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In a message dated 6/28/2005 5:47:20 PM Eastern Daylight Time,

ddomingo122@... writes:

My son was different in that he had no sound but he had words (strange

huh!!). He closes his mouth and his words come out of his nose

Correct me if I'm wrong, but part of apraxia, has alot to do with breath

support, my son was always able to do all those things as well, but he had a

really hard time with breath support, and still does, and it is improving with

OT/PT/ST. I believe alot of people have the same issue, especially if their

children have a global apraxia as does my son. I think its quite common.

please correct me if Im wrong.

Michele

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My son was different in that he had no sound but he had words (strange huh!!).

He closes his mouth and his words come out of his nose. Even his SLP though that

was different. She actually thought maybe he had sucked on the pacifier too long

and then I told her as hard as I tried to get him to take a pacifier when he was

a new born, he never used it. But you can hear him attempting to imitate through

his nose. the really strange thing is he can eat, blow bubbles, blow whistles,

brush his teeth, but he couldn't open his mouth to talk. What we did was, like I

said before we taught him sign, which eased his frustration. Then when ever he

would open his mouth and make a sound...any sound we would clap and waive our

hands in the air and tell him " good using your words, Big Boy!!! " Something that

his SLP does is get him playing and excited. Although they really don't realize

they are talking at that point, the practice is great. He really loves bubbles

so she would blow lots of them and get

him all excited and he would jump and laugh. When they were gone she would say

" bubbles? " and he would say " ba ba " and keep playing. It took about 2 months and

now he is trying to say a lot of words. Most don't sound anything close to what

they should but we use the sign with the word and then I tell him " good using

your words and your signs!! " and he just thinks that is the greatest.

Every day is a new day and another chance to step forward. Don't give up. I

think it all boils down to what works best for your child. Our first SLP got my

son to say his first word " duck " but he said it once and never said it again and

still has never been able to say it. She had more of a calm focused environment

and the new SLP has a fun intergetic environment that my son has responded to

with amazing results. But when you have a child with no words, just focus in the

begining on getting him to open his mouth and make a noise.If you say Mama and

he says Ah, make a big deal about it. This all worked for my son, we still have

a long way to go but I never thought he would open his mouth to talk. He

honestly though he was talking. I hope this helps.

le

California, mother to Curtis, 2 yrs with verbal apraxia

jacart2 <smoffat@...> wrote:

Hi,

My name is Stacey Moffat and I live in Kitchener, Ontario,

Canada.

My son is almost 22 months old. He was born

with Pierre Robin Sequence and a cleft palate and he

is not talking. We've been told that his speech delay

is not related to his cleft palate which was repaired

just before turned a year old. He had tubes put in his

ears at 5 months of age which is a common occurence for

children with clefts........

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I don't know what " breathe support " is. My son is not globally apraxic, just

verbally. It was my understanding that children with apraxia are late talkers,

and then when they do begin to talk the jumble up words or drop syllables off.

My son could even open his mouth. There is nothing wrong with his breathing or

his facial muscles. he can do anything a child his age can, except open his

mouth to talk. His new SLP (who is just fabulous) even said that it was a little

different, the way he says things like " milk " with his mouth closed. If you

closed your mouth and said milk with your mouth closed using only your throat

and letting the sound come out of your nose, that is what my son sounds like.

But now that his SLP has gotten him to open up a little bit, he says milk " dit "

(thank goodness he can sign). He still talks with his mouth completely shut most

of the time, but will attempt to imitate one word at a time. Sometimes a

sentence, but it comes out with the same sound over and over

again. Like " want to talk to dada? " (DH is deployed) Curtis says " da da da da

da " . I think it actually take more breathe support to talk out of your nose than

it does out of your mouth, so I am not sure on that one. I have only been living

with this Dx for the last year and the only person I have known to have it is my

son and all my research has been online, doctors, SLP's, and books. So I am no

expert. All the kids are different.

le

California, mother to Curtis 2yrs with verbal apraxia

mmich5569@... wrote:

In a message dated 6/28/2005 5:47:20 PM Eastern Daylight Time,

ddomingo122@... writes:

My son was different in that he had no sound but he had words (strange

huh!!). He closes his mouth and his words come out of his nose

Correct me if I'm wrong, but part of apraxia, has alot to do with breath

support, my son was always able to do all those things as well, but he had a

really hard time with breath support, and still does, and it is improving with

OT/PT/ST. I believe alot of people have the same issue, especially if their

children have a global apraxia as does my son. I think its quite common.

please correct me if Im wrong.

Michele

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Hi Stacey,

Welcome! I am pretty new here too and have found this site invaluable! I have a

20 mos. old son and completely understand your frustration with wanting to do

something and not knowing where to begin and also with people giving their

well-meaning, but frustrating advice.

The best thing we have done so far is to teach Colby sign language. We ordered

" Signing Time " DVDs from Amazon.com and he loves them. After 7 weeks, he now

uses 30+ signs and is starting to put two signs together such as " more cheese " .

He wasn't crazy about the videos at the beginning but now he asks to watch them

by making the sign for " signing " in front of the TV. We have purchased 5 of the

6 DVDs at this point and hope they hurry up and make more.

One of the best things about teaching Colby sign language was to shut up all the

" know -it- alls " who said he would talk when he had something to say. Colby has

PLENTY to say... he just didn't have the means to say it verbally. It has also

cut down on his frustrations when he can use a sign to tell us what he wants.

You will love this mailing list.... you will learn so much and will feel

" empowered " rather than helpless as you join the rest of us on this journey to

giving your child the gift of speech...something so many take for granted...

Best wishes to you and your son,

Noelle

Mommy to 20 mos. Colby...still without an official diagnosis...

jacart2 <smoffat@...> wrote:

Hi,

My name is Stacey Moffat and I live in Kitchener, Ontario,

Canada.

My son is almost 22 months old. He was born

with Pierre Robin Sequence and a cleft palate and he

is not talking. We've been told that his speech delay

is not related to his cleft palate which was repaired

just before turned a year old. He had tubes put in his

ears at 5 months of age which is a common occurence for

children with clefts.

makes a few vowel like sounds - mostly just uh, oh,

and ah sounds but he has no words. has seen a speech

therapist about 5 times in the last four months. We

have been trying to get him to do some sign language

but he is not interested to say the least.

is also delayed in his fine motor skills and

he sees an occupational therapist about every three

weeks.

He is a very happy boy and hasn't shown much

frustration but we worry that as he gets older and is

not understood he may develop behaviour problems.

communicates by making grunting noises, using

facial expressions and by using his eyes (looks at

what he wants, looks toward something when asked eg.

" where's the light? " ). He just started to point at

things but his pointing is very random and sometimes

meaningless. He also just started a bit of imitation but not of

any signs that we are working on (more, drink).

It is very frustrating trying to get to sign

when he doesn't seem interested in signing at all. We

have been working on " more " for months and he still

hasn't gotten it.

I tried to make a list of the words/phrases that I know that

understands and I came up with about 50. I'm not sure what that

means for an almost two year old but I do know that 's

receptive language is at a higher level than his expressive.

I am currently reading the book " The Late Talker " and have found

it very informative but in all of my reading (mostly on the internet

and in the book) I haven't come across anyone who has said that

their child has NO words. Usually parents speak of their child

having two or three words. Where do you begin with a child who

has no words? What should I expect from the speech therapist?

Should we continue to wait until says his first word before

becoming too concerned? How long should we wait?

My husband and I feel like we should be doing more for

but it seems that everyone keeps saying that he

is still very young. We are becoming frustrated at having to wait

things out but are unsure as to where to go from here.

Thank you for listening,

S. Moffat

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  • 1 year later...
Guest guest

Hi,

Check out Dr. Shoemaker's website _www.chronicneurotoxins.com_

(http://www.chronicneurotoxins.com) . You may want to take the VCS test, which

is 98%

accurate, to see if you have been exposed to toxins. He is in Pocomoke, MD

which

is long trip for you but certainly closer than some people have traveled to

see him. Many people that are MCS have had exposures to mold first.I've been a

patient of his for over 2 yrs.and highly recommend him.

Feel free to contact me anytime.

Sue

hello,

I'm suffering with MCS and it's getting worse by the day.

i need a great doc in my area. Willing to travel. I'm in Ulster

County, NY and havent found one to my satisfaction yet.

Have any meds worked for you?? thanks.

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Thank you Sue,

I so appreciate your prompt reply. My closest friend sees Dr. Shomaker. I was

hoping to find someone closer, maybe in manhattan,ny. I have a # to call in New

Mexico that gives referrals. Have you ever heard of them?? They make a brochure

on MCS. They mentioned a DR. Mazlen in Queens, ny or Long Island?? Ever hear

of him?? Also, ever hear of an MSC specialist at NYU medical center??

I did a very dumb thing yesterday, I painted my front steps and feel awful

today. And i've been sooo toxic!

do you believe one have to detoxify using something or detoxify by just eating

right and staying away from toxins.

I know i'm asking a lot of questions. thank you so much for your time. I so

appreciate someone to talk to. Felice

From: ssr3351@...

>Date: Sat Jul 08 10:34:17 CDT 2006

>

>Subject: Re: [] i'm new to this site

>

>

>Hi,

>Check out Dr. Shoemaker's website _www.chronicneurotoxins.com_

>(http://www.chronicneurotoxins.com) . You may want to take the VCS test,

which is 98%

>accurate, to see if you have been exposed to toxins. He is in Pocomoke, MD

which

>is long trip for you but certainly closer than some people have traveled to

>see him. Many people that are MCS have had exposures to mold first.I've been a

>patient of his for over 2 yrs.and highly recommend him.

>Feel free to contact me anytime.

>

>Sue

>

>hello,

>I'm suffering with MCS and it's getting worse by the day.

>i need a great doc in my area. Willing to travel. I'm in Ulster

>County, NY and havent found one to my satisfaction yet.

>Have any meds worked for you?? thanks.

>

>

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It all depends on your system. I personally don't believe in getting too

isolated or taking glutathione ivs, vitamin c ivs, etc. Some doctors give

people massive amounts of things like magnesium by iv and that can be dangerous.

I have noticed the people who recover best eat almost normally and not one food

at a time on a rotation diet. I found all that ever did was starve my body and

make me more sensitive. I know because I have tried everything. By the way,

not all conventional medicine is bad. My mcs doctor had to give me an injection

of steriods yesterday to stop my asthma and guess what??? I am getting well and

the world did not end. We have staved off taking antibiotics hopefully for a

few more days. He is also having me take Transfer Factor from 4Life and that

made so much difference in life. Leigh

felice <anupath14@...> wrote: Thank you

Sue,

I so appreciate your prompt reply. My closest friend sees Dr. Shomaker. I was

hoping to find someone closer, maybe in manhattan,ny. I have a # to call in New

Mexico that gives referrals. Have you ever heard of them?? They make a brochure

on MCS. They mentioned a DR. Mazlen in Queens, ny or Long Island?? Ever hear

of him?? Also, ever hear of an MSC specialist at NYU medical center??

I did a very dumb thing yesterday, I painted my front steps and feel awful

today. And i've been sooo toxic!

do you believe one have to detoxify using something or detoxify by just eating

right and staying away from toxins.

I know i'm asking a lot of questions. thank you so much for your time. I so

appreciate someone to talk to. Felice

From: ssr3351@...

>Date: Sat Jul 08 10:34:17 CDT 2006

>

>Subject: Re: [] i'm new to this site

>

>

>Hi,

>Check out Dr. Shoemaker's website _www.chronicneurotoxins.com_

>(http://www.chronicneurotoxins.com) . You may want to take the VCS test,

which is 98%

>accurate, to see if you have been exposed to toxins. He is in Pocomoke, MD

which

>is long trip for you but certainly closer than some people have traveled to

>see him. Many people that are MCS have had exposures to mold first.I've been

a

>patient of his for over 2 yrs.and highly recommend him.

>Feel free to contact me anytime.

>

>Sue

>

>hello,

>I'm suffering with MCS and it's getting worse by the day.

>i need a great doc in my area. Willing to travel. I'm in Ulster

>County, NY and havent found one to my satisfaction yet.

>Have any meds worked for you?? thanks.

>

>

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I tried " transfer factor " too........ & it did NOTHING for me, except cost me

alot of money.

V.

Re: [] i'm new to this site

>

>

>Hi,

>Check out Dr. Shoemaker's website _www.chronicneurotoxins.com_

>(http://www.chronicneurotoxins.com) . You may want to take the VCS test,

which is 98%

>accurate, to see if you have been exposed to toxins. He is in Pocomoke, MD

which

>is long trip for you but certainly closer than some people have traveled to

>see him. Many people that are MCS have had exposures to mold first.I've been

a

>patient of his for over 2 yrs.and highly recommend him.

>Feel free to contact me anytime.

>

>Sue

>

>hello,

>I'm suffering with MCS and it's getting worse by the day.

>i need a great doc in my area. Willing to travel. I'm in Ulster

>County, NY and havent found one to my satisfaction yet.

>Have any meds worked for you?? thanks.

>

>

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