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Hi, ! I am the mom of Cameron. He is now 15 and we discovered he had achalasia in December the day before his 14th birthday. Between December and May of 2005, Our family went through the biggest educational event in history. Well Cameron and I did.mostly. and the others nodded and said... Oh! [well, not really] When we found out, I hit the Med libraries! Signed on as a Med student and began to read and cry.. cry and read... I found this board and with the help of a number of "old timers" began to find out the experience and wisdom these folks had to offer. Many a night I pounded the keyboard. I emailed and phoned and talked to quite a few surgeons. I looked at alternatives, and natural and holistic approaches, knowing full well, that once we crossed the bridge of surgery, there was no going back. I wanted to know it was the best and last alternative. We went thought the various stages of aggressive

Achalasia, and 84lbs and 5 months later, Cameron saw one of the greatest surgeons. Dr. Patti at UCSF. I realize you may be overwhelmed, or numb, but let me assure you we are here to help you and support you. You have to be an aggressive advocate for the child as there are more hoops to jump through. I noticed someone wrote that perhaps you need to find an adult specialist, but that is only partially true. The problem herein lies in the fact that your child is just that a child. The Big guys don't work on children. So with that ... what do you do.. We had Dr. Patti, but we also had .. Dr. Diane Farmer Chief of Pediatric Surgery and her Whole team in addition to Dr. Patti and his whole team.. What a crowded theater it was that day! ! ! The Jama articles and the Jpgn articles are not available to you without a subscription until they get to be so old... or

the info is not as new. Once it has been cited, it will become available in the full abstract. Like Sandy said, you may contact the surgeon if you want a copy of that particular abstract. Chances are he is waiting for it to be published along with his colleagues. Do you need some good info on Adolescents and Achalasia? Do you need some other resource material.? Let me know, I will be happy to copy the articles and/or links and get them to you. If I can be of any help to you please do not hesitate. Additionally feel free to email me personally you like... Your journey is bumpy... I pray Good ears for hearing and a heart for learning! Carolyn in No CA , with a real live sunny day! Snows a meltin' and Mom of Cameron Myotomized, Fundo'd, and Pizza'd up..

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Hi, Carolyn! I was told you would be a great " mom resource. "

Thank you for getting in touch.

Mark's barium swallow was on Friday and that was the first I

heard the word achalasia. Since then I've been doing just what

you did, researching, reading, crying... and praying.

> We went thought the various stages of aggressive

> Achalasia, and 84lbs and 5 months later, Cameron saw one of the

> greatest surgeons. Dr. Patti at UCSF.

Good heavens. Your son lost 84 pounds?? What are the stages of

aggressive Achalasia?

Does myotomy stop the progress of the disease or will the

esophagus keep losing motility? I don't really understand how

swallowing can work without a functional LES and peristalsis.

After a myotomy do you need to wash everything down with liquid

and just rely on gravity?

> I realize you may be overwhelmed, or numb, but let me assure

> you we are here to help you and support you.

I'm so glad. It does indeed feel overwhelming, and I can't for

the life of me concentrate on my work (freelance translation,

with deadlines coming up). Meanwhile, Mark doesn't seem to think

his condition is a big deal. He's not in pain; he just has to

wait awhile for his food to go down, although occasionally it

doesn't. I mentioned the possibility of surgery but I haven't

told him yet that (as I understand) surgery doesn't really cure

it, and sometimes it has to be repeated or causes other

problems...

> I noticed someone wrote that perhaps you need to find an adult

> specialist, but that is only partially true.

We're going to first talk to a pediatric gastroenterologist in

Lancaster. I expect we'll then need to see a surgeon with more

achalasia experience in a larger city, like Hershey or

Philadelphia.

> Like Sandy said, you may

> contact the surgeon if you want a copy of that particular

> abstract.

I faxed the first author in the Netherlands but haven't heard

back yet.

> Do you need some good info on Adolescents and Achalasia? Do

> you need some other resource material.? Let me know, I will be

> happy to copy the articles and/or links and get them to you.

Yes, yes, please!

> If I can be of any help to you please do not hesitate.

> Additionally feel free to email me personally you like...

I can't tell you how much I appreciate this.

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