Sunday, December 30, 2018

The Year at a Glance

Where to begin. I'm sure I have said it before somewhere, in some random post (multiple times), but the best cliche for 2018 I could muster is the old adage 'the more things change, the more they stay the same'. While on the surface there were a lot of changes Mira seemed to go through over the past 12 months, they all end up leading to the same path (or roller coaster, depending on your perspective) that we have all been on for the last 13 years. I think the saying is appropriate in every category across the board, but I will try to do my best in giving a brief recap for 2018:

School

As you may have read from my last post in September, Mira's transition to middle school was pretty rough in August and September. Multiple parent/teacher/school district meetings and discussion on what is best and appropriate for Mira's education and how we need to move forward as a united front. There were a host of variables in play when she started in August, most of which focused on the school staff getting to know Mira, but also the lack of staff they had available in her classroom. The district simply was not prepared to handle her classroom and the number of kids coming in at the beginning of the school year. After the dust settled with this tumultuous autumn start, there was no finger-pointing or foot-stomping, as it was not a singular issue that you could narrow it down to - it had to do with district funding, staffing, communication, turnover, availability, and again, preparedness.

In looking back to the beginning of the year in January, we were voicing concerns with the school district and how we wanted to minimize the number of transitions Mira was going to have to be subjected to, for this very reason. It takes a while to get to know all of her nuances, her temperament, and her ever-changing spectrum of seizure activity. We had some initial meetings with her teacher prior to her starting, which were very helpful, however the promises made by the district were not acted on, as there was a considerable amount of turnover in the summer months, which led to much of that communication getting lost in the transition.

Fast-forward to December, we had Mira's IEP re-written, the district has improved staffing by getting additional support in the classroom, and everyone has really gotten to know Mira very well over the past few months. Mira's teacher and paras are wonderful and have been through all of this. We (parents, teachers, the district, etc.) are collectively getting the train back on track and everything has been going smoothly ever since.

Medications

This is an easy one. What has changed this year? Really, nothing*. I'll say that with an asterisk, as I did try to lower her pyridoxine (see July 21st post) which ended up being a horrible mistake. I have never truly learned the simple lesson we as a family have experienced with this crazily influential vitamin, which is this: less pyridoxine = more irritability. We all witnessed it first hand for a week or so when I attempted to lower her dosage over a few days over the summer, the reduction prompted by me questioning what was going on with her during one of her bad spells - by the time day three hit on the weaning down of the pyridoxine, she was a complete wreck, crying constantly, and expressing some extreme irritability that nothing would remedy, except to bring her back up to where she was on her dosage.

Her neurologist always raises an eyebrow during our meetings at her dosage, however explaining the severe mood swings in lowering it, we all agree she is where she needs to be with it. It helps with her mood and I am not changing it. Outside of the pyridoxine woes, we have not attempted to rock the boat in any other capacity with medication or diet changes. Mira continues to be on Lyrica and Fluoxetine. This combination does not completely control her seizures, but it does help with her irritability and offers some seizure relief.

Her neurologist has offered up a few remaining AED options, along with revisiting the Ketogenic Diet and a VNS, but those actual medications that are left have the same mechanism of action and/or efficacy rate of all of the others she has tried previously. We have had several conversations about Epidiolex in 2018, which is currently running through the clinical and political protocol at Children's Mercy. It could possibly be an option for Mira in 2019, as the FDA and DEA have both loosened restrictions on using CBD/THC as an option for catastrophic epilepsies. It's just a matter of time before all of the barriers fall universally across the country - Missouri has finally embraced medicinal cannabis, but I suspect Kansas will be one of the last states to hold out, thanks to our atrociously conservative political climate. However, the wall is slowly crumbling thanks to the mid-term election turnout. I will park my political rant in that stall and leave it for another day.

Seizures

The 'change' cliche is most appropriate when considering Mira's seizure patterns over the past 12 months. Overall, the actual seizures have not changed at all in type - she is still averaging about 2-3 involved tonic-clonics a week, hundreds of myoclonics every day, and countless jerks, spasms, and staring spells/absence seizures that are impossible to tally, nor predict. Some days are awful for her - multiple TCs, followed by persistent dystonia for the next 12-36 hours. The number of days she has experienced these dystonic episodes seems to have increased this year, although we have not been tracking them consistently. We just know that when she has a multiple seizure day, more often than not, it will lead into some degree of dystonia. Sometimes, however, the dystonia will just come on by itself - she will become increasingly agitated over a period of a few days, prior to it coming on.

What has changed over the past year is the number of times we have had to intervene with Diastat to stop 'clustering' seizures. In the past, Mira has had multiple tonic-clonics within a short period of time, often within 20-30 minutes of each other. Once we see this occurring, one of two things usually happens: she will continue to have involved tonic-clonics, usually 5-6 at a time within a brief period, or it stops at 2-3 and it evolves into a bout of dystonia, or sometimes, both. Either way, we feel like the best solution is to try and break the cycle all together by trying the Diastat, which is usually effective enough to change or divert the pattern to give her some relief. She has had a spike in the number of clusters this year and we have no idea why. Could be hormones, stress, growth spurt(s) or who knows what. All we know is that we have been refilling her Diastat multiple times this year, where in the last 6-7 years, we were lucky to only fill it once a year.

Vision

Mira's vision this year has worsened some. Her script over the past 12-24 months has gone from a -10.00 to roughly -11.50, which is an incredibly high script to begin with. Her astigmatism has worsened some slightly as well. Her last trip to the ophthalmologist over the summer, Mira was extremely uncooperative in trying to get a solid reading on her vision, but after some time and patience, they were ultimately able to get the information they needed, but not without a lot of fighting and tears on Mira's part. The good news is that there were no signs of glaucoma, disease, or any significant issues with her eyes or vision - she just has extremely high myopia and no one seems to know why.

In terms of her eye rubbing, it has decreased some this year, but not enough to say that things have changed significantly - she still does it, especially outside, but we try to control it as much as possible. Mira has nearly perfected her trick removing her glasses, which is to slide her left index finger on the inside face of the frame of the glasses, curl it around the frame, then fling them to the floor. Her last pair of glasses met their demise this way, so she is temporarily using her old pair, until her new frames arrive in about a week. She is sneaky about throwing her glasses around sometimes, so you have keep an eye on her, no pun intended.


Transportation/Home Modifications

In late 2017, we started a process with Medicaid to have one of our bathrooms modified to make is accessible for Mira's chair - simply put, the plan is to tear out the existing shower and enlarge the entire area and make it a zero-entry shower, so we can more easily bathe her and minimize the number of transfers from wheelchair to bed, to bath chair, etc. Ironically, it has been over a year since we started this process and we are finally on the schedule to have the modifications done in January 2019.

I won't go into the painful process and countless meetings we have had in order to get this moving forward - I will only say that I am thankful we can finally say that it will happen, very soon. Her case manager and advocates through Medicaid have been amazing and wonderful - however, getting a qualified contractor and getting the work scheduled has been the primary hangup. Bathing Mira has become an enormous challenge, as she is now 5' tall and very difficult to not only transfer, but to physically get her bath chair into our current shower. Transferring Mira when she is 'planking' (she will go completely rigid and stiff as a board) is incredibly taxing on our backs. Construction to modify our existing shower shouldn't take too long, but we will have to figure out a temporary bathing scenario that works for everyone.

As Mira continues to grow, our need for an adapted van will come to a head in early 2019. We have been eyeing a bunch of 2019/2018/2017 Honda Odysseys (we are a Honda family and love our current Odyssey, but it is a non-converted 2006 and definitely showing its age) but the cost for a newer model van is mind-boggling. We are currently working with a local van company to get our arms around financing options, which has really been the sole deterrent in purchasing a van. They are extremely expensive - the one we are looking at is $70,000, which is a hard pill to swallow. Medicaid will offset the cost of the lift (we hope) but a new van off the lot at a dealer is still over $40-45,000. To complicate things further, my car (a 16 year old Honda Civic) is showing it's age as well. The thinking is that I try and find a newer model Civic and Eli (who in theory will be driving in the next 4-6 months) will take my car. The van is this priority - everything and everyone else will need to wait.

It has gotten to the point where we don't have a choice but to buy one. Mira's current chair barely fits in our current 13 year old van, not to mention it is impossible for one person to lift her chair into the back of the van without causing some serious risk to your back or internal organs. It just isn't safe. We have a portable stroller that we received through Variety in 2017, which is awesome, but it doesn't completely alleviate the need to be able to transfer Mira in her day-to day chair. It becomes an issue every time I travel for work - it leaves Sarah having to navigate (or ask for assistance) to transfer Mira's regular chair into and out of the van. It continues to be an issue for us that must be resolved in 2019.

Research

Things have been extremely quiet on the research front in 2018 and I suppose the reason is this: I feel as though I have exhausted every possible avenue I can think of in terms of treatments, therapies, and possible diagnoses for Mira. I hit a breaking point in the fall of 2017 where I just needed to take a break from it all and stop reading, stop wishing, and stop hoping for that needle in the haystack, or that anything is ever going to alter the path Mira is on. It has been a difficult process of letting go, as I have been entrenched and consumed by the idea that things can get better for Mira. This journey she has been on for the past 13 years has been fairly consistent. The adage rings very true here.

I will continue to be a firm believer in the miracle (for Mira anyway) of pyridoxine and am always open to listening to suggestions/comments/anecdotes/stories from anyone, but at the end of 2018, I am hanging my hat on these rudimentary clinical observations, from a lowly architect, of what Mira is suffering from. Some are more obvious than others:

  • uncontrollable seizures - all types: tonic-clonic, myoclonics, spasms, abscense seizures
  • extremely high myopia
  • dystonia
  • pyridoxine-dependency or at a minimum, pyridoxine-responsiveness
  • ataxia
  • irritability
  • breath-holding/teeth-grinding (occasionally)
Of which most symptoms point to the following:
I can't imagine 2019 will be much different than 2018. There haven't been any new revelations or advancements in the field of epilepsy or autism research or treatments, other than in the CBD/THC department, which the regulations and restrictions are slowly lifting. I am optimistic that perhaps Epidiolex will present itself as an option for Mira in the coming months, but outside of that, there is nothing else out there that I have researched that I feel will alter Mira's course of seizures or help in any way. Call it pessimism or acceptance - i think it is simply the reality of where we are at. 




Life and Family

I cannot tell you how many times I have heard the comment directly or indirectly 'I don't know how you do it' either referring to Sarah, myself, or us as a couple. People mean well and I truly appreciate the sentiment in the question - people truly care and that means something. Whatever the context or whoever it is directed to or at, is irrelevant. Yet, I personally don't know how to answer that question without venturing into a lengthy, drawn out explanation/venting session that, 20-30 minutes later, causes ones eyes to glaze over. The only way I can respond to that question is to say that this is our sense of 'normal'. It's just like raising a family in any other situation - there are just different challenges and different rewards.

Raising neuotypical kids is hard work. Raising kids with special needs is an equal amount of hard work, but it is a different kind of energy you have to put into it. In Mira's situation, it is definitely more physical, it can be more emotionally taxing at times, and for our family, it never really gets any easier. It requires an extreme amount of patience, which can be difficult to exercise at times. We just keep getting older and so does Mira, which means the physical demands in caring for her increase with each passing year. However, Mira's physical abilities and skills have been pretty much at a standstill for the past 10 years, but her needs are always the same. She is and most likely always will be, 110% dependent on Sarah and I.

Through all of this though, there is a constant that I cannot emphasize enough, how grateful I am to have a consistent, caring, support system for our family, from one single person - Sarah. She has been and continues to be, the emotional glue that keeps this family bonded and unified. She has been the organizer, scheduler, accountant, rationalizer, equalizer, and emotional reservoir for this family that never dries up. Through unrelenting epilepsy, autism, kids, family, aging parents, and everyone else who needs something from her, she is constantly operating in giving mode, always providing for our family, at any given moment. She needs and deserves breaks whenever she can get one.

Thank you all for your continued love and support and I wish you all the best for 2019.

Monday, September 17, 2018

Tumultuous Month

As we burst out of the school starting gate about a month ago, it has been a pretty rocky run, especially the past few weeks. First and foremost, Mira started at a new school this year. We knew the transition was going to be difficult, no matter how much you try to prepare. I won't go into to many of the details in dealing with the school district's unpreparedness in Mira's transition, but let's just say that there have already been several meetings with most of the staff already, in an attempt to make sure everyone is on the same page. There has been a fair amount of turnover in the district over the past 6 months, particularly in the special needs division, and it is obvious that the district as a whole is understaffed and overtaxed. It is improving, albeit very slowly. Mira only has 2 years at this school and we will be dealing with another transition in 2020 - hopefully it will go smoother.

Mira gave the school their first real challenge by having a multiple seizure day, complete with dystonia, the very first week. That episode, where Sarah had to come up to school and pick her up, I think was a definite eye-opener for the district, in just how much they all really need to get to know Mira. We met with the district numerous times prior to the school year starting, walked through her seizure action plan and the protocol we have in place. However, nothing can prepare you until you have actually been through it. Sarah eventually got Mira home that day and ended up administering Diastat at home, in an effort to break the cycle of seizures. Unfortunately, Mira had another one of those episodes on Saturday, where we again had to use the Diastat to break the clusters and seizure cycling. We have found that her clustering has become more prevalent this year, along with the associative intervention on our part. Chalk it up to hormones, growth, or whatever you wish - we cannot predict it. We just know it is happening more often.

All of this seizure activity has been wiping Mira out. She spent most of the day yesterday sleeping. We went out to the mall for a bit, which she seemed to enjoy for the first 20 minutes or so, but the exhaustion of all of the seizure activity the day before, just wore her down. Her sleepiness continued after school today, where she just slept, folded into her pretzel comfort position.

We have a few more appointments coming up - one with her ophthalmologist, another to get fitted for another pair of dafos, and another to rewrite her IEP with the school district. She has outgrown her current dafos over the past 12-18 months and they are too constrictive when she is in her walker at school. In terms of ophthalmology, I really don't know what to expect with her vision. Her extreme myopia has gotten significantly worse over the past year, going from a -10.00 to a -12.00 in a span of less than a year. My hope at this point is that it is not getting any worse. We are currently in a holding pattern to get her some new glasses (her last pair have been thrown on the floor one too many times and are beyond repair) so she is currently using her older ones, which have a slightly weaker prescription.

Sarah and I are finally going to go out for our 18th anniversary this weekend, over 3 months after the actual date. It has been very difficult for us to get out, with extremely limited resources in the babysitting department. We have been actively working every avenue we can think of to find people to help with Mira, but the reality is, there aren't a whole lot of available people out there, even for an evening. It's a busy time of year with school starting and schedules filling up.

Friday, August 3, 2018

Neurology

Mira had her 6 month neurology appointment this afternoon. Typically, we like to schedule the appointment itself earlier in the day, when Mira is, generally speaking, in a better mood. However, seeing as we have to schedule the appointment 4-5 months in advance, we take what is reasonably available. Turns out, a late Friday afternoon appointment was not the ideal time frame to accommodate Mira's mood today, She was irritable before we left and stayed unhappy for the first 20 minutes of the appointment, before finally settling down.

We went heavy into several discussions during her appointment, the first of which was the idea of her having homocystinuria. I have been corresponding with her neuro on this topic for the last few appointments, but we did a deeper dive today in understanding what steps we would need to take in order for her to be fully tested for it and to completely rule it out. First and foremost, we would need to take her off of the pyridoxine completely, for several weeks, in order to capture a decent amino acids panel from her urine to see if she is dumping cysteine. Seeing as how we tried weaning her off of pyridoxine a few weeks ago (see my last post) the prospect of taking her off of it for any length of time is not an option at this point. We have tried this several times in the past and it is always a disaster.

The second option would be to switch her current protein powder for Hominex-2 for a few months and see if there is any improvement. While our neuro has no issue with doing this, it would be an incredibly expensive option, as Mira does not have a formal diagnosis of homocystinuria, thus insurance would not cover a 2-3 month supply of Hominex. Seeing as how it runs over $600 a case (for a half-dozen 14 ounce cans) we might be spending upwards of $2,500 or more out of pocket to run her through such a trial. I am looking into options of trying to find it cheaper, but there are limited outlets and we have limited funds to pay for it. If anyone knows of some other avenues of trying to obtain Hominex-2 any cheaper, please let me know.

In the meantime, we are going to try and get an appointment with a metabolic geneticist through CMH, to sit down and get their opinion on whether we should look deeper into the genetic and metabolic nature of Mira's seizures to see if we can arrive at any conclusions or avenues to pursue. The primary reason would be to discuss the concept of her having homocystinuria.

The second discussion had to do with CBD/THC/hemp/cannabis, which I won't go into the lengthy details of the actual conversation, but our neuro gave us a very informative update on where he thinks the issue is headed in the next 90 days. We have been closely following the status and development of Epidiolex, which is a CBD based medication used for the treatment of severe forms of epilepsy, including Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome and Dravet Syndrome, both of which Mira has been formally diagnosed with. Currently, the FDA has approved the use of Epidiolex for epilepsy, however the DEA needs to reschedule cannabis from a Schedule 1 narcotic, to where is more appropriately belongs as a Schedule 3 or 4 drug, in order for it to be legally administered in the states. It is still running in clinical trials right now. By the way, Lyrica, which Mira has been taking for the last 10+ years (I've lost count) is a Schedule 4 drug. It is absurd that cannabis is at the top of the list, along with heroin and LSD. All we can do is wait for the rescheduling to occur, in order for this to be an option for Mira.

After settling down during the last part of her appointment, Mira again vocalized her displeasure before bedtime, which prompted me to take her for another walk outside in the park. That worked for about 15 minutes, until she was again irritable before falling asleep. I figured the long walk we went on before her appointment would keep up her spirits, but it apparently I did not fulfill her daily walking quota and she needed a few more laps before settling down.

Saturday, July 21, 2018

Changes, Changes, Changes

So many changes over the last few weeks. First and foremost, Mira celebrated her 13th birthday at the end of June, which officially marks us having 2 teenagers in the house. I cannot believe where the time has gone with having a sophomore in high school, a 7th grader, and a 4th grader. We had a very low-key celebration at the house, which Mira didn't seem to mind. She had been having a rough time at the end of the month, so we felt like we needed to keep the celebration to a minimum.

The biggest change as of late has been Mira's transition from grade school to junior high. It was an emotional week for us, as Mira finished her last day at school this past Thursday at OPC. She had been at the same school for the past 7 years (K through 6th) and I think there are claw marks on the doors where they had to pry us away from the school. Mira has an enormous amount of support from her paras, the school, the principal, therapists, the cafeteria staff, and of course her teacher, who has been running the classroom since Mira started kindergarten there. We had to say goodbye to the only other person who knows Mira as well as we do. I am sure our paths will continue to cross, as the special needs community in the school district is small, yet the overall transition is to a new environment and a new support system is always difficult.

One of the last changes has been completely my fault. We have had Mira on a steady dose of pyridoxine (vitamin B6) for some time now and on occasion, I question my decision to keep her on this high dosage, as we continue through this journey with her. I read about the risk peripheral neuropathy, combined with the fact that Mira is non-communicative. These questions typically surface after Mira has a bad week (or weeks), which is exactly what transpired at the beginning of the month, which I will get to in a bit. Questioning and evaluating is good I suppose from time to time, which is what I try to do when she is having a bad few weeks, so I questioned whether the high dosage she is on is:

a. truly effective in seizure control or reduction
b. potentially causing harm (i.e peripheral neuropathy or something other side effect)
c. making her uncomfortable
d. actually increasing her seizure activity
e. causing imbalances in some way in the body
f. all of the above

After Mira had a few really rough weeks at the end of June/early July, where she had multiple days of multiple involved and repetitive tonic-clonic seizures, forcing us to administer Diastat twice in 3 days, these questions all came up again, causing me to evaluate Mira's current daily medication and vitamin intake. Thus, I reduced her pyridoxine dosage, thinking it might be the cause of something - an increase in seizure activity, dystonia, neuropathy, or the root of what had been disrupting her flow the last few weeks. Keep in mind that she is still currently taking Lyrica, which she has been on for years, as well as Fluoxetine, both of which serve their respective functions - partial seizure control and combating irritability to a degree. They both seem to be only fairly effective. Neither one completely stops her seizures or entirely stops the fussiness, but they at least help, which is the best we can hope for after trying dozens of ineffective meds, therapies, and treatments prior to settling on this regimen. These dosages we have not altered for some time, thus the only variable that I decided to change was her B6.

Well, reducing her pyridoxine has been an absolute disaster. After reducing it for a few days, the irritability spiked and today has reached an unprecedented level of wailing and screaming in her bed, for hours. Nothing is keeping her happy and there is nothing we can do to address it, other than to wait it out and increase her dosage back to where she was. I saw it coming yesterday and immediately boosted her dosage back up to where it was a week ago.

I seem to never learn the lesson that all of this is such an incredibly delicate balance and shifting one single domino causes the entire maze to seemingly collapse. We have been down this path before, attempting to adjust pyridoxine, Lyrica, and a host of other meds on the pharmaceutical roller coaster (at different times) and it never ends well. Insanity is doing the same thing repeatedly and expecting a different outcome - a lesson I truly need to grasp. Less pyridoxine = more irritability. That is the outcome. It's not difficult to understand. No one in the medical profession will be able to convince me otherwise that Mira has some level of dependence and/or deficiency with pyridoxine and this latest dosage trial reinforces that theory, once again.

As the wailing continues, the questioning will no doubt continue, but for now, we are moving back to where she was on the B6 and crossing our fingers that some sense of normalcy will return soon.

Saturday, July 7, 2018

Irritable Day

Mira just had one of 'those' days today. Nothing would keep her happy - we tried going down to the Rivermarket for lunch, which was probably not the best choice, considering it was a beautiful sunny Saturday, with the high only getting into the mid-80's. As soon as we hit traffic, Mira started fussing, so we changed plans and grabbed some BBQ carryout in the opposite direction and and had lunch back at home. We will try the market again some other day I suppose.

Mira's irritability continued through lunch, so I took her for a walk for an hour and a half around the neighborhood, which was the only thing that kept her in a positive mood the entire day. As soon as we were back home, she ramped it back up again. She was twitching a lot today and yesterday, which is usually a sign that a really bad tonic-clonic filled day is lurking around the corner.

The neurological flux is part of it but the other factor is her desire for mobility and perhaps a change of scenery. I get it. She is bored, wants to move, or wants to do something else - since she is non-communicative and non-verbal, it is a guessing game as to what that magic bullet would be that would change her mood. It is impossible to keep her in a constant state of motion - we can't physically sustain the level of activity she requires to be happy on days like this. The swing in the park (which she is really too tall for now) will only get you so far, as will walks around the house, or time with her toy. We were able to get through the day today, but tomorrow may be a challenge if the heat spikes back up outside again.

Saturday, June 23, 2018

One Birthday and Two Days of Turbulence


It has been a busy few days around the house. My sister and her family had been planning a trip to St. Louis from Colorado for some time, making a stop in KC to visit us for a few hours, which was great. We were able to have an uninterrupted chat for a couple of hours, where Mira was content the entire time. She was even able to sit with us in the kitchen for a solid hour, not really making so much as a peep - she just sat in her cozy position, while patting and kneading her knees periodically, as if she was practicing making a loaf of bread. 
The following morning, we celebrated Jonah's 10th birthday - he is officially in double digits now! He didn't seem super impressed with the gigantic inflatable numbers we got for him, but he had a solid day nonetheless. We had Indian takeout from our favorite spot here in town (Jonah loves the naan and mango drinks), while Sarah and Jonah tackled his presents together (Legos - thanks Auntie Aura!) We later went out and picked up something Jonah has been talking about for months - a pet fish. Jonah had a good time picking out the tank, rocks, vegetation, and of course, the actual fish, which was a small green and blue betta that he named Neptune. The kid loves his planets.

That evening, Mira did a 180 degree turn from the night before and was super irritable, to the point where she was wailing at the top of her lungs, tears streaming down her face, for a solid half-hour before we decided to give her something. She had not had an episode like that for a long time. Unfortunately, she followed up with a repeat performance this afternoon. I ended up taking her for a really long walk outside right after lunch, instead of trying to easy her anxiety with medications again, which seemed to take the edge off for about an hour or so. She soon tired of the walk and was again fussy, so we ended up alternating quick fixes of bottles and doing more walking in the house for the next few hours. She finally calmed down right after dinner, after the merry-go-round of laps, bottles, and toy time eventually wore her out.

Monday, June 18, 2018

Welcome Back

Sometimes, we all have to take a break. A break from from routine. A break from kids. A break from being being a caregiver. A break from researching. A break from reading. A break from reality. A break from being in a constant state of motion. After my last post in September, which ironically was around the beginning of school, I finally decided to return to Mira's blog, right after the school year has come to a close.

Sarah and I finally took a long overdue break in October, just for ourselves. We had been planning a vacation for several months and settled on something very predictable - Mexico. I had never considered myself a beach person by any stretch of the imagination, but the idea of sitting somewhere tropical, with no decisions to consider other than where to eat dinner each evening, and no agenda whatsoever, sounded like bliss. Keep in mind that Sarah and I have not had a vacation by ourselves, for more than a day or two, for 17 years. We were long, long overdue and thoroughly enjoyed doing nothing but being spoiled by having someone bring us drinks and clean our sunglasses. We cashed in miles and flew Sarah's sister in for the week, then Sarah and I escaped, spending 5 days at the Excellence Riviera in Cancun. 

I also took a break from reading and researching. The entire zinc episode last August and September sent me over the edge and I have, for the most part, stopped reading about epilepsy and autism. I had become so entrenched in articles, literature, and research that I felt like I deranged cat chasing my tail. Distancing myself from all the reading for awhile was frankly, very refreshing. I still venture into the occasional PubMed abstract if something seems relevant, but nothing to the degree I have been doing over the past 7 or 8 years. It was exhausting and at times, seemed utterly hopeless to think I could find something tangible that would stop Mira's seizures. Nothing has ever stopped them completely and I am not optimistic that anything ever will.

With all of this separation and temporary relief last fall, life quietly resumed where we left off before Mexico. It sounds so cliche, but the more things change, the more they stay the same. Mira's seizures have not changed one iota and we have not made any medication changes. She has bi-monthly bouts with dystonia, her latest happening this past weekend, where she had 4 seizures in the morning, forcing us to administer Diastat. Most of her days are how they have been for the last 12 years - random myoclonics, random tonic-clonics, and random irritability. Overall however, her demeanor seems to be much better, still having the occasional bad fussy day, but at least it isn't every single day, as it was a few years ago. In terms of the dystonia, it often looks like this, where I took a few pictures back in November of last year - her episode this past weekend looked identical:

Clenched fists, turned feet, body gestured to her left. Cold, clammy hands and feet, with an unresponsive stare, lasting for 18-24 hours. She doesn't eat or drink, but will make up for skipped meals the following day. We don't know why. It just is. If anyone has any suggestions, I am always open to listening.

The only real change over the past 8-9 months has been Mira's vision. As you may have read from one of my earlier posts, Mira has extreme myopia, to the tune of +10.00 in both eyes. Unfortunately, we took her in for her annual exam earlier this year and her vision has become significantly worse, peaking to +12.00 in one eye and +11.25 in the other. Another symptom with no answer. Again, I'm all ears.

It will be a busy summer. We have a new kitten, our bathroom is going to be renovated in a few weeks (to make it wheelchair accessible and to have a zero-entry shower) and Mira is getting a new bed. Photos and news will be forthcoming. Breaks are good, but I promise to not take such a long hiatus between the next post.