Guest guest Posted April 9, 2012 Report Share Posted April 9, 2012 Hello, my 3 year old son, Kieran Arnold Leamy is going for his tenth cast next Thursday, April 19, at Salt Lake City Shriners. Kieran started out with some spine problems that showed up right after birth. At four months of age he was diagnosed with Infantile Scoliosis, rotation, an RVAD over 60, and ribs that bowed and flared oddly. At 17 months of age he was placed in a brace, that sadly, ended up not fitting him. Kieran was placed in his first cast at 20.5 months of age. At the time he had an 85 degree curve, almost 90 degree rotation, 110 degree RVAD, and slightly thin ribs that where bowed and flared oddly. That is all. Other than that, one doctor has diagnosed him as not having formed the third lobe in the three lobed lung due to his scoliosis but he plays, runs, jumps and learns normally, although he is shy. So for his 10th cast, it has been requested that we keep Kieran out of cast for 3 to 5 days beforehand so that his skin can heal. From the time the first cast was removed he has had open abrasions, a rash separate from the purple rash that disappears or fades under the cast area in a few hours time, and sometimes areas that are forming into sores that the team who treats him works around, I am told, by placing felt over it and leaving a hollow section to keep pressure off of the area forming a sore. Other than this, Kieran ends up having the casts too tight around his little waist and this area has been affected by it. I suspect this is because originally Kieran was not growing very well due to all the pressure and pain he was in (most kids it is my understanding do not find severe scoliosis like his painful, but Kieran for some reason was in an unreal amount of pain for the first 20 months of his life and I think this was very hard on him, including his body's ability to thrive and grow) and his body ended up playing catch up and he grew a lot once he started being cast. Today he is of normal height, although still short from what he would have been otherwise I am sure. So we are going to take him out of his cast for probably 4 days. What I needed was to be able to stick close to home and we have worked it out as the road from our house is an hour long vomit comet over the rocky hills to town. So we will first do the trip with him when we need to leave for the plane ride to Salt Lake City. Other than that I am at a loss of what I can do to keep as much of his correction as possible over the four days. I can reach Kieran's spine with my tiny hands and it is quite literally " popping " in and out. It will go to a curvature less than 30 degrees I'd say with rotation that I cannot detect and the bowing of the ribs will be way down, although the severe rib angle on hump the one side would still remain. So I know his little spine is going to pop out. Now I know that it is the cast causing it to " pop " in and I love it and wish he could just hold there. It is my opinion that his scoliosis is caused by a birth injury and I fear that he has permanently damaged joints between his ribs and vertebras at the apex, although I have been assured by the doctor that they would have satisfactorily healed in a few months time and it has been three and a half years. So I am curious if anyone else's spine " pops " in and out like this? I do not rub my son's spine. I have done a lot of research into massage and massage the long muscles running up and down alongside the spine with the slightest pressure, very carefully, soothingly, paying close attention to what Kieran thinks and avoiding the spiny ridge in the back. I have been giving back massages to children and babies for 25 years and have given several hundred massages to adults as well, although I am not a massage therapist and supposedly I really know my stuff. I have had massages given to me by persons who have no idea what they are doing and they can be extremely damaging so I recommend that before anyone who is unsure tries massage that you start slow, do some research, get some feed back, remember that some casts can be very tight and don't force anything. This is only the second cast where I could massage Kieran's full back. The other one was cast 6 or 8, I don't remember, and he has had two casts that where very tight and not even his undershirt could be changed. Particularly when he was younger, this seems to be improving as he ages. So he has about an 85 degree curve then, although there is signs that in some ways he may be improving. The doctor's goal is to buy him growth time before more invasive treatment. My goal is to avoid surgery altogether, or perhaps only cage fuse the few vertebra with severely damaged joints. I'll cross the bridge to the doctor's goal when we come to it. But he is about 50 degrees in cast right now and only three years old. I understand that we are removing the cast for four days so that he can heal his skin and soft tissues from the pressure that the cast has placed on him, but I am concerned about what I can be doing to improve his chances of going back into a cast at 50 degrees once again on April 19. We will cut the cast off on Sunday April 15. Also, has anyone had their three year old cast without a general anaesthesia and how did it go? Now, I am sorry to anyone who actually read this, I do wish I had pared it down, but it did feel good to get it off my chest. Thank you to those who respond. Also, anyone else going to be in SLC for a cast April 18, 19 or 20? We will be staying at the RMDH. Best wishes to everyone and their families! Shauna Leamy mother of Kieran, Kelsey and Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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