Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Feeling Blessed...

Momma was able to go away successfully this weekend and came home to happy and healthy boys. Daddy still had all his hair left and the house hadn't burnt down. To top it all off our littlest man, Gregory decided he wanted to sit on the potty and has been successful two times today.

We (and I mean me) took awhile to get to a place where we would even think about trying to have another child. When we got David's diagnosis it felt like that was it, and we already had an 8 month old when we learned of David's developmental delay, it felt so hard to do and pretty overwhelming. Worrying that Gregory could possibly show signs of autism was scary...thinking back and remembering David, thinking about signs we didn't act on and looking for them to show up in Gregory. Rocking in the crib or on the couch. Little to no eye contact. Socially and emotionally quiet.

Gregory- 1 1/2 months

So far, so good. Gregory's almost three (in August) and his motor skills are above David's, he is extremely outgoing and he gets excited about the things he does and wants to show us, this is something David hasn't done. It has been nice to see such a difference in our two boys and it has also brought a sense of relief. We thank God on a daily basis for our boys. We have learned so much from David, I know our patience is much more bountiful than it was. We want to know and understand how to help them learn and grow to the best of their ability. David's teachers mentioned they wish all parents were as active in their child's education.

Brothers...

We are seeing great strides in David since we started with his all natural treatment. The gluten free, casein free diet was first and by itself, we didn't notice much change...maybe just less hyper. Once we started adding in the vitamins and supplements, things just starting happening, changing and taking shape- right before our eyes he was speaking a bit more and we were seeing more eye contact. What is so great is that the teachers and therapists knew how to bring him out of his shell even more with the visual PECS schedule and he took off again! Growing, learning and becoming even easier to work with.  I just can't wait to see the NutrEval result in about 4-5 months, so I can share our continued proof and success in natural treatment!

David is potty trained and doing really well! Gregory has caught on (because he adores David and wants to do whatever he does) and I love that. On top of that...God has blessed us once again and we are expecting another baby... we just can't wait to introduce him or her to two wonderful brothers!

Thursday, February 17, 2011

February...

Here we are mid-February. Things are going well on the potty training front. David’s school sent home his back-up diapers…Woohoo! It’s exciting that we are finally over a large speed bump that was causing me stress, unbeknownst to me. I didn’t realize how much I wanted David to be potty trained until we are finally there. What a weight has been lifted…kinda.

We seem to have gained a new skill though, and it’s not a good one. Poo Painting, anyone? Oh yes, you heard me right. I know, yucky. Huh? Some dear friends at our church told our community group horror stories about their twin girls and their “artwork” and now that nightmare has become our reality. None too excited about standing guard outside David’s room “timing” his naptime diaper change. He hasn’t gone #2 for us in the potty yet, it occurs before he goes to sleep for nap in the afternoon diaper. If we don’t catch it soon enough… we get to clean the walls. :::SIGH:::

Needless to say, a lot of vigorous hand washing has been occurring. David’s hands now seem to have Eczema. Dr. said plain old Vaseline after hand washing is the best thing, and it works. We use a great kid friendly soap from Melaleuca that we just love. 
It’s smells yummy and it comes out foamy and easy to rinse. The pump is oversized for little hands.

Still no luck trying new foods for David, it’s hard when you see him getting tired of the same old same old, but you can’t seem to introduce something new.

Some encouraging things I’ve noticed lately though, since we started treating David: He’s gone from 2-3 word sentences to 5-6 or sometimes up to 8 words! He’s taken off with wanting to learn to read. Starting him on BOB books for beginning readers. He’s enjoying those. Much better eye contact in general. We’ve been able to have a bit more conversation with David too, that’s been really nice. Treating naturally takes a bit more time, but I feel good about his progress and I know his body is getting exactly what it needs to recover itself. 

Last weekend, David broke our indoor trampoline (accidentally). We've ordered the part, but he was pretty sad. 

Remembering when he could jump...

This weekend, Mommy gets to go away for some much needed relaxation time. The women of our church are going on a retreat. Daddy will be home all weekend with the boys. I've prayed for a calm household while I'm gone and that potty training continues on the right track. We'll see how it goes.

Monday, February 7, 2011

Is it January already?

So, here we are in 2011. New Years was a relaxing day, no real plans. I had a paid day off and we all stayed close to home. I continued to prep for my visit with the Dr. on the 3rd. Making sure I had all my research printed and the email I sent a few days before as well so I could remember what I was going to talk with her about.


Follow up Dr. visit and how I do my research.


1/3/2011- I had 40 minutes of the doctor's time to figure out the next stage of David’s treatment. On my agenda were:
  • Review Genova Diagnostics report together and discuss concerns. My #1 was the mercury chelation then amino acids. I brought a pile of one’s I found on the internet with Neocate being on the top of the pile- since it was made for children 
  • Running another NutrEval in 5-6 months, this time with all the vitamins and supplements on board to see the difference in how we are helping his body.

At the appointment we dove right in, starting with the Excel spreadsheet I made showing David’s current regimen and checking it against what was suggested. We looked at the numbers on the report that were either too high or too low and those were our focus points. Everything recommended on the report lined up with what we were seeing…how cool is that?

David had very high DHPPA (Dihydroxyphenylpropionic Acid) (say that 10x fast) as well as high Citric Acid, Cis-Aconitic Acid, Isocitric Acid, a-Ketoglutaic Acid (AKKA) and Malic Acid…these are all Citric Acid Cycle Metabolites. This is the Krebs Cycle (fun link to show you how it works) or Citric Acid cycle used for metabolizing nutrients and storing them for later use. When I researched on my own before going to this appointment, I broke it down into bite size pieces. I went to www.ask.com and typed in “What is DHPPA?” and learned it’s tied to digestion and bacterial growth in the gut (Great Plains Laboratory- pioneer in treating autism is the first link to pop up). We have good and bad bacteria…in this case the bad bacteria (Chlostridia) are ruling my son’s gut. 

  • The Questionhow do we treat it naturally? 
  • The Answer… Grape Seed Extract and/or Uva Ursi are both successful in treating this bacteria. I addressed this with David's doctor, which you should always do before starting any kind of regimen, and we started with 25mg and worked up to 100mg. 
I took each additional item on the report that was elevated or lacking and researched them one by one. With that info I talked to the Dr. about how we should proceed. She spent a whole hour with me and I was only slotted for 40 minutes, very gracious for a doctor!

The doctor and I also talked about the info I found about naturally removing the mercury from David’s body- she approved and thought we should give it a try. We also upped his antioxidants to help his body recover as he was in oxidative stress. This is linked to a number of serious diseases, such as: Parkinson’s and Alzheimers.

When I left I felt excited about this next step in David’s treatment. We started everything right away in his evening juice and we also had switched up his probiotic- we wanted to “round it out” a bit- so we are now trying Kids MegaFlora as it has 14 probiotic strains as opposed to just the one in Culturelle. Since the Chlostridia got out of hand we figured more strains of good bacteria along with the grape seed extract should rid his gut of that bad bacteria. We’ll confirm in about 5 more months. I’ll be sure to keep you posted.


     ~A side note about this...I use a HSA account, and normally vitamins and supplements are not covered. I checked with the HSA company and they stated if his Dr. provides a letter stating they are medically necessary, they will be covered. This is a big thing, because this stuff can add up. 

Administering supplements.

David's evening juice is packed with 13 vitamins and supplements! Luckily, he loves tart stuff like lemon and vinegar, the juice doesn’t taste bad at all, it has a nice tart kick to the aftertaste that he likes. It also tastes a little green (from the cilantro/chlorella) but David will drink my green smoothies when I make them and has no complaints, so there you go. 

  • If your child doesn't like tartness, you may have to go with 1/2 doses of the anti-oxidants to cut it down a bit and just do 2 servings of juice. We serve ours in all natural fruit juice to help mask the flavors and sweeten it up a bit. We also change up the juice every once in awhile to keep it new and interesting.
The barrage of vitamins & supplements for David's evening juice.

January was a great month for us. We have David on his new regimen and he drinks his AM milk and his PM juice with no issues (thank God). The juice does give him a bit of energy though…so as soon as he is up from nap I give it to him. I stay on him until it’s gone, the farther from bedtime the better.


Adventures in potty training!

1/15/2011- This was a Saturday, I have weekends off and spend them entirely with the boys. I thought, I’m going to try potty training David again. I kept it low key, no pressure and relaxed (mostly my attitude). We were totally successful that weekend. I was so excited for David and he knew it. I gave him fruit snacks and he wore big boy pants all day…we went every hour or so, I used the microwave timer to remind me.

Week of 1/17/2011- Monday (holiday- David off from school). He went in the AM for our nanny and that was very exciting as well. He had a few accidents too. We just encouraged him to go in the potty next time. He would ask to go but it would be too late. He was totally getting the hang of it though! We lost it again though that weekend, my Godkids were over and weren’t able to keep up, so he wore a diaper most of the time.

Week of 1/24/2011- We continued our attempt at getting David on the potty 1st thing in the AM, hopefully getting him to go before school.  If he did, he got to wear bog boy pants and we sent change of clothes in his back pack. He was always successful at home for me- we’d figured out his schedule. His back pack always had his set of clothes wrapped in a plastic bag for us…he wasn’t getting it at school just yet.

Week of 1/31/2011- David was well on his way to having a potty schedule down at home, now we just needed it to follow at school. He had his first success at school today and the teachers gave him GFCF chocolate chips as a reward, he loved that! I immediately adopted that idea at home, they are fairly cheap and when I only give him two, they last a LONG time! What a great idea and incentive, we gotta do what works…right?

More to come in …February!