Bug in Air

Bug in Air

Monday, October 11, 2010

And So It Continues

Three weeks ago Rayleigh had a major breakthrough from her Phenobarbital medicine and began having seizures again. They started gradually, 1 seizure every 2 days or so and then got to where we are now at 2 a day.

The seizure will generally happen about 15-20 minutes into sleep. She usually has one for naptime and one at bedtime. Today was weird, she had one when waking up in the morning at 7:30a. She did not have one during naptime today but then had one when she went to bed at 9:30p.

A couple weeks ago on Saturday, Oct 2, we did as Dr. Coleman prescribed and started giving Rayleigh 12ml of Phenobarbital a day. We were to do 6ml morning and night. Each time you change the dose of Phenobarb you have to give it 5-7 days to take effect because it has a long half-life. After 5 days there was absolutely no change. We expected to at least see them slow down if not go away on this dose.

We called Dr. Coleman and spoke with him on the phone for quite a little while. He is ordering a new EEG to see if her brain activity has changed. If so, this will give him more information on the direction we should go in. The EEG is tomorrow.

Also, he had us up her dose to 14ml (7ml twice a day). This seems like a lot to us. We took Rayleigh to get her blood drawn today so Dr. Coleman can check the Phenobarb levels to make sure they are still within the normal 20-40 range.

Dr. Coleman had a couple of points of information that were a bit unsettling:

1.) The harder the seizures are to control, the more likely we are dealing with a longer prognosis of her having seizures.

2.) He has had patients where the best you can do with medicine will still have them having a few seizures a day. It sometimes comes to the point where the parents have to make the decision to either give her a higher dose of medicine than normal range and risk developmental side effects OR keep the dose normal and prevent most of the seizures but not all.

We had to stop by Dr. Coleman's office today to pick up the paper order for her bloodwork to take to the lab. While in there, Dr. Coleman talked to Michael quickly and said that even though she's still having a couple seizures a day and today is day 5 on this new dose he doesn't want to make any changes on her medicine until after the EEG and then he asked us to come to his office right after her EEG because he will immediately have the results and he'd like to go ahead and squeeze us in so we can go over them as quickly as possible.

We know that she's not conscious when she's seizing. For her it's like sleeping and waking up feeling weird, but it is so upsetting to watch this happen to your child and know that there isn't anything more you can do for them. Sometimes we think it scares her and then she's afraid to go back to sleep which is heartbreaking.

We always tell her, "I promise we are working with the doctor to get rid of these!" And we are. We just love her so much and hate that she's going through this. No child deserves this.

Epilepsy brings out a lot of emotions and very little answers.


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