Guest guest Posted March 16, 2006 Report Share Posted March 16, 2006 OK, so I wrote the first story from Tom's conception to age 2.3, when he came to Florida. While I was waiting for an appt. with Early Intervention (took from July to October, a long time when you know they can only help till age 3), I did what I could to just get down on the floor with him and try to relate. They also had to do a sedated hearing test before they could evaluate him (it was within normal limits). He had no formal therapy. I would do things like make up a game, Run! Run! Run! STOP! and my two ies and I would run around the house with Tom like he did constantly and then all FREEZE at the word STOP! (At first, the dogs were actually better at this game than Tom, but he would soon run into the sofa or somewhere that would help him put on the brakes.) I would go over to his house, too, and play with him on the floor and talk about the play-doh colors, simple words, simple phrases, make him laugh, blow bubbles...anything I thought might make some contact. So he did have " grandma therapy. " And when I tried to leave the house I would try to get him to say, Bye-bye, but he would cry and say HI! HI! by which he meant, don't leave, I don't want to say bye, so I'm saying HI. No ABA or anything, just get on the floor and play with the kid. I did read Greenspan's book on the special child and anything else I could get my hands on. His mom and dad were trying to start an Internet business, and I told my son there was NO WAY he could look for a full-time job because the child was primarily bonded to him; his mother can't care for him (and it's not his mom's fault, we are going to some day get to the bottom of her problem, she has had therapy and has been on every antidepressant in the book. We suspect an undiagnosed medical problem). So Tom went back to part-time, 20 hours a week group day care, and I helped when I was able, being on medical disability myself and unable to keep up for very long with a child who at that time would run from one thing to the next every 30 seconds on the average. His day care provider loved him and felt we should apply for Social Security Disability for him. We didn't, it was too complicated. We tried to get him in Head Start but that year couldn't because of technicalities about income limitations (based on Jeff's previous year's income in California). He did qualify for Medicaid, though. In August of 2004 he finally got in, just before his dad got a job in his field, but 50 miles away (and with no benefits). So Tom's dad was commuting and Tom was in After- and Before-Care at Head Start, unless I was able to pick him up early. But the ProEFA was definitely helping and Tom did make progress with Speech Therapy and Occupational Therapy twice a week and Grandma therapy. Grandma always took a bag of new fun stuff when we went out to a restaurant, which eventually became possible as he started to be less frustrated by his speech problems. When I was working with him on the floor, though, I definitely noticed almost immediate changes for the worse (aggression, etc.) after he had lunch with milk and/or wheat, but his momma didn't want him to " avoid a whole food group " like milk, and his dad was overstressed in having to do all the housework, cooking, childcare, and support the family, so I was frustrated in trying to change anything there. One day I said to him after lunch, how come right now you are doing all the things you know you aren't supposed to do...whereupon he tried gently to " hit " , " kick " and " bite " me to show me he knew what those things were. I started to take him to church with me in December 2003, and that's when we discovered the extreme sound sensitivity. He screamed at Silent Night! let alone the louder, faster music...until one day his Sunday School teacher showed him how to bounce and dance with the music so that he could integrate it and no longer experience it as an outside assault. Still, it has taken until just recently that he would not cry if I sang with the congregation because he apparently felt so excluded that he was the only one who couldn't sing along. He wants to be like everyone else very badly. Now I'm telling you too many stories, so let me try to get to the real biomedical interventions that helped incredibly. First was the ProEFA. And since he was often stuffy and runny nosed, he got Claritin too, suggested by his pediatrician. He had several more ear infections, I think the last one was treated with a Rocephin injection since he had a very high fever. Since we knew he had trouble with receptive language and possibly auditory processing, I got myself certified for Fast Forward and used Fast Forward Basics with him on the computer when he was 3.5 years old. This was very helpful, and he quickly became very good at using the computer. This is a computer program especially designed for helping kids with auditory processing problems. He eventually got into Head Start, where they will not allow any outside food to be brought in (no bag lunches) because of kids with peanut allergies. More trouble trying to limit his already very limited diet (very picky eater). They required a physician's prescription to limit the diet in any way. Still the ProEFA was helpful. And since he seemed to be having problems with lactose intolerance, his pediatrician wrote a prescription for lactose-free milk only and limit lactose-containing foods. This has continued to be a problem because he may have tendencies towards diabetes and hypoglycemia with a strong family history. He was fortunate to have a very experienced teacher there, with 30 years of experience teaching disabled children, but no certification for same...only an adult developmentally disabled child of her own. She was patient and usually intuitive about his needs. At first she couldn't see Tom's disability because he was so intelligent. However, he played by himself most of the time. And he couldn't sit and listen to the teacher at group times. Then last spring he had a setback, with a bad ear infection, for which his pediatrician prescribed some macrolide antibiotics, which he kept vomiting, and by Easter Monday (three days later) he had a case of atypical pneumonia in the left upper lung lobe (verified clinically and by x-ray) and shingles that went right along the left cervical dermatome of the nerve, according to the pediatrician. He had, of course, never had chickenpox, nor was there any going around...he had just had the varicella vaccine on his first birthday. She then prescribed a cephalosporin antibiotic and acyclovir, 5 times a day for 5 days. Well the most amazing thing happened...his speech articulation suddenly became age- appropriate on the acyclovir. His drooling also stopped. I did some literature research and realized that varicella (chickenpox virus) can remain latent in the ganglia and could affect the cranial nerves and could have been the cause of much of his oral speech, oral motor, auditory processing and vestibular problems. And shingles in preschool children has been cultured and it is the vaccine strain. After this incident, and after consulting with his pediatrician and having him tested by my own pediatric immunologist, for primary immunodeficiencies and vaccine titers, we filed a religious exemption to continued vaccination for . He had four HIB vaccines and a negative (0) titre to them, but we did not follow up on this. I also read in DeFelice's book Enzymes for Autism and other Neurological Disorders that enzymes like Houston's Zyme Prime had been used in Germany to treat shingles and had a much safer side effect profile than acyclovir. I talked his parents into starting some of the Houston Nutraceuticals enzymes at home to break down the peptides in milk and wheat, and to help his digestion, lactose and whatever, because he still had, and has, a very limited diet. Houston has excellent chewable products for picky kids, and it seemed to me a good compromise between going GF/CF and just ignoring the possible issues with casein and gluten. And would help any lactose intolerance--and maybe even any residual latent varicella viruses. His improved articulation continued. However, in the spring he had some less experienced teachers, and was just beginning to want to interact with the other children...and hit one on the shoulder to get his attention. I think he was also still recovering from being so sick at that point. The (inexperienced, not to say dumb) teacher told him...if he did that, his GRANDMA would come and get him. For the next three days he hit, kicked and tried to bite the staff, the children and other teachers to see if it would really work! He did not understand the intonation or meaning of the teacher and had taken this promise literally. I went in when called and refused to take him home after the teacher told me what she had said. He had never shown any aggression to other children before, although if they tried to take away something he was playing with there might be a problem. His excellent pediatrician said, at this point (so that he didn't get kicked out of Head Start), she thought a little medication would be beneficial. So he got 2.5 mg/day of Adderal and is still on it. There was no more hitting or kicking. His attention span is improved. She thought that it would help him remember the beginning of a sentence when he was listening,instead of only the last phrase. At that point we also noticed that in playing hide and seek, he did not seem to know when the other kids could see him when it was his turn to hide. And he was confusing " you " and " I " frequently. So there could have been " theory of mind " issues as in high-functioning autism. Last fall after reading a copy of DeFelice's book Enzymes for Autism and other Neurological Conditions, our pediatrician, who is board certified in both pediatrics and internal medicine, agreed to write a prescription for these so that Tom could also have them at school (although they are OTC and GRAS, Head Start has very strict rules about such things). He had needed them all along because they really only work when taken with EVERY meal containing the offending foods. Tommy started to really do better socially and in speech and every other way, although he still had sensory issues, and we couldn't get him to sit on the potty to defecate at all. We did finally at 4.3 get him to be able to urinate in the toilet regularly. Last year he didn't seem to be able to release the sphincter muscle to urinate even though he understood everything and would stand in front of the toilet and look at me and say, " It's stuck! " I once tried to help by turning the faucet on, which only caused pain and fear. That was the last time I did that. Somehow the neurological condition of his body...that area seemed to be hyposensitive and he didn't have proper motor control over it, it just would not allow him to do this. So he was progressing academically and socially on the enzymes. At Christmas this past year, he was in the church Children's Christmas Pageant as a shepherd. It was hard for him, but he was SO PROUD of having participated and doing well. He said, " We did it! " (I think this is the first time I ever heard him refer to himself as part of a group!) Some time after that his teacher at school saw him take the magnatiles he had been playing with alone all year, say to some other children, " Would you like to play with these? " and go over and start dramatic chef-play in the kitchen. (I think as SpongeBob making Crabby Patties, if I know him.) Finally I was tested for celiac because of my chronic diarrhea, possible dermatitis herpetiformis, and the results of my most recent colonoscopy and my CVID/IgA deficiency. I tested as gluten-sensitive, and we paid to have fecal IgA anti-gliadin and IgA anti-casein and anti-tissue transglutaminase antibodies, as well as HLA typing related to celiac done for through enterolab. No prescription required. As you may have read on another post to the group, his anti-gliadin antibodies were very high and the other two were positive, and the HLA showed gluten sensitivity but not classical celiac type HLA. At that point his pediatrician wrote a prescription for an absolute strict gluten-free diet. I found some of the medical research on gluten ataxia, which was extremely interesting to me. A child who will only run because it is harder to keep your balance when you walk, who can't balance on a toilet seat, who refuses to go on boat rides and carousels, and gets very upset in traffic and motion-sickness on the back of a horse at a Therapeutic Riding program. (we used C-bands)..may just have something similar to gluten ataxia. These are all vestibular sensory issues, which his former OT said were severe. I stopped his OT last summer because he would be put in time-out for refusing to go on the swing, the therapist thought he was being oppositional, and I thought he was feeling sick because the school had just filled him up with cheese crackers. I am sure now he wouldn't mind it at all. He always says, " I want to be a good boy. I'm not trouble. " Anyway, although we had gone through months of gradually less gluten, with the enzymes, with the parent's removing it at home, etc., when the school finally had a prescription and did so too...the improvement in sensory functioning was dramatic. The child was toilet trained for defecation in two days after never previously having a single success, and he will be 5 years old later this month. He wants to go on all the rides at Silver Springs and the boat rides, and says, " Whee! And I didn't get sick! " instead of screaming when I pull up on the interstate ramp. He is academically advanced, starting to read, my brother who has taught elementary school for 34 years thinks he is entirely ready to go to a normal kindergarten next fall. So here we are, he is a joy to be with...Wednesday I had him for 10 hours straight. He says, " I like you. I like you a lot. " And can actually give me a kiss on the cheek. We have lots of adventures together, but the biggest adventure for me has been putting together this puzzle to help my grandchild. His biggest remaining challenge is in the area of eating. But I can now easily see that with his enzyme system probably messed up, and bad tummy aches after eating and drinking common foods, his gag reflex probably disturbed by the torticollis, we will just have to be patient with him. He ate a new food this week...Almond Munchies (salted almonds). No, he won't eat pasta or pizza, although he will pretend to like the latter for social reasons. Yesterday when I went to pick him up, one of the other children said to me: " Ben ate a big bite of strawberry! He almost threw up but he swallowed it! " Fortunately I worked for 6.5 years in the at a University nutrition school as a Research Associate so I can watch and make sure he does get supplements he needs. Head Start also has a consultant Registered Dietician. Last spring we also started him with a multivitamin that had an oil-soluble form of vitamin A (Sea Buddies), and he also gets Juice Plus chewables because he won't eat " slimy " veggies and fruits (or even the Juice Plus gummies). We saw an immediate increase in affectionate, calm and compliant behavior when these two nutrient supplements were added. (Previously he had had supermarket gummies vitamins.) My suggestions for research: I'd really like to see some done on the ProEFA. I think it remains a key part of Tom's recovery. But for some kids at least the GF and CF diets, and/ or the enzymes, are very important. The enzymes not only break down the " opioid peptides, " if you believe in that theory, but also, if there is gluten intolerance, or if the mercury excreted from the environment and vaccines is excreted in the bile and damages the intestinal brush border, they may replace normal digestive enzymes. Or it might be acting, as in the case of the Zyme Prime-type enzyme and shingles, as an anti-viral. They (enzymes) are insufficient for celiac, DH or gluten ataxia, however. And I hate to say it, but mercury toxicity (whether from vaccines or the environment or amalgams or the diet), immune dysfunction or deficiency and live viruses are all big issues. When it comes to nutrition and biochemistry the whole system has to function properly for the child to develop to his or her full potential. They were doing a lot of talking this weekend about methyl B12 injections to normalize the biochemistry. To do ethical research, you may have to give parents information about all the various possible things that might help and let them and their physicians the right to choose which interventions would be helpful, and then possibly use each child (and/or perhaps siblings) as his or her own control....Tom will still regress if he doesn't get his ProEFA on a particular day. Even though some of these therapies are unproven, to withhold them might turn out to be damaging. What is often not recognized is the extremely high risk in a situation like this of doing NOTHING. Our next step is to get him tested for urinary organic acids to see if he may have a B12 deficiency, or some other correctable biochemical situation…such as caseomorphin peptides in his urine. He still seems to have some oral tactile insensitivity and taste hypersensitivity. Just one more comment regarding research. I did a lot of epidemiological research at Cornell, biostatistics was one of my specialties. People in this field like to do studies with identical twins but they forget one thing: even identical twins do not have the same prenatal experience. One study in Pediatrics has shown in older children with plagiocephaly that a history of uterine constraint is a big risk factor for school learning problems and IEPs, speech problems, etc. in elementary school. This would include Tom's situation, but it would also include a situation where one twin or triplet is " squashed " in the womb by being under the other in some way--just a thought. I would be glad to discuss the design of research studies you might be considering with you, if you would like some feedback. It's not going to be easy with with all these factors. I haven't even mentioned things like yeast toxins, etc.! Last week I took him briefly to see a school near us, where we hope he might go to kindergarten, and when we had to leave he grabbed the guidance counselor around her skirts, started to cry and said, " PLEASE let me go to this school! " LOL! Heart-breaking! How can you resist a kid like that? He wants so much to be with the other children now. Peace, Kathy E. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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