Guest guest Posted October 1, 2004 Report Share Posted October 1, 2004 Hi everyone. My name is Diane -- our 4 year old daughter, , was diagnosed with hypogammaglobulinemia three days ago. Her IgG is 468, which the immunologist indicates is " significantly low. " Although it was relief to finally have a diagnosis, I'm also scared of what to expect in the future. We've had 2 visits with an immunologist, Dr. Shapiro in Plymouth, MN. The initial visit was a discussion and bloodwork, and the second visit was to discuss the diagnosis. We have a great feeling about him, and believe he'll be a wonderful doctor for her. He's also really good about talking to . He reassured us that she will live a normal life with the right treatment. is now taking an antibiotic 2xday, and will do so for the months of September through May each year. He stated that IVIG will be a last resort. Parents with children having this disorder -- do you have any " words of wisdom " to share? Any thoughts, guidance, comments, anything, would be greatly appreciated! Thanks, Diane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 1, 2004 Report Share Posted October 1, 2004 Hi, Diane, I'm glad you have gotten some answers. Dr. Shapiro was able to get our dd on a routine of IVIG and it has made a tremendous difference in her life. But, keep monitoring your dd's health while on antibiotics. You won't need to wait through months of illnesses before you get him to reevaluate this plan of treatment. He also likes to be informed about every illness, so call him...a lot in necessary. Welcome to the list! Pam wife to (17 years) mother to , 10, Hannah, 8, Rebekah, 5, and Leah, 3 Tell me about hypogammaglobulinemia....... Hi everyone. My name is Diane -- our 4 year old daughter, , was diagnosed with hypogammaglobulinemia three days ago. Her IgG is 468, which the immunologist indicates is " significantly low. " Although it was relief to finally have a diagnosis, I'm also scared of what to expect in the future. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 1, 2004 Report Share Posted October 1, 2004 Thanks for the information Pam! How long after the diagnosis of an immune deficiency before your daughter started IVIG? Yes, Dr Sharpiro did indicate he would remain very involved, which is a relief after so many unexplained fevers with , and the brush off " it's just a virus " from other doctors! Did your daughter find any relief from infections through antibiotics? > Hi, Diane, > > I'm glad you have gotten some answers. Dr. Shapiro was able to get our dd > on a routine of IVIG and it has made a tremendous difference in her life. > But, keep monitoring your dd's health while on antibiotics. You won't need > to wait through months of illnesses before you get him to reevaluate this > plan of treatment. He also likes to be informed about every illness, so > call him...a lot in necessary. Welcome to the list! > > Pam > wife to (17 years) > mother to , 10, Hannah, 8, Rebekah, 5, and Leah, 3 > > > > Tell me about hypogammaglobulinemia....... > > > Hi everyone. My name is Diane -- our 4 year old daughter, , was > diagnosed with hypogammaglobulinemia three days ago. Her IgG is 468, > which the immunologist indicates is " significantly low. " Although it > was relief to finally have a diagnosis, I'm also scared of what to > expect in the future. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 3, 2004 Report Share Posted October 3, 2004 Diane, We were diagnosed by a hematologist/oncologist who, unfortunately, believe he knew how to treat this disease. We were diagnosed on Monday and started treatment on Thursday. But the orders for IVIG included a high dose and a high rate. Rebekah was sick, sick, sick afterwards. We were told to come back for another treatment in 30 days, so, being good parents, we did. Same thing: high dose, high rate, lots of side effects. In the meantime, I found this group and IDF and got a referral to Dr. Shapiro. Because of the rush to treatment, except for basic IgA and IgG levels, no other bloodwork had been done. We had to discontinue treatment for 4 months in order to test her properly. Oh, that hurt! Here we finally had a diagnosis and a treatment, but we had to allow her to get sicker in order to figure out what the real diagnosis was and how to treat it! We were parents caught in the middle of two doctors, both well-intentioned, who had radically different opinions on how to treat our dd. The hematologist implied that we were abusing our dd by stopping treatment for further testing. How's that for a guilt trip!! Basically, as soon as we drew the bloodwork, we started treatment again, but with the high dose, high rate and long intervals between treatments. After a couple more awful treatments, we changed to the immunologist who was 250 miles away. Our dd had absent IgA, low total IgG, very low-normal in all subclasses and a deficiency in IgG3. She had made no response to any vaccine, had had strong reactions to all vaccines and had a complement deficiency. It wasn't a question of antibiotics working. She wasn't capable of making an antibody on her own. Nope, we've never detected an antibody " made by Rebekah " ! So, we went right to IVIG, although Dr. Shapiro had discussed us trying antibiotics only to see if that worked. After the complete bloodwork, it was clear that Rebekah has very little functioning bacterial immune system, so antibiotics weren't an appropriate treatment anymore. She was also one really sick puppy when she was diagnosed: not growing, not eating, not getting out of bed, and not really living a life of any quality. Fast forward two years: she's healthy, learning, happy and growing like a weed. If you feel that antibiotic treatment isn't sufficient because you continue to see breakthrough infections, talk to Dr. Shapiro about changing the course of treatment. We've been blown off by doctors! We were actually told that we needed parenting classes since we couldn't manage a sick and fussy child (this was our 3rd child out of 4!). We were asked if we washed our hands regularly. We were told to stop bringing her to the doctor's office since we were making her sick by exposing her to so many sick kids. And my personal favorite: your child is sick because you homeschool! Gotta love the connection there! LOL Pam wife to (17 years) mother to , 10, Hannah, 8, Rebekah, 5, and Leah, 3 Re: Tell me about hypogammaglobulinemia....... Thanks for the information Pam! How long after the diagnosis of an immune deficiency before your daughter started IVIG? Yes, Dr Sharpiro did indicate he would remain very involved, which is a relief after so many unexplained fevers with , and the brush off " it's just a virus " from other doctors! Did your daughter find any relief from infections through antibiotics? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 4, 2004 Report Share Posted October 4, 2004 Quoting Pam Mork <pmork@...>: > > Pam, This sounds quite similar to our situation with . I'm glad our appt with Shapiro is in 2 1/2 weeks. LInda > > > > Diane, > > > > We were diagnosed by a hematologist/oncologist who, unfortunately, believe > > he knew how to treat this disease. We were diagnosed on Monday and started > > treatment on Thursday. But the orders for IVIG included a high dose and a > > high rate. Rebekah was sick, sick, sick afterwards. We were told to come > > back for another treatment in 30 days, so, being good parents, we did. Same > > thing: high dose, high rate, lots of side effects. In the meantime, I > > found this group and IDF and got a referral to Dr. Shapiro. > > > > Because of the rush to treatment, except for basic IgA and IgG levels, no > > other bloodwork had been done. We had to discontinue treatment for 4 months > > in order to test her properly. Oh, that hurt! Here we finally had a > > diagnosis and a treatment, but we had to allow her to get sicker in order to > > figure out what the real diagnosis was and how to treat it! We were parents > > caught in the middle of two doctors, both well-intentioned, who had > > radically different opinions on how to treat our dd. The hematologist > > implied that we were abusing our dd by stopping treatment for further > > testing. How's that for a guilt trip!! > > > > Basically, as soon as we drew the bloodwork, we started treatment again, but > > with the high dose, high rate and long intervals between treatments. After > > a couple more awful treatments, we changed to the immunologist who was 250 > > miles away. > > > > Our dd had absent IgA, low total IgG, very low-normal in all subclasses and > > a deficiency in IgG3. She had made no response to any vaccine, had had > > strong reactions to all vaccines and had a complement deficiency. It wasn't > > a question of antibiotics working. She wasn't capable of making an antibody > > on her own. Nope, we've never detected an antibody " made by Rebekah " ! So, > > we went right to IVIG, although Dr. Shapiro had discussed us trying > > antibiotics only to see if that worked. After the complete bloodwork, it > > was clear that Rebekah has very little functioning bacterial immune system, > > so antibiotics weren't an appropriate treatment anymore. She was also one > > really sick puppy when she was diagnosed: not growing, not eating, not > > getting out of bed, and not really living a life of any quality. > > > > Fast forward two years: she's healthy, learning, happy and growing like a > > weed. > > > > If you feel that antibiotic treatment isn't sufficient because you continue > > to see breakthrough infections, talk to Dr. Shapiro about changing the > > course of treatment. > > > > We've been blown off by doctors! We were actually told that we needed > > parenting classes since we couldn't manage a sick and fussy child (this was > > our 3rd child out of 4!). We were asked if we washed our hands regularly. > > We were told to stop bringing her to the doctor's office since we were > > making her sick by exposing her to so many sick kids. And my personal > > favorite: your child is sick because you homeschool! Gotta love the > > connection there! LOL > > > > Pam > > wife to (17 years) > > mother to , 10, Hannah, 8, Rebekah, 5, and Leah, 3 > > > > > > > > Re: Tell me about hypogammaglobulinemia....... > > > > > > Thanks for the information Pam! How long after the diagnosis of an > > immune deficiency before your daughter started IVIG? Yes, Dr > > Sharpiro did indicate he would remain very involved, which is a > > relief after so many unexplained fevers with , and the brush > > off " it's just a virus " from other doctors! Did your daughter find > > any relief from infections through antibiotics? > > > > > > > > > > This forum is open to parents and caregivers of children diagnosed with a > Primary Immune Deficiency. Opinions or medical advice stated here are the > sole responsibility of the poster and should not be taken as professional > advice. > > > > To unsubscribe -unsubscribegroups (DOT) > > To search group archives go to: > /messages > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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