Friday, October 26, 2007


Here are some pictures of Eve.


This one is the worst (best?) bed-head I have ever seen on her. You really have to look, but you can see the height she has achieved.

Still waiting on a call from the Neurologist. I also have a call in to CHOP to schedule a December appt. Very excited about the prospect.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Katie Beckett approved!

Yesterday we got the news that we got the Katie Beckett waiver! I am not exactly sure what this means beyond lots of help with medical bills. Which is good because it looks like more testing is in the works.

I met with the pediatrician yesterday and he must not have carefully read the last report the PT sent, because he was surprised that Eve has regressed since her evaluation last year. Then he freaked me out by saying that was "terrible, terrible news." If it is CP she shouldn't regress. He told me to ask the neurologist for further testing (looking for causes of regression) rather than him because he is afraid he wouldn't order the right tests. He also told me that we need to see the neurologist soon (and not wait until our January appt). He said I should call and ask for an appt right away - with Krewiecki or with anyone in his office. Then he said he would call - translation: his office staff would call their office staff.

I am not satisfied with the results. The neurologist's office said that Eve can't see another Dr in the group because they don't switch around patients. The earliest appt is in 4 weeks (which I took, but found out later I can't make) or we are back to January. I am waiting for the Neurologist to return to the office tomorrow. I am hoping he calls me and perhaps orders tests based on our phone conversation. I will also ask if he can see us sooner than January. It's weird that at one time CP seemed so terrible (in comparison to delayed myelenation) and now we are hoping for it (in comparison to some degenerative disease or genetic syndrome). I really hate not knowing what is happening to our daughter. I am looking forward to getting beyond diagnosis and focusing on treatment.

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Dr on vacay

The neurologist is out of the office until Thursday, so I won't hear before then what he thinks of the MRI and the next step. I have made an appt with the pediatrician for Tuesday, however. I am planning on talking to him about his impressions about Eve and what he thinks our course of action should be. Should we press the neurologist? Should we look into an endocrinologist? Hopefully I will get answers somewhere.

We had a mini communication break through last night. Lately, when Eve finishes her dinner, she points to the fridge and says, "Ah-ssssssss" over and over. We kept thinking she was saying cheese (which usually sounds like chssssss), and that she was changing how she said it. Well, last night she is refusing her dinner plate (after eating about half) and starts saying "Ah-sssss". Jim looks at her and says, "Do you want something else?" and it clicks with me. He always asks her that. She's been saying "else" this whole time. She wants else. Usually, it's fruit that we keep in the fridge. It was like I got hit over the head. Of course!

Sunday, October 14, 2007

evaluation meeting

Well, we met with the Tracey (PT) and Beth (Early Intervention Specialist) today. It wasn't as bad as I thought. I think they could have given us the report and explained over the phone if we had questions.

It is written in a negative style, really pointing out Eve's deficits and the ground that she has lost. This was done for 2 reasons - to help with the Deeming waiver appeal and to help Eve's doctors see that we really need to do something here. Rather than type out the age equivalence for her specific motor skills and other areas, I will simply say that she is WAY behind. But we all knew that. In fact, she is behind in every single area, even cognition (she is below the 10th percentile on all except cognition). HOWEVER, the way that cognition is tested relies, in part, on motor skills. If she can't point to an object, she can't demonstrate she knows it. So, the team thinks that her cognitive skills and social skills are ok, but the items that she didn't do well on were items that required some sort of physical response.

So, I am faxing the report to the pediatrician and the neurologist tomorrow. Tracey will call the neurologist once he gets the films from the MRI and discuss the evaluation. I think she will push for another test - some sort of plan of action. In the meantime I send out the appeal tomorrow and will begin work on a timeline of all the testing (and results) and doctor appts Eve has had. Something to bring with us to all Dr appts to show what we have had done and when.

Also, we started video taping Eve (per Tina's request) as a precursor to a consult at CHOP. Just to make sure we don't make a trip to the CP clinic unnecessarily. Sooo... that's it for now.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

MRI

It was a long day at the hospital (9:30am-4:30pm), but we all survived. Eve did really well. They had her under anesthesia for nearly 4 hours. I guess the process took a very long time. Everyone at Athens Regional was fantastic. Very concerned about Eve and very attentive. She took a while waking up and was very groggy. She slept the whole way home. Poor thing was dehydrated from not being allowed to eat or drink since the night before and sucked down lots of pedialyte. I think the Docs and nurses all fell in love with her. The anesthesia Doc seemed so happy to carry her in to be put to sleep. He made a comment about it being so long since his boys were that size. And of course she was all drunk from the sedative they gave her, so she was snuggly and floppy.

I was able to get a copy of the results and a disc of the images so that we can take them to future Doctors (CHOP and/or the orthopedic Dr.). I read the report and they found nothing. No masses, no tumors, no abnormality. We'll see what the neurologist says when he looks at the films. So that's good....but where does it leave us?

We are meeting on Sunday with the PT and developmental specialist (we were supposed to try to meet today, but the MRI took too long). They redid Eve's evaluation in preparation to appeal the Deeming waiver denial. They don't want us to read it until they explain it to us. That freaks me out. Tracey mentioned that Eve is doing worse in some aspects than she was a year ago. That doesn't make me feel good. Anyhow, I'll know more about it on Sunday.

So, here are two moments of levity for the day:
1. Jim fell asleep in the family waiting room and started snoring. Loudly. It was pretty funny. I had to keep waking him up as people looked at him. Then I had to wake him again when the Doc came in to tell us Eve was in recovery - Jim told him that his own recovery from anesthesia was going well.
2. Jim got in trouble. The pull of the pulse ox (sp? that thing they put on your finger to test oxygen in blood) was too great. He had to put it on his finger when the nurses weren't looking. Of course when he took it off he set off all kinds of alarms because the machine thought he was dying. I made him go tell the nurses what he had done. His face was so red!! I just laughed and laughed.

Monday, October 8, 2007

visitors






Grammie and PaPa came for a visit this weekend. I'm not sure who was more excited about it - Eve or them. Kirby came, too. Jim and I got to go out on a date, which was so much fun. We ate like pigs all weekend.






Thursday, October 4, 2007

little mimic

Yesterday, Eve and I were in the car and a good song came on the radio. I started snapping my fingers to the beat. I looked in the rearview and Eve was looking at her own fingers and moving them with a look of serious concentration. She was trying to snap! It was too cute.

This afternoon the PT and Developmental specialist are coming over to redo her evaluation. They moved it up so that we can have the new evaluation to turn in with the Deeming waiver appeal. I think her delays are MUCH more pronounced than they were a year ago. Hopefully this will help our case.