Guest guest Posted July 18, 2003 Report Share Posted July 18, 2003 Dear friends, Our son has made such dramatic progress---specifically with speech since we discovered the protocol and put him on the diet in early January 2003. First, his receptive skills really perked up and then in February he started really expanding his babbling. In March, he was making true word approximations and in April he started saying single words for the first time. Since then, our entire speech therapy/OT team has been floored by the rapid progress he has made with expressive speech. He is now using three word sentences ( " I want a cookie " ) prepositional phrases ( " in the water " " on the chair " ) and action verbs ( " he's running " ). He also is using these words/sentences appropriately and in the correct context. We are thrilled and amazed at this progress as well---although we know he still has a long road to travel. In May we had our first appointment with Dr. G and he gave us much hope for our son's future---given he age (2 1/2) and the social connectedness he has always demonstrated. Thank God for this man's existance. As I promised to God when we first found out about , I have made it my calling to help any child I see who has been mislabeled by the system like our son. I have since met three other children/parents who just screamed " " symptoms and ambushed them outside of my son's therapy setting. I carry the packets with me in the car and my speech tX/OT now gives it out to any kid who just doesn't fit the PDD/Autism label. Unfortunately, Dr. G. is on a hiatus now with new patients---but I tell these parents to start the diet and labs to get going with it. Last month, we started our first trial with Valtrex. We had some bumpy spots along the way---not because of side-effects but because our son does not tolerate swallowing pills and would gag no matter how small I crushed the pills into his food. He even stopped eating for three days. Our solution---getting the Valtrex put into a liquid form---which our insurance company would not pay for because the only pharmacy that makes liquid compounds is not on the plan. Four weeks worth of the stuff cost us $1,000. We just put it on the credit card and have no idea how we will pay it off. As for the Valtrex---we honestly have had trouble telling Dr. G. if we see any " true " improvements with the Valtrex versus the normal progression of improvements one would expect as he learns. We do think he seems more energetic/ " brighter " ----but also a bit more hypermotoric on the stuff. Plus, he has always had a " perserverative " focus on numbers/letters that tended to be in his head prior to speech and now is coming out in verbal spurts throughout the day---especially since the Valtrex (reciting the alphabet as he runs around the house, counting when he's board, in his carseat or as he falls asleep.) No other major side-effects or dramatic improvements---nothing like what we saw with the diet changes. Here are a few questions for all of you wise parents out there. Please offer any tips if you find a spare moments to respond---you always give such great advice. 1. For those of you who have children with a " fixation " or strong love of numbers/letters---is it still best to " ignore " the behavior or try to be firm and " stop it. " This has always been a strength of his (knows all his letters/numbers/spells words/memory reader). We don't want to shame him---but it is the one behavior that really sets him apart from his peers and admittedly embarrasses us. Other kids are starting to ask, " why does he count all the time? " It's almost like the Valtrex " brightened " everything a bit---including his little obsessions. 2. We are going to take a short break from the Valtrex, per Dr. G and see if the absence of it helps us to better see how it affected him. Then, we will be starting the Famvir. Did any of you have minimal success/change with Valtrex but bigger changes with the Famvir?? 3. I understand it is also a pill form which means we will have to pay big bucks to get it converted into liquid so our child will take it. Have any of you had to do the same and make these drugs into liquid?? We are fighting the insurance company since the will cover 80% of the cost for the valtrex in pill form---but not the liquid from this one pharmacy who does compounding. Of course, you also don't want the insurance company looking too closely at all this " " stuff and wondering why this 2 1/2 year old has had so many labs and is on anti-virals. Thanks for your patient ears and hearts. Leahy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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