Friday, October 23, 2009

What they learn in Med School

Every so often I search the web for 'holoprosencephaly' just to see if anything new has come up. A week or so ago I came across the blog of a medical student who posted about encountering severe case of HPE in a terminated pregnancy. The baby had severe facial deformities but no chromosomal anomalies. This med student was amazed that otherwise the body was perfectly normal and was even born alive. She noted that she is unlikely to ever come across HPE again in her career. I posted a comment to her blog, just to let her know that not all HPE births are so severe and told her a little about HPEkid. The student wrote back that she never knew that HPE's could live! "We were always taught otherwise". This is pretty depressing to hear; that even in this era of so much better diagnosis and information, med schools are still teaching students that HPE = death. I totally understand that the VAST majority of instances HPE do result in death of the fetus. But doctors are trained, hopefully, to treat the living and it would be nice if they knew that there is a substantial population of HPE kids out there who do lead meaningful lives.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

October Update

C has been much improved the last 2 weeks, with markedly less congestion and gagging. Of course it;s all relative. Nearly every time she lays on her back for diapering she starts to hack and cough. Nearly every evening as we sit down for dinner she begins to fuss in her chair and retch. So we normally end up taking her back to her room while we eat. It's odd really, because she can be fine all afternoon, but the instant we pull out the chairs at the dinner table, C starts crying, goes all stiff arching her back and threatening to vomit. Back in bed, lying down, she settles down and is OK. The obvious explanation is that since she can't eat, C gets upset sitting there watching everyone else eat, and I think there is a lot to this. She's obviously aware that she's missing out on something. She clearly shows interest sometimes in wanting to taste things - of course whenever we try this she gags and spits most of it out, she just can't control her muscles to chew and swallow.

Yesterday we noticed a coin-sized bruise on C's lower back above her right hip. Most likely someone (Me?) banger her into the armrest while loading her into the wheelchair. Doesn't seem to bother her. C. was also in some discomfort last night (although she slept fine), had some brown in her residual and was grining teeth this morning. Think she needs a B.M.