Family Spotlight from Norway!

 

 

 

Meet our 11q Family from Norway!

Vera & Knut-Henrik
Leon – age 5 (JS)
Maria – age 2

We live in Norway, and are as far as we know the only family with JS in our country.

We like to be with our family and friends. We love to travel, special to warm and sunny locations. Both of the childeren love the water and swimming.
We (the parents) love to make food and experience with all of the worlds kitchens 😉
Leon loves his Ipad, music and strange sounds.

Texas Family Spotlight!

 

 

Parents: Ryan and Amy Bodiford

Man of the House: Tyler 2 ½, 4q and 11q interstitial deletions

We live in Houston, TX

Tyler enjoys walks, being out of the house in public places and hanging out with all of our families. He is always smiling during bath and jammie time (just wish he would love sleeping time too). He absolutely loves TV time – his favorites are Bubble Guppies, Monsters Inc and Frozen!

He has many of the characteristics of Jacobsen kids and a few unique ones too. His newest diagnosis is his large scoliosis curve. He will be getting his first of many Mehta cast at the end of the month. We hope he adapts quickly and will be happy and playful after a couple days.

Meet the Kuhns!

Erica and her son Kylan both have Jacobsen Syndrome.

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Hi there! My name is Erica and I am 34 with JS and my sons name is Kylan he is 4 with JS and HLHS (hypoplastic left heart syndrome.) My husbands name is Paul. We live in Ohio.

Kylan has had two open heart surgeries and a few heart catherizations. He has his last open heart surgery coming up. I found out I had JS after Kylan was born and his blood wasnt clotting properly. They did a bloodwork and realized he had JS and then the doctors asked to get me tested and sure enough I had it.

I have a full time job as a hotel logistics coordinator booking hotel rooms for pilots all over the US and some international. I graduated form college with a degree in Associate of Applied Business specializing in Hospitality Management. Kylan attends pre school 4 days a week and receives OT, PT and speech. He is doing very well. He loves going to school. As a family we like to go on little getaways.

On Mondays daddy takes Kylan to Chik-Fil-A after school because its daddy day and mommy does the same on Thursdays after school because its mommy day. This is just a special thing we started this year after days that we pick him up from preschool. Lala which is grandma picks him up on the other two days he attends school until mommy or daddy gets off work. We also love to go to dinner as a family. In the summer we like to talk walks with Kylan and go to the park. Mommy also takes Kylan to the pool. He loves going to the pool. Kylan loves playing with other kids his age too.

Meet Ryan’s Family in Ohio!

 

 

Moms: Liz Gladish and Katie Effler

Big sis: Charlie, she will be 5 in May

Little sis: Ryan, 2 1/2, interstitial deletion 11q

We live in Cincinnati, Ohio

We love to snuggle, have movie nights, go out to eat, dance and sing while making dinner, take walks, swim in our pool and sleep in!!!

The Story of Joan & Nick

Joan has graciously shared a part of her story with us.

When I first found out I was pregnant with Nick, I felt a mixture of emotions, both happiness and fear, as 3 months before I became pregnant with him, I miscarried at 8 weeks. The pregnancy itself was rough, to say the least, because I had morning sickness ALL the time. I even had to be admitted several times for dehydration. During one particular ultrasound, the docs told me they felt something was wrong because he had short limbs and was very small, but soon that was dismissed because his father and I were both small. My due date came and went, and still no Nick.
On May 20, I was admitted to the hospital to have labor induced, and it took 32 hours for him to finally arrive. After an hour of pushing, he finally made his appearance, but it was hardly joyful as he was basically stillborn. He had an APGAR score of only one. They immediately whisked him away to a table across the room and started CPR. It took about 6 minutes until I finally heard him cry. As fast as he was there, he was gone, and they rushed him to NICU.

It was about 2-3 hours until they finally wheeled my hospital bed to see him. He was so black and blue all over his tiny little body, but he was so beautiful. It was then that we were told that he was found to have a very low platelet count, 7000 to be exact. Over the course of the next couple of days, it was determined that along with the thrombocytopenia, he also had 2 VSDs, a double outlet right ventricle, enlarged heart, and hardening of the pulmonary artery. We were later told that tests revealed him to be legally blind and deaf!
Twenty days later, he was stable enough to come home. Talk about being scared! I had no idea what I was doing, how I was going to take care of a sick baby! All of a sudden, I was in charge of not only loving this beautiful little boy but also keeping him alive and helping him get better. There was no way I was going to be able to do that! It’s impossible! At least, that’s what I told myself, but then we settled into this routine of doctor and therapy appointments. He started PT when he was 9 weeks old. He was getting better! It was all I knew, after all. For the first 3 months, our day-today living was consumed with going to the doctors for routine blood tests to monitor his platelet levels. And on days when we weren’t at the hospital, we had home nurses doing the same! Heart meds around the clock. And yet, he still remained such a happy little boy!

Throughout his nearly 18 years, he has fought hard. There have been many hospitalizations for illnesses due to viruses, pneumonia, and bacterial infections. When he was 1 year old, he underwent his first major surgery, a cardiac catheterization, and it was then that they diagnosed him with pulmonary hypertension and sent him home on oxygen. He remained on home oxygen for approximately 1.5 years until the pulmonary hypertension was manageable without it. Since then, he has been through many more operations, including tubes in the ears (multiple times), double hernia repair, double eye turn repair, bone marrow aspiration and biopsy, cleft palate repair, and most recently the surgery on his legs.
Over the course of the next couple of years he continued to get better, but we did not have a genetic diagnosis yet. He had been tested for Velo-Cardio Facial syndrome, Down syndrome, Smith-Lemi Optitz syndrome and Aarskog syndrome, just to name a few. It was not until he six years old that he was finally diagnosed with Jacobsen syndrome. By that time, the defects in his heart had self-resolved, and he was able to stay off all heart meds. Still, every roll-over and step was cause for a celebration. I couldn’t have been more proud of him, even if he had been a typically developing child. He finally learned to walk at 3 years old, and he was learning to run, jump, do somersaults. He was progressing slowly, but he was progressing. However, we were still alone.

I finally found Dr. Paul online and we met our first family with the same disorder at the conference in 2008. Nick was 12 years old. For the first time in our lives we were not alone! I was developing a network of extended family that I could talk to, cry to, lean on, celebrate his accomplishments with, and get support from people who know what we are going through every day.
Nick has had quite a few scares since his delivery, but he always bounces back! He is so strong! His strength was never more evident than the day I received the call that he had drowned at a camp for autistic kids. He had to be fully resuscitated, and it was touch and go all night, but he fought his way back to us. And when everything was said and done and he had recovered, he was back to baseline!
Before Nick came into my life, I did not know you could love someone so much. Nick will be 18 soon, and he has beat the odds in so many ways and has shown me how to be strong, how to try your hardest. I don’t know that I could go through all that he has gone through in his short little life. But I do know that I love him and wouldn’t change a thing about him, including the JS, because that is what makes him who he is. He is my hero!