu shot." I asked, "So the flu shot had thimerosol?" They back-tracked and said maybe. (I need to call them back and ask them to call the manufacturer.)
  • I had to call the first pediatrician twice to find out that they are contacting the manufacturer of a flu shot and they will call me back.
  • The third (and current) pediatrician said the only vaccine JF has had in his office was a thimerosol-free flu shot.
  • Something reminded me that I'd had a flu shot when I was pregnant, before JF was born. I called the OB-GYN who had given me that flu shot. They contacted the manufacturer and are waiting for an answer from them.
Then I called the DAN doctor, intending to make an appointment for a consultation. The earliest appointment I could get was in June! I was appalled. I understand supply and demand, but this is ridiculous! I eventually did make an appointment with him for June 8th, but I didn't want to have to wait until June before starting JF on the GFCF diet.

So I called the developmental pediatrician that JF's PEP teacher had recommended, Dr. Chernoff. I had already made one appointment with this doctor for JF, but I'd had to cancel it because of his illness. I rescheduled for April 27th. I also asked for their fax number to receive the hospital records (for the mercury search).

So then I was bummed, because I still have to wait over a month before we can start JF on this GFCF diet. (I'm also bummed because he's taking antibiotics, which may be upsetting his internal flora. And we're remodelling, which may be exposing him to toxins.) Meanwhile, he is getting older. The older he gets, the less effective any treatments will be. Time is running out! There has to be something I can do!

Then I had an idea. Why not try the GFCF diet myself? Half of the problem of starting JF on this diet is the daunting aspect of figuring out where to get GFCF products and figuring out how to work it into our lifestyles. (We do most of our cooking in the microwave.) By starting myself on the diet, we split the problem in two. Divide and conquer!

So I ordered a shopping guide from gfcf.com. (How can they claim to be "The largest FREE resource of it's kind on the Internet" when all of their resources cost money?) As soon as I get that guide in the mail, I'm starting the diet. For now, I'm savoring each and every thing I eat, because it may be the last time I get to eat it in a long time.

4 comments:

Mom without a manual said...

Yikes! You have been busy. Hang in there. Take a deep breath. You can't do everything today!

I am so glad you got the book. There is so much to the biomedical approach. Pace yourself! I knew based on what you said about JF's immune issues and gut issues that you would find some of these things very eye opening.

Just know that mainstream docs (and educators) are not going to champion this cause. But please know that many many families have traveled the same path and seen amazing results! Us included.

That said, I have to warn you that the diet is hard. But it can also be hugely rewarding. It all depends on your child's issues. They are all different! Plus it really has to be 100%. Another little guy we know can't even sneak a cracker. He nabbed another little guy's cracker at day care and had diarreah for 2 days. But that is an extreme example! Unfortunately, you have to give it time and you can't "cheat" but the payoff can be huge. Good luck!

I know your husband is probably a little freaked out. This is a huge change! (Just wait until you start looking at the gluten!) You definitely need to get his support because it is only going to get more crazy as you change foods. It is hard but it can make the world of difference!

Maybe use the next month to just try to incorporate a few of the GFCF snack foods into his diet. Atleast this way when you remove the other foods he will be happy to hold onto those snacks. This way there will still be something familiar in his diet!

Try not to get hung on the mercury stuff right now. That is a huge snowball that gets bigger and bigger the more you obsess over it. And to be honest it is pretty hard identify if your vaccines had mercury. My guess is that your flu shot did. They still do. The childhood vaccines took several years to get the "mercury free" ones on the shelf. And not to be an alarmist but mercury free is still not completely mercury free. Mercury is still used in the process and although the end product has much less it still has trace amounts.

Hopefully your DAN doctor will be helpful. We only have one local DAN doctor but he is not very well respected. I think he did what he needed to to qualify and then has proceeded to do much of his own stuff. We travel a couple hours to an other city to consult with a different DAN doctor.

We run lots of blood, urine, stool tests and use that to base our treatments. The local doctor doesn't run tests and frankly comes off as a quack. I know of many families that he has turned off of biomedicals. As with any doctor you might have to visit with a few. Much of the contact with the doctor is with lab tests so it is even possible to deal with a doctor out of state over the phone. Many families do this...you may even find one that your insurance will pay part of!

Just make sure your doctor is current on the research and serious about interpreting JF's results. Our kids are unique and there is not one treatment plan that can be applied to all of them! And pace yourself because there is so much more to the biomedical process before you even think about chelation. You need to get a hand on the gut and dietary issues first!

Anyway, I always write too much! Hang in there! I am glad you are doing okay. You are definitely a very busy lady!!!!

WarriorMom said...

Thank you, MWAM. You don't write too much! I really appreciate the feedback, at any length.

WarriorMom said...

And thank you very much for recommending the Starving Brains book in the first place!

Maddy said...

I'll only comment on the scratching because that's the only useful [possibly] thing I might have to add. My 'typical daughter' walked early [8 months] and had no speech. She would run up to children and shove them, which was her 'friendly' way of saying 'run' or 'chase me.' I think the teacher is spot on with giving him tools to make his requests in a more socially acceptable manner.
Best wishes