Talli S.. (Geboren am 4. Oktober, 2001 Bestanden am 17. Februar, 2019)
Tallin Renee & quot; Stable" Schmied
Talli ertrug anmutig und heftig die schreckliche Bosheit der Propionsäure; Sie verließ dieses Leben mit einer Sepsis-Scorekarte von Talli 5 und Sepsis 1.
Sie begegnete nur zwei Schüsseln Nacho-Käsesauce, die sie nicht liebte; häufig verschlungene Scooby-Doo-Fruchtsnacks, außer den orangefarbenen; und war entschlossen, unabhängig zu sein und Dinge auf ihre Weise und Ordnung zu tun, es sei denn, sie wollte, dass du ihre Dienerin bist. Sie konnte einen Lego-Turm mit fragwürdiger Stabilität bauen, der weit größer war als ihr 4'8″ selbst. Männliche Teenager-Athleten aus ihrer Kirche, waren voller Ehrfurcht vor ihrer Ausdauer und Stärke, mit ihnen Schritt zu halten, während sie einen Handwagen kilometerweit in einer Nachstellung des Mormon Trail schob. Sie hasste es, Gottesdienste in der 3. Abteilung von Naperville der Kirche Jesu Christi der Heiligen der Letzten Tage zu verpassen, selbst wenn sie im Krankenhaus oder Erbrechen wurde und würde jemand sagen, wer zuhören würde “beobachten Veggie Tales eine Lektion lernen”.
Sie rechnet hoch ihrem letztes Jahr im nächsten Jahr in Naperville Central High und sie fühlte, war sie einer der Stern Athleten von Special Olympics, Team Feuer 203 im Basketball, Bowling, und verfolgen. Sie liebte es, andere zu treffen, die PA haben; ob es sich um ein PAF-Treffen handelte oder um eine Reise durch das Land und einen Besuch bei ihnen zu Hause. Sie hatte zahlreiche Komplikationen von PA einschließlich der meisten ihrer Vision zu verlieren und hatte ein geschwächtes Immunsystem; jedoch, sie hielt eine positive Einstellung und befasste sich mit ihren Herausforderungen mit Entschlossenheit.

Talli

Talli is seemingly always on the go, wenn sie nicht will sie wissen, was die Pläne für nach der Schule und am Wochenende sind. She loves to go to school and hates missing class if she is sick or has an appointment. She can’t stop talking about an upcoming trip to see her grandparents in Oregon and a sleep-away camp with the teenage girls from our Church over the summer. She loves technology, music, and live performances. We have had to put on parental controls on her tablet just like her typical peers have. She got braces on just after her birthday in the fall.

She is in the 7th grade at our local Junior High School. She is in an Instructional class for her core classes and is mainstreamed for PE, science, choir, and a period that rotates between art, technology/engineering, sewing, and cooking. This year she was on the school’s 7th grade cheerleading squad and she just excelled! She attended practice every day and then came home and practiced some more. She is very excited for next season.

Overtime, new health challenges have some up and she now has some complicated treatments. She was fortunately newborn screened; we found out a week after she was born. She was already in crisis at the time and took several weeks to stabilize her in the NICU. The biggest challenge at that time in keeping her stable was severe food allergies and reflux. She vomited every feeding! Thankfully, she has outgrown some of her food allergies, jedoch, tree nuts and latex can affect her by just being around them.

She had frequent infections and was hospitalized every couple weeks when she was an infant and toddler. After starting IV immunoglobulins (IVIG), she had a significant reduction in the number of illnesses and hospitalizations. She has had sepsis several times, one of those times infecting her hip which required surgery. She has a significant Long QTc wave and had an internal defibrillator placed when she was in the 2nd grade. She also has hypothyroidism and was recently diagnosed with growth hormone deficiency, so takes daily growth hormone injections.

After many years of going to the hospital for IVIG infusions, she will be starting weekly subcutaneous at home. This will keep her better protected from infections, but also free up her (and our) schedule and cause fewer side effects. She had received IVIG at our local hospital which has a Pediatric Critical Care Unit because of poor tolerance to it.

Eating always seems to be a concern for newly diagnosed families. Talli eats inconsistently. We think that a lot of it has to do with her severe food allergies. She had a g-tube placed when she was 6 months old as she was failure to thrive. Her growth only improved once all of her allergens were removed from her diet and her esophagus was allowed to heal (she had erosive esophagitis). She eats a lot more when she can have whatever she is craving at the time (right now it is Taco Bell) and when she is around her friends. She consistently eats about a third of her calories by mouth. She is learning to weigh her food and typically does her own feedings at school, if they are needed, with her nurse supervising her. She is also learning to read labels for her allergens and protein content. Update May 2015

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Talli is a thrilled-seeking social butterfly.

She will turn 8 years old in October and she is just finishing up the 1st grade. She is mainstreamed in our local elementary school with resource support, speech and OT. She participates in jazz and ballet and Daisy Scouts. She LOVES to build with Legos, take things apart, play with her friends, and visit Disney World. Her favorite rides are the Tower of Terror, Splash Mountain, Space Mountain and Journey to Atlantis at Sea World.

She was diagnosed with Propionic Acidemia from newborn screening, although she was well into her first crisis situation when we received the results of her testing. She spent nearly a month at CHoP to stabilize her and get her diet just right. She has had over 20 hospitalizations because of illness. For the past 3 years, she has had received IV immuglobulins every four weeks.

She is unable to have the infusion run quickly, so she always has an overnight stay in the hospital. We attempted to have her use a port-a-cath, but after a year of no problems she had two episodes of sepsis, the last one being fungal and bacterial. She has other health challenges that have made it difficult to keep her stable all of the time and also just adds to her complexity. She has Long QT Syndrome, hypothyroidism, allergies, asthma, esophagitis, GERD, secondary immunodeficiency, and occasionally, she has neutropenia, low platelets, and anemia. She has a history of sleep apnea, is on her 4th set of ear tubes, has had her tonsils removed once and her adenoids twice.