Guest guest Posted March 8, 2000 Report Share Posted March 8, 2000 Hi Beth, wow - very interesting about the intestinal permeability alteration theorized to cause autism in some children. (or did I make a leap there??) Zachary, my 7 yr. old, has profound GI problems - top to bottom and is IV dependent with tolerance of small, (20% of his calories) feeds into his small intestine. I might have mentioned that he carried the diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder from the age of 18 months until recently. And it truly was an accurate description of Zach's behavior. Our neurologist and I are determined to solve this mystery of how this child could be worse medically and yet " cured " from autism...(not sure we will actually solve it though). But at any rate your post gave me food for thought. Zachary could take 50-70% of his calories by mouth until last march 2. the rest went into his G tube. he ate everything that any typical child his age would have eaten although struggled with daily vomiting episodes. We had to increase his g tube feeds to 50% when he was 5.5 and interestingly noticed an improvement in his autism although still present. Last March he was still considered to have high functioning autism when he went into the hospital. At that time he lost all GI function and became TPN dependent, (nothing into the intestine). By the time he was released in July - there was no autism to see - as hard as we looked. Not that I would recommend that all children be put on IV only to cure their autism and not even sure this makes any sense...just something to think about and see f the neuro laughs or not at me when I tell him this. Anne PS RE: lactic acid - I assume you sued the lab at Children's - they are generally very good about not using a tourniquet and putting on ice right away. Do you remember if they did for Clayton? Everyone has their own opinion but I would repeat it if it was me. If it is normal it does not rule out the one that you got - as Jeannine said a non metabolic child should not have a LA of 50 after 24 hrs of little nutrition. But it still might be helpful to know if it is a chronic thing he struggles with or is it a constant. But that's me - I like to know labs even if there is nothing to be done. As far as the glucose - no, it is not bad across the board for all those with Mito. And it can be bad in degrees - in my 2 kids it is poison to Sam and less so to Zachary, although still not the best. Sometimes the doctors order a glucose challenge test where they give the child something high in glucose and then after several hours they draw a LA level - not sure of the specifics but I believe that some of the docs at Children's would know how to do it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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