Guest guest Posted February 18, 2008 Report Share Posted February 18, 2008 I want to prefce this with we don't know for sure metals are at play. My son was never sick but on the few times he was uninfected fluid remained in his ears. He had off and on days last year after progressing in speech. He also was a picky eater and his sister, who was always a great eater, stopped wanting to eat. I checked with therapists and specialists for feeding stuff, swallow, etc. but his stuff was intermittent. Bottom line: the intermittent stuff and progress when I limited milk solely to get more food intake, told us something allergy or metabolic was going on. That pointed me to more specialist. I then found out our water had 25 or 27 times the safe levels of fluoride, a metal trapper, in it. That is what made me think metal. Have not done much about it other than diet but that is what made us think metal. We have seen such progress that I am not sure where to go from here. Still stuck on that.Wisdom of thing. > > Hey all, > So, I'm wondering what clues you guys came across in recognizing there were additional > factors in play. > > It seems like 's only area for concern is the speech. He has never had any ear > infections, has only been sick a handful of times (knock on wood!), and doesn't have any > food intolerances that I know of. > > Could I be missing something? What were the clues that gave it away for you all? He's a > pretty good eater, or at least used to be, it's definitely progressing toward that toddler > diet of less and less foods! How did you recognize food intolerances, GI problems, or > food allergies that didn't cause outright reactions? > > Also, I've noticed a lot of talk about metals and whatnot. I'm not fully up to speed on that > topic, but are there noticeable symptoms of metal toxicity other than the speech? Or do > you rely solely on labs for determining that? > > Also, do DAN! docs treat patients who have apraxia, but aren't on the spectrum? > > I look forward to the day when I can answer more questions than I ask! > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 18, 2008 Report Share Posted February 18, 2008 We call them DAN's, but most of them treat lots of different kids, including those with ADHD, APD, and apraxia. It's just a protocol that has been developed over time. The 4-A's book by Bock is the first/best one that really connects multiple conditions (autism, ADHD, asthma, allergies). We definitely had some obvious signs, but some were not at all obvious. My son had just two ear infections that I know about. (He was undersensitive to pain, so we discovered both of them by accident. One, he had a doctor appointment for a different reason. the other appointment wasn't even his. He was climbing the walls and misbehaving terribly at his brother's appointment, so on a whim I asked the doctor to check his ears -- flaming infection!) He also had a lot of congestion, but only during the cold months. I didn't connect the dots for a long time, and visits to the allergist came up with nothing. Now we know that he has some auditory processing issues and he is sensitive to dairy. Surprise! He also had soft BM's all the time, so the GI problems were more obvious. I always tell people that sometimes kids with speech delays are lucky. We look at all their medical and developmental issues a lot more closely because of the lack of speech. Other kids' issues lay quietly until they cause problems at school. My daughter has a friend who was diagnosed with a language processing problem in second grade -- only after she was having big academic struggles. We are hoping to avoid that by aggressively tackling these issues early. My big, usually unanswered question is, " what is the origin of the problem? " I keep solving problems without knowing the cause, and this bugs me! Fish oil helped the speech. Enzymes helped the GI issues. Dairy free diet helps the behavior and (I think) the auditory issues. Great! But why all the problems in the first place? The Bock book really helps connect the dots. I wish he called it the 6-A's. I'd like to know what he thinks about auditory processing and apraxia. in NJ > > Hey all, > So, I'm wondering what clues you guys came across in recognizing there were additional > factors in play. > > It seems like 's only area for concern is the speech. He has never had any ear > infections, has only been sick a handful of times (knock on wood!), and doesn't have any > food intolerances that I know of. > > Could I be missing something? What were the clues that gave it away for you all? He's a > pretty good eater, or at least used to be, it's definitely progressing toward that toddler > diet of less and less foods! How did you recognize food intolerances, GI problems, or > food allergies that didn't cause outright reactions? > > Also, I've noticed a lot of talk about metals and whatnot. I'm not fully up to speed on that > topic, but are there noticeable symptoms of metal toxicity other than the speech? Or do > you rely solely on labs for determining that? > > Also, do DAN! docs treat patients who have apraxia, but aren't on the spectrum? > > I look forward to the day when I can answer more questions than I ask! > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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