The drama, trauma and hilarity of raising a child with autism while dealing with life's other little issues, like unemployment.
Friday, June 10, 2011
What's going on with us....
I've been horrible about keeping things up here. I would like to blame my being busy (and I am), but I think it's more laziness than anything.
A lot's been happening in the past few months. Back in January/February, Monster's teacher and aide noticed some troubling behavior. It seemed that he was spacing out (for want of a better word) and they couldn't regain his attention as usual. Once or twice, the aide was very concerned since after Monster "woke up" he seemed disoriented and tired. They did some googling, and seemed to think these episodes were like absence seizures. So they talked to us, we talked to his pediatrician (and some folks around here) and eventually found a pediatric neurologist in Massachusetts. We went in April for a visit and exam (Monster did great)and scheduled an EEG.
The EEG was a bit of a challenge for all of us. First off, Monster doesn't like things on his head. He's gotten a lot better and will wear hats occasionally and knows he must wear his helmet to ride a horse or his bicycle. But he hates having his hair washed or any goop in hair. Getting all of the wires hooked up was anything but fun. Mr and I had to hold his hands, his legs and hold him down (with the aid of a technician or nurse). I must say, however, the lady that wired him up was FAST!
The EEG took about 20 or so minutes. Since Monster wanted to immediately rip his wires off (they were stuck on with a glue-like gummy substance), we had to hold his hands, or at least keep them from being able to reach his head. One thing that really helped was having a timer on so he knew exactly how long he had to keep the wires glued to his noggin. I warned the tech that he wouldn't tolerate the wires 1 second beyond the timer, so we settled upon 30 minutes on the timer to give her plenty of time.
Monster got to play with Mr's phone, while I got to hold the timer. Monster checked that timer about every second or so, but it kept him mostly calm.
The EEG itself was interesting. He just sat there and played for a while (most of the time actually). But they also tried to induce whatever by having him blow a pinwheel. He got tired of that pretty fast, but hung in there and did what he needed. Then they flashed strobe lights around him. He really seemed to enjoy looking at the strobe lights a lot. And, voila, it was over and he got to rip off the wires. His hair looked pretty wacky afterwards, though ;) (and you can tell how thrilled he was).
About two or three weeks later, we got the results back. It seems as though Monster has increased electrical activity in the back, right part of his brain. According to his neurologist, this is the part that deals with his cognitive function and attention/focus. The Doc said that they use to not treat for this, but with the possible regression noted by Monster's teachers, he recommended that we start Z on anti-convulsants. Scary for the parents, but it is what it is, right? Right? The medication is Lamictal (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/PMH0000957/). We won't be at full dosage for a while and we likely won't be able to determine if it has any impact until the fall.
In addition, the Doc wants to do an MRI to check for any structural abnormalities. Ok, another test, we can do this. However, we need to pull Monster's spacers out. Spacers that need to be there to prevent his needing braces when he gets older because of the teeth we had to pull (why do I feel like we are being punished for not getting him to the dentist sooner?). So we had the spacers yanked (actually, Z had removed 2 of them on his own, so they only had to remove 2 of them), which was also tough on Z since he had a spacer thingie used to keep his mouth open. He was a bit freaked out by the whole thing. His dentist wants to try and put them back in next fall (without the surgery part this time). YIKES!
Well, that's it for the amazingly electrical brain of the Monster. Next up, his latest IEP meeting (next post).
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