Saturday, September 8, 2012

My Baby's Growing Up

Here we are at the brink of Fall with a 15 month old.  Lyle and I have heard the oh so familiar phrase, "Can you believe it's been a year?"  We shake our heads and smile, but then we laugh with each other when they walk off.  Instead of the normal response parents should be giving Lyle and I just want to take a deep breath and say, "YES, we can believe it.  It's been the longest year of our life!"  haha  It's with great pleasure to be able to laugh and joke about where we've been, where we are, and where we're headed with our sweet Natalie.  We're full of relief, exhaustion, excitement, joy, and encouragement to be celebrating a year of Natalie's life.  A year and half a go Dr. Goodnight told us our little baby girl had a 50/50 chance of survival after birth.  Isn't truly wonderful to be celebrating on the 50% chance side of life!?!
With all of that said here's where we are as a family with Natalie's diagnosis and development so far.

Diagnosis - NONE
However, Natalie's neurologists entered her into a medical trial that is referred to as, Next Generation DNA testing.  It allows a lab to test 20x the amount of DNA than what's been done before.  This a 5 year long trial so Natalie's results will be reviewed for the next 5 years as the medical field changes and becomes more knowledgeable.  The only conclusion that has been made about Natalie is that wherever her genetic informality is a normal lab does not have the resources to find it.  We're hopeful to see some results in this medical trial.  Natalie's doctor called and said we should be receiving the results in the next few weeks.
  • Back
    • Natalie is now wearing a back brace.  Because her core has taken so long to strengthen she has developed scoliosis, an S curve in the spine, and kyphosis, a hunched back.  
  • Feet
    • Still in the process of correcting her clubbed fee.  We are casting, taping, and wearing special shoes depending on the week.
Development - A lot (currently 15 months old)

Natalie is continuing to develop and surprise her therapists on a monthly basis.  No one really knows what to expect because she continues to build her strength in the opposite direction of a normal child.  :)  What is expected during the infant - toddler development is for the child to first strengthen their core and work they're way out to their limbs and eventually fingers for the fine motor skills.  Natalie does the opposite.  She gained her strength starting with fine motor skills and is gradually working her way to her core.  Although she may not be able to walk she can spot and pick a cat's hair out of the carpet even if you did just vacuum twice.  lol  The problem this presents is that a baby's core strength is what signals the body to start maturing.  As you are probably familiar with babies are very flexible creatures.  As their core strengthens it sends out signals.  It tells the muscles and bones where to settle and stop being so flexible.  It tells their insides when to mature, whether the stomach can handle table foods or cows milk versus mom's milk or even whether swallowing something lumpy is ok.  With all of that said here's where Natalie is today...
  • Eating her first table foods
    • She has fallen a little behind on her feeding abilities but her feeding therapist says it's the lack of her core strength.  As her core strengthens her digestive track matures and her appetite will increase.  We would say she's right around a 12 month's old abilities in eating.
  • Starting to put weight on her legs when you hold her in a standing position.
    • Leg strength and lower abdomen are around 6 month's old
  • Has full head control
    • She was able to move to  forward facing car seat this past week.  She's on target with the exception of lifting her head more consistently while in a crawling position.  This has more to do with her back muscle versus her neck.
  • Is starting to crawl!
    • 8 months old
  • Is a ahead in her cognitive
    • She has more words in her vocabulary than normal.  She notices and reacts to people's mood changes.  16-17 months old
    I'll have to say it's quite entertaining to have a baby that does so little but understands so much.  What perhaps makes us laugh the most about Natalie is the fact that she laughs the hardest when someone gets hurt.  If your remember the youtube video, "Ouch, Charlie that hurts,"  then you've seen a glance into Natalie's mind.  She laughs when you fall, if you cry, if you scream, or when her brother, Isaiah, is in trouble.  What catches people of guard is Natalie still can't make facial expressions.  When you hear a belly laugh coming from a straight faced baby it's a little confusing, but hilarious.  It goes perfect with the fact that she's typically laughing at someone getting hurt.

    Isaiah is thrilled to have a mobile sister.  He told me just this past week that Natalie is older now so we need a another baby.  I knew it wasn't just me that finally feels like my baby is growing up.