Showing posts with label purple day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label purple day. Show all posts

Friday, March 18, 2011

Epilepsy Awareness and Purple Day



Bookscoops is again hosting a challenge for Purple Day and I'm a excited to participate this year as well. Purple Day is March 26th and is a worldwide campaign to help raise awareness for those who are affected by epilepsy, or seizure disorders. Here's a little information that I'd like to share from the Bookscoops post.





"We wanted to raise awareness about epilepsy because it is the second most common reason people see a neurologist behind migraine. Epilepsy affects 50 million people world wide and about 3 million people living in the United States have epilepsy. More people have this condition than multiple sclerosis, cerebral palsy, muscular dystrophy and Parkinson’s disease combined and every year more people will die of epilepsy than breast cancer. Unfortunately, a lot of myths and false ideas are still being perpetuated about epilepsy (such as it is a mental condition or that epilepsy is contagious). Some of these misconceptions have caused many people to become isolated and live in fear and shame that someone will find out about their condition and many people have faced discrimination based on their medical diagnosis."



There are several ways to participate in the challenge and this is what I plan on doing.


  1. Wear purple on Purple Day and tell people why.

  2. Post a review of When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead, which has a character with epilepsy.

  3. Post about our family's experience with epilepsy.

  4. Read and post a review of The Brothers Karamozov by Fyodor Dostoyevsky who is known to have had epilepsy. (Hopefully I can get this one done.)

I'll try to figure out some more things I can do but I'm already a little late in starting. The challenge ends March 27th but hopefully you too can do something to participate. There is a prize drawing for participants: two books, When You Reach Me and The Day Glo Brothers by Chris Barton.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Our Epilepsy Story

This is our little guy, Aaron. He's four years old and is such a sweet little boy. He loves trains, cars, tractors, airplanes, basically anything that moves, has wheels, and makes sounds. Aaron likes to watch TV and movies. He loves people and will give just about anyone a hug. He can only say two words, mama and bus (he actually only says "bu" but we know what he means), but he can sign about 100 words. Aaron has epilepsy. My hope is that by sharing our story more people can learn about epilepsy because there are so many people affected by this disorder in many different ways.


My pregnancy and delivery of Aaron where completely normal. He was a very content little baby with no apparent problems. He developed pretty normally (maybe just slightly behind) until he was about 8 months old. That's when we first noticed that sometimes when he was lying on his stomach, his head would drop down and hit the floor. For a while we thought he was kind of throwing a tantrum or that he was just losing control for a second because he was just a baby
and he needed to learn how to control his muscles. Sometimes when he was lying on his back his arms would come up towards his body, kind of like the startle reflex, and I can't help but wonder if he'd been doing this for a long time but we thought it was just a reflex. He's our fourth child but we still didn't think this behavior was that strange. As he started to scoot around and start to crawl we noticed that it wasn't just his head but his arms were giving way as well and it was happening more frequently. By the time he was 9 or 10 months we thought there was something wrong but when I mentioned it to the pediatrician he said we should watch it. He asked me if he was thrusting his arms, head, and body forward over and over like a jackhammer (infantile seizures)but it wasn't anything like that. Anyway, I thought, this couldn't be seizures because that's when a person falls on the floor and convulses for a few minutes. What Aaron was doing lasted less than a second.

At the same time he was having these strange movements, Aaron was also having recurring ear infections. We kind of figured that there was a connection. He got tubes in his ears when he was 11 months and once asked the nurse if the loss of muscle control and the ear infections had any connection. She talked to the doctor and suggested that maybe he was holding his breath and passing out for a second. By this time, he was having these episodes a couple dozen times a day and I also noticed that he'd stopped progressing in his development. He wasn't babbling at all or making any attempts at sounds and though he was crawling he wasn't moving forward from there. At his one year check-up I convinced the doctor that something should be done but I didn't know what. He got us in for an EEG which measures the electric impulses of the brain. Within a week we had the results--everything looked normal. What! That was good in a way but I was now certain that there was something really wrong. I let it go for a couple of weeks but decided to try to get one of his episodes on tape so we could show the doctor and we also tried to record how many he had and at what times. It wasn't easy because they were completely unpredictable but I was finally able to do it. I got a video of three episodes one night while he was eating dinner. I'm going to show you these so you can get an idea of what they looked like. At this point they were a little worse and lasted longer than they had in the beginning. He was having as many as 50 a day. (When you watch the video please ignore the family dynamics going on in the background.) :)




I'm showing this video because I think it's important for people to recognize that there are so many different types of seizures. If I had known that then maybe it wouldn't have taken so long to get Aaron diagnosed and start his treatment.

Our pediatrician again was able to quickly get us in to see a neurologist as Primary Children's Hospital and as soon as he saw the video he immediately went to look at Aaron's EEG results again. He said that at first glance it did look normal but when looked at carefully he could see those split second seizures. He ordered another EEG to confirm before starting Aaron on medication.

I just have to take a second to talk little about the EEG. It is an experience in and of itself. We needed to have Aaron sleep deprived so they could monitor his brain's electrical impulses as he was going to sleep so he was pretty cranky already. Then they put 24? little nodes all over his head, then wrapped it up with gauze so none of them fall off. Here are a couple of pictures:



He actually was such a trooper and he had to go through this whole process twice, beside the MRI, ct scan, blood draws, and urine tests that he also had to endure. All of these tests came up with no answers to why he was having seizure so they say it's idiopathic which means there's no known cause or in other words, "We're too big of 'idiots' to understand what's going on." :) I'm actually totally kidding because I know they do what they can but it is frustrating to not know why our sweet little baby is suffering this way.

We started on one medication that seemed to reduce the seizures quite a bit for a while but not in the long run. Then it was another medication that didn't work and which we realized, once we got him off of, was keeping Aaron in such a fog and probably making him dizzy that his development was really slow. About a month after getting him completely off that second medication, Aaron started taking his first steps at 21 months old.

Two more medications later, we finally have his seizures under control. When he was two we started him on a medication that he wasn't able to take until that age because of the risk of liver failure (scary, huh!) in children under two years old. It seemed to do the trick in combination with two other medications (#1 and #3). He's now on two medications and we were hoping to get him down to just one but our attempts to wean him off of one have been unsuccessful. He started having a few break through seizures so we'll just stick with the two for now.

Aaron is such a blessing to our family. We have learned so much through him. He goes to special-ed preschool which he loves. He has great teachers and he continues to make progress even though it's very slow. He's developmentally delayed in all areas but his speech is the most delayed. It's so good that he can communicate to some degree with sign language. His fine motor skills aren't really good so his signs are hard to understand but I can usually figure it out.
He loves people and recognizes those he knows and loves best even from a distance. There are many people that when he sees them, he'll squeal loudly and run over (in his funny little way) to hug them. He can be a trouble maker because he has the mentality of an 18 month to two year old but he's the size of a four year old. He gets into EVERYTHING it seems and because he's taller than a two year old he can reach even more stuff. But we still love him.

I know this has been a super long post but on this Purple Day I really wanted to share our story of how epilepsy has affected us. There is so much to learn about this disorder. There are several different kinds of seizures and they look dozens of different ways. Most people have heard of grand mal, or tonic-clonic as they're now called, but there are so many different kinds. Aaron's have been called myoclonic but when I read the description of myoclonic seizures it doesn't seem to describe what he has. Besides the differences in seizures, doctors don't even quite understand why or how the medicines work. There are dozens of medications and they do the best they can to prescribe the one that will work for a certain type of seizure but it seems like sometimes it's a guessing game.

Thanks for reading and be sure to wear purple today in support of the millions who deal with epilepsy.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Epilepsy Awareness--Purple Day March 26th


Cari over at Bookscoops is hosting a mini-challenge in honor of Purple Day, an international day to promote epilepsy awareness held on March 26th. She's written a beautiful post about her reason for doing this--her daughter was diagnosed with epilepsy 5 months ago. She and I talked about it at the Utah Book Bloggers Winter Social because she overheard me tell someone that my son has epilepsy. I am so thrilled that she's taken the effort to promote Purple Day and I will try to do my part as well.


Here's how the mini-challenge works: (Taken from bookscoops.com)


"There are number of ways to participate in our first annual Purple Day Challenge and because we love to promote literacy we are combining both reading and Purple Day starting on March 21st and ending on March 31st. While our blog focuses on children and adolescent literature we are inviting anyone to go purple!!!! So that means any person, book blogger or blogger who wants to promote Purple Day may participate. To make this easy on you (and us) choose any or all of the following.


  1. Post the Purple Day Button on your blog starting on Sunday March 21st through Saturday March 27th and write a post promoting Purple Day. Please note we have received permission to use the Purple Day logo as part of this challenge. If you choose this option you must read and agree to the copyright notice on the Purple Day website by using the logo you are stating that you have read and agree to their terms of use. Two sizes of buttons are at the bottom of this post.

  2. Read a book about epilepsy and post a review. For a list of books for children go to Epilepsy.Com.

  3. Read a book by or about a famous person with epilepsy and post a review. Cari’s daughter’s favorite so far is The Day-Glo Brothers: The True Story Behind Bob and Joe Switzer’s Bright Ideas and Brand-New Colors, which also is a Cybils winner for 2009. Some names you might know are Harriet Tubman, Alfred Nobel and Charles Dickens and more recently actor Danny Glover, football player Alan Faneca and track star, Florence Griffin Joyner known as Flo Jo. For a more complete list visit The Epilepsy Foundation or if you’re a fan of Wikipedia see the List of Famous people with Epilepsy, which to be honest seems to be the best documented list we’ve found so far.

  4. Read a book that promotes self-confidence and acceptance in children and post a review. Suggested books so far with a very appropriate title, Purplicious by Victoria Kann and Elizabeth Kann and Little Skink’s Tail by Janet Halfmann, illustrated by Laurie Allen Klein.
  5. If you or a family has dealt with epilepsy write a post sharing your experience.

  6. Wear purple on March 26th and tell people why you are wearing purple.

  7. Click on the link to watch the 60 Minute Special on Epilepsy and write about the things that you learned in a blog post, or if you don’t have a blog put it in the comments for this post.

Have an idea not listed above submit it and we’ll give you another entry. Cari’s niece is making 600+ purple ribbons for her school. So if you think of something put a comment in the comments below.


For every entry we receive, Cari will donate 25¢ per entry for a total of fifty dollars to a non-profit organization that works towards epilepsy awareness and/or research and Holly will match Cari’s donation. Multiple entries are possible. One entry equals doing one of the seven items listed above."


I've now posted about the challenge, I will wear purple on Friday and will get my kids to do the same, I hope to review a book or two about epilepsy or by someone with epilepsy, I will watch the 60 minutes special and report on it, and I will be writing a post on Friday to share my son's story. (The time period for the challenge is March 21st-31st)

I would encourage you to go to Cari's post and do what you can for this good cause. She has a lot of great information about this disorder and how it affects so many people, as well as several links to find more information.