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hip luxation NEED HELP

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Hello,

 

My son, named Noël, who is almost 9 years old and has bilateral perisylvian

polymicogyria, is facing hip problems at the moment. due to his spasticity, he

now has a hip luxation on the right side. They expect it will get worse and that

he will suffer pain as soon as bone touches bone. Their solution then is to

remove the head of his hip bone! But if they do that he can never stand on that

leg again. So no more walking in his gait trainer and no more standing in a

stander for the rest of his life! Things that he loves to do. I cannot believe

that this is the only way to solve his hip problems. Does anybody have any

experience with this?

 

greetings,

Mabel from The Netherlands, mother of Noël, BPP, visually impaired and epileptic

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Molly is 5yrs old had has had both hips subluxed for several years, now the

right is fully dislocated. We have been able just to watch and wait, continuing

with standing activities. As long as she's not having pain or issues with

positioning in her wheelchair, we will likely continue to watch and wait. We

have an orthopedics appointment next month, so we'll get more feedback about

surgical options at that point. I would be very concerned with your docs

recommending such a radical procedure when your son isn't having any real issues

with his hip at this point. My thoughts would be, why limit his activities so

significantly when he's NOT having any pain from the hip right now. Can you get

a second opinion?

LoRene, mom to Molly (5yrs, BPP)

To: polymicrogyria

From: mvetswensson@...

Date: Mon, 15 Mar 2010 07:53:45 -0700

Subject: hip luxation NEED HELP

Hello,

My son, named Noël, who is almost 9 years old and has bilateral perisylvian

polymicogyria, is facing hip problems at the moment. due to his spasticity, he

now has a hip luxation on the right side. They expect it will get worse and that

he will suffer pain as soon as bone touches bone. Their solution then is to

remove the head of his hip bone! But if they do that he can never stand on that

leg again. So no more walking in his gait trainer and no more standing in a

stander for the rest of his life! Things that he loves to do. I cannot believe

that this is the only way to solve his hip problems. Does anybody have any

experience with this?

greetings,

Mabel from The Netherlands, mother of Noël, BPP, visually impaired and epileptic

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