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Hello everyone!
:brain:
I would never had dreamed 5 months ago that I would be typing this thread today in this forum. My 11 year old son and I have spent the last two years trying to cope with my husband's, his father's death. We try to keep busy and have lots of friends to help us through. We are very active on the weekends from camping to four wheeling to fishing. My son is very healthy and seems to be dealing with his dad's death as well as can be expected.
Then all of sudden we get dealt another blow....2 days after my son's 11th birthday, he wakes up, it's 3:00 am on a Thursday morning and he is having a grand mal seizure! Of course at the time, I did not know what he was having! I was hysterical, screaming at the top of my lungs for someone to make it stop. We run to the ER and they run tests, all of which were normal. We go to our first neurologist and she says more than likely it is a one time thing go home and do not worry or change a thing. 1 week later we have another grand mal. The doctor puts him on Tegretol and orders more tests, all of which come back as normal. In the meantime he has these what we call "moments" throughout the day where he says his "legs won't do what he is telling them to do". These "moments" begin occuring more often. Our doctor shrugs and says "I don't know what they are" and sends us to a medical facility 100 miles away.
They tell us to try this and that. They run more tests etc. They say that his "moments" are petit mal seizures. It is 2 months later and we are nowhere and his "moments" are increasing in duration, frequency and intensity. Now he can barely stand when they occur, we have to guide him to a chair. His arms and legs go stiff and shake. He makes strange noises and has eye deviation and dilation. These occur anywhere from 6-8 times a day, each episode lasting less than 25 seconds. After trying three other types of medicine we seek the advice of another recommended neurologist who is over 200 miles away.
This doctor puts him in the hospital to monitor him on an EEG for a few days. After 30 episodes captured on the EEG the doctor says there is no evidence of epiletiform activity!! Then what is it?? He says let's look at what else it could be...and sends us for theray on a newly discovered inner ear imbalance my son has. He also sets us up with an appointment at a Comprehensive Epilepsy Center 350 miles away. The appointment is an unbelievable 5 more months away!! By now my son's episodes are coming 11 times a day and now there is no guiding him to a chair when they occur. He drops like a rock! We have to use a wheel chair to ensure that he does not hurt himself while we are out and about. He is on an obscene amount of an anti-convulsant drug, more than the maximum for adults.
My son has gone from four wheelers to a wheel chair in less than 2 and half months!
Finally I decide that we can't wait 5 months for an appointment somewhere. I start calling the top pediatric hospitals for neurology in the country and finally have some luck. A center about 650 miles away agrees to see us in two weeks. We go and they repeat tests and confirm this is epilepsy and these "moments" he is having are petit mals. They say we will not benefit from medicine since we have tried 5 different types with no relief. They tell us to come back for a surgical evaluation. Oh my gosh!!
Brain surgery!?!?!?
We go back and they run more tests. They say they have found the source of his seizures. Right frontal lobe. 90% positive it can be resected without any impact to motor functions etc. They send us home and now we await them to call us back for the surgery. I am happy because it affords us a chance for a cure but I am very worried.
It has been four months since this all began on that fateful day in June. Neither of realized how much our lives would change in the coming days and weeks after that first seizure. Everything almost seems surreal even though every day is a struggle.
I am not sure how to handle or deal with my happy, vibrant, active, caring, young boy, undergoing brain surgery! Thanks for letting me share our story!
:brain:
I would never had dreamed 5 months ago that I would be typing this thread today in this forum. My 11 year old son and I have spent the last two years trying to cope with my husband's, his father's death. We try to keep busy and have lots of friends to help us through. We are very active on the weekends from camping to four wheeling to fishing. My son is very healthy and seems to be dealing with his dad's death as well as can be expected.
Then all of sudden we get dealt another blow....2 days after my son's 11th birthday, he wakes up, it's 3:00 am on a Thursday morning and he is having a grand mal seizure! Of course at the time, I did not know what he was having! I was hysterical, screaming at the top of my lungs for someone to make it stop. We run to the ER and they run tests, all of which were normal. We go to our first neurologist and she says more than likely it is a one time thing go home and do not worry or change a thing. 1 week later we have another grand mal. The doctor puts him on Tegretol and orders more tests, all of which come back as normal. In the meantime he has these what we call "moments" throughout the day where he says his "legs won't do what he is telling them to do". These "moments" begin occuring more often. Our doctor shrugs and says "I don't know what they are" and sends us to a medical facility 100 miles away.
They tell us to try this and that. They run more tests etc. They say that his "moments" are petit mal seizures. It is 2 months later and we are nowhere and his "moments" are increasing in duration, frequency and intensity. Now he can barely stand when they occur, we have to guide him to a chair. His arms and legs go stiff and shake. He makes strange noises and has eye deviation and dilation. These occur anywhere from 6-8 times a day, each episode lasting less than 25 seconds. After trying three other types of medicine we seek the advice of another recommended neurologist who is over 200 miles away.
This doctor puts him in the hospital to monitor him on an EEG for a few days. After 30 episodes captured on the EEG the doctor says there is no evidence of epiletiform activity!! Then what is it?? He says let's look at what else it could be...and sends us for theray on a newly discovered inner ear imbalance my son has. He also sets us up with an appointment at a Comprehensive Epilepsy Center 350 miles away. The appointment is an unbelievable 5 more months away!! By now my son's episodes are coming 11 times a day and now there is no guiding him to a chair when they occur. He drops like a rock! We have to use a wheel chair to ensure that he does not hurt himself while we are out and about. He is on an obscene amount of an anti-convulsant drug, more than the maximum for adults.
My son has gone from four wheelers to a wheel chair in less than 2 and half months!
Finally I decide that we can't wait 5 months for an appointment somewhere. I start calling the top pediatric hospitals for neurology in the country and finally have some luck. A center about 650 miles away agrees to see us in two weeks. We go and they repeat tests and confirm this is epilepsy and these "moments" he is having are petit mals. They say we will not benefit from medicine since we have tried 5 different types with no relief. They tell us to come back for a surgical evaluation. Oh my gosh!!
Brain surgery!?!?!?
We go back and they run more tests. They say they have found the source of his seizures. Right frontal lobe. 90% positive it can be resected without any impact to motor functions etc. They send us home and now we await them to call us back for the surgery. I am happy because it affords us a chance for a cure but I am very worried.
It has been four months since this all began on that fateful day in June. Neither of realized how much our lives would change in the coming days and weeks after that first seizure. Everything almost seems surreal even though every day is a struggle.
I am not sure how to handle or deal with my happy, vibrant, active, caring, young boy, undergoing brain surgery! Thanks for letting me share our story!