A Very Lengthy Update ft. Seizures

Welp, it is already September of 2023, and a lot of life has been lived since my last post highlighting all of 2021. I keep promising myself that I will be better at documenting our journey, but time goes quickly and life is hectic. In the past year and a half, a lot has been happening, including the birth of our son, Patrick!

Starting back at the beginning of 2022 (far before little brother was on the radar), we were in the midst of a terrible cold season with Piper. Piper attended daycare three days a week, and all winter long, she was having back to back sicknesses that would rarely, if ever, go away on their own without an antibiotic. Pair this along with her ear tubes falling out and having terrible ear infections for a month until we could get in to have her ENT specialist place new ones in February 2022, we were just miserable. Things just kept getting worse and worse. Somewhere along this timeline, Piper developed a new kind of seizure, where she would have one or multiple limbs twitch for a few seconds. When she is sick, her seizures are typically worse, so that makes it even harder to decipher if new seizure meds are working effectively.

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Receiving Piper’s Diagnosis at 10 Months Old

Over the past few months, I’ve felt compelled many times to provide our family and friends with an update on Piper’s medical journey, but behind the scenes, we were patiently waiting for our final genetic testing results. This wait was absolutely brutal – over 5 months. The whole exome gene sequencing test took place in a lab in California, where they were inspecting individual genes known to cause hearing and vision loss. Mike and I submitted our DNA samples as well, so that if/when any findings were discovered in Piper, they could look for those same changes in us to determine if they were inherited. On July 12, 2021, we finally got “the call.” The geneticist explained that Piper’s testing found an extremely rare gene mutation, which they are certain is the cause of her disabilities. This genetic mutation was de novo, or new in Piper, meaning she did not inherit the mutated gene from Mike or myself. However, they noted that this change could be due to something called mosaicism, which is a condition where there are genetic issues within the sperm or egg cells, but not in the parents’ DNA. After hearing all of this, I think I was in shock. After the first two rounds of more simplistic genetic testing came back normal, we had been told for months that a genetic abnormality was of course a possibility, but the doctor’s really didn’t suspect any findings with this genetic test. (Spoiler – there were findings.)

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Expect the Unexpected | Welcoming Piper Ann

A failed newborn hearing screen. That’s how it all started. When Piper was born, she did not pass her hearing test in the hospital. The nurses and doctors didn’t seem overly concerned. Of course they told us the risk of hearing loss, but said that many times babies have gunk in their ear canals and it can work itself out. We were told to have a follow up hearing test when Piper was about a month old. Other than that question mark, we left the hospital as clueless as the next set of new parents with a healthy baby girl. During the following month, we were worried, but tried to not think the worst. But alas, the next test indicated that her hearing hadn’t improved. Again, we were scheduled for another follow up test…

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