On March 17, 2004, St. Patrick’s Day, Alex
was born into this world. His parents, Laura and Jose,
were filled with joy. Their happiness quickly turned to fear when
a few hours later Alex began to have trouble breathing. The next
night he started having seizures. The doctors performed a CAT
scan that revealed that he was having abnormal activity on the
left side of the brain. He needed an MRI to determine a more
precise diagnosis.
The following Sunday, Texas Children’s
Kangaroo Crew®,
a
specialized transport service, picked up Alex and brought him
directly to Texas Children’s Hospital. An MRI revealed that Alex
had frontal cortical displasia: Approximately 5 percent to 7
percent of the left side of his brain never developed, causing his
seizures.
“Alex was having
multiple seizures every two minutes,” said Laura. “The seizures
would last anywhere between 20 seconds to a minute and a half.”
The doctors tried
several seizure medications on Alex, but none worked. Alex stayed
in the intensive care unit for one month before he was finally
sent home. Ten days later, Alex returned to the emergency room at
Texas Children’s. He had gone from having 50 seizures to 90 seizures
a day.
Alex’s case was
presented at a staff meeting to a group of physicians. Their
recommendation was to remove the left side of the brain.
“My jaw hit the
floor when they told me about the surgery,” said Laura. “The
first thing I thought of was how could he live with just one side
of the brain?”
Alex was placed on a special ketogenic
diet to control the seizures before he underwent the complicated
surgery. One month later, the nine-hour surgery took place at
Texas Children’s. Alex’s physician, Dr. Angus Wilfong,
neurologist and medical director of
Texas Children’s
Comprehensive Epilepsy
Program, reported Alex’s status throughout the
surgery to the family.
The surgery was
successful. Alex was taken off all seizure medication, and he’s
now seizure free. At this point, there is a five-to six-month
delay in his development. He attends weekly physical and occupational
therapy sessions and will soon begin speech therapy.
“Alex’s right
side of his brain is fine,” said Laura. “We’re hoping that the
right side can learn the functions of the left side.
“He’s our
miracle child. We’re blessed that the staff at Texas Children’s
took the time to do more than what they had to do. They are the
best at taking care of patients
– and parents.”