I asked Lee to write a guest post today. Here it is:
You’ve heard part of
the story already so now picture the scene. Four days into a ‘new home, new
baby’ scenario with my head stuck through a cat flap trying to remember whether
it’s righty tighty or lefty loosey to get that awkward last screw in. I get a
call from upstairs saying that Catherine’s waters have broken which I largely
ignore (we have around a month to go before that could possibly happen). Turns
out this wasn’t a joke and 20 minutes later we are on our way to hospital
completely unprepared with Catherine still registered with a different hospital
70 miles away.
Anyway that all
turned out fine with a birth that (to me at least) seemed relatively
straightforward for Catherine although personally I did find managing my hunger
quite discomforting, I was starving! I think our experiences at the hospital
have been described in some detail so I won’t belabour it, but suffice it to
say, our son’s appearance was pretty much what I would consider normal at birth
i.e he was small, pink, wrinkly and making a lot of noise. He did have one
small patch of skin that had rubbed off which the paediatrician was asking us
about but I didn’t really think too much of this at the time. It was only after
they had towelled him down prior to weighing him that it became glaringly
obvious that something wasn’t right; most of his skin had started shedding away
leaving a very raw red appearance. Elation and joy immediately turned to dread.
It wasn’t only us panicking, confused and clueless at this point since its true
that the hospital staff really did suggest wrapping him in a food bag (I still
can’t quite work out why they would want to do that, but I don’t have an MD).
As I said I’m not
going to go into too many details about the condition or the difficulties we
have faced since it’s been covered elsewhere. I thought what might be useful
are some general observations and some experiences during those early days
since at least for me I think there were/are various stages to this process;
these aren’t necessarily mutually exclusive, and they can reoccur.
Stage
1: Denial
Remember that
diagnosis of Ichthyosis takes a while, so it led to me clinging on to some hope
that my son couldn’t have Ichthyosis. The prevalence is estimated at 1 in
300,000 so how could he be the 1, it must just be some form of severe eczema or
something like that which will get better. This denial and fear grew once I’d
consulted google images. DO NOT do that! On a side note I dug out some old
photos the other day and I must admit some of them shocked me. I can’t remember
thinking at the time that the skin was anywhere near as red or blistered or
sore as it was. There was definitely denial, and probably some coping mechanism
to block out the severity of the situation.
I had to develop my emotional resilience in order to fulfil my
requirements as a parent to take care of my son.
Before I move to the
next stage I want to share with you a few diary entries I made in the early
days. These were really just to monitor his general health day to day to try
and get a handle on whether things were improving or deteriorating and helped
us to assess which creams and dressings were and weren’t working in various
scenarios (e.g blistering, heat etc.). Trust me, there are a LOT of creams to
choose from and different creams seem to affect people differently. By now we
must have a hundred various permutations depending on what his skin looks like
on any given day. Below are the actual notes I wrote on my phone before I went
to sleep each night in an effort to retain some form of control of the
situation, I haven’t modified them.
July 7 2013. Age 6
weeks +3.
Weather 22 degrees.
Tough day today.
Alfie suffers when it's particularly hot. Arms dry and red/sore in places. Legs
peeling quite bad above the knee area and on shin. Right leg worse than left.
Blistering and
peeling around the naval area and some on lower back- mostly where the top of
nappy is.
Face, head and back
of neck clear. Hands and feet mostly clear. Alfie seems content having slept
well. Eaten less than usual, may be due to heat (690ml).
Treatment: Used
Epiderm cream all over. This seems to be effective on facial areas but not
elsewhere, possibly soaks in too quickly. Wet conti-wraps on legs. Arms bare.
Intracite conformable on blisters with mepilex transfer on top. He looks like a
mummy.
May revert to 50-50
cream tomorrow.
July 8 2013. 6 weeks
+4.
Weather 24 degrees.
Improved today.
Blistering and peeling from yesterday cleared from very red to pink colour. No
blistering, skin dried in problematic areas.
Face, head and back
of neck clear. Hands and feet mostly clear. Alfie seems content having slept
well. Eaten plenty (850ml).
Treatment: 50-50 all
over. One dry layer of comfifast on legs. Arms bare. Intracite comformable on
stomach area that blistered and peeled yesterday.
Will retain this
treatment plan tomorrow.
July 14 2013. 7 weeks
+3.
Weather 29 degrees.
No diary for a few
days following no bad spells. However bad tummy ache last night and Alfie
didn't really sleep. He was agitated and was kicking a lot. This caused rubbing
of skin leading to blisters on fingers, arm, back of thigh and for the first
time low down below belly button. Skin creasing in nappy area appears to be
white and damp, this is difficult to monitor. The remainder looks like it is
healing, and drying.
Face, head and back
of neck clear. Feet mostly clear and ankle cracking healing.
Treatment: 50-50 all
over. Mepilex on raw skin, intracite conformable on blisters near belly button.
July 15/ 2013. 7
weeks +4
Weather 27 degrees.
One of the best
nights sleep since birth. 4 hour intervals. Very content and fast to settle.
Sores and blisters
have begun to clear up. No blisters today.
Skin on arms dry so
regular Epiderm cream.
Skin under belly
button white appearance and damp- need to think of something to protect this
and dry it out.
Treatment: 50-50 all
over. One piece of Mepilex on arm and leg. Intracite conformable on broken skin
near belly button.
July 20 2013. 8 weeks
+2.
Weather 29 degrees.
Diagnosis confirmed
today. Alfie has Bullous ichthyosis as suspected. His mutation is in keratin 10
gene. We will get tested to see if we are carriers or if it was a spontaneous
mutation.
These become a little
monotonous so I’ll stop there, but I hope that does give you an idea as to how
variable this condition is. I purposely finished on his diagnosis. No more
denial.
Stage
2: Ask the experts.
Although some
politicians tell us not to believe the experts (controversial?!), we had to
seek their advice here. Diagnosis was confirmed, this was a genetic disorder
and wasn’t going away so I had to accept it for what it was (and no he won’t
grow out of it!). As you’ve heard this was a very difficult time for us as a
family but we had some fantastic support, in particular from the NHS. There are
a handful of people there who helped us so much in those early days and
continue to do so today.
Stage
3. Get educated.
There’s only so much
the experts can help with when a condition like icthyosis requires all hands on
deck all day. So, the next thing we did was to become engaged in the process
and become the experts. I think that parents of children with icthyosis and
those affected by ichthyosis truly are the experts here since they are forced
to learn exactly what works and what doesn’t.
Stage
4. Advocacy.
This post is becoming
lengthy so I’ll finish with this one because I guess that this is the whole
point of the blog. People get frustrated, angry and resentful when they are
struggling to cope with the shock of a child being born with something
different. I felt all of these things back then, and still do today when Alfie
is having a tough time. Whether you love or loath social media, it undoubtedly
enables people to seek help and advice more easily from others in similar
scenarios. On top of that, it helps promote awareness which is vitally
important. We were put into contact with a charity known as the Ichthyosis
Support Group which has created a network of parents and sufferers to provide
information and support to families affected by Ichthyosis. We as a family are
now able to share our experiences and provide that support to others. Reach out
if you need help, things do get easier.
To finish on a
positive note Alfie is an amazing little boy. I’m so proud of him and how he
does not let this condition get in his way. He never complains, even when he is
suffering (sometimes I wish he would complain more, so that we know he is
suffering). He is always smiling, loves everybody and everything. He inspires
me to do better. We could all learn a thing or two from my ‘champ’.
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