Ok, so here's our journey so far in a nutshell for anyone who's reading this blog and obviously somewhat interested. Sean was born perfectly healthy, we had no problems until his 2nd HepB vax. Sean became chronically congested from that point on. At only 8 weeks of age he received his first full round of immunizations: Prevnar, Hib, DTaP, and IPV. Looking back, I believe this is when Sean began to sink into the pit that is autism.
So after 18 months of chronic ear infections, no eye contact, no receptive or expressive language, no development of any social skills whatsoever, except for the tv, Sean had a love affair with the tv, we began to come out of our fog of denial.
We were referred to a neurodevelopmental pediatrician who gave us a PDD-NOS diagnosis, but nothing else. No help or hope of any kind. We left feeling pretty defeated that day. I think we did what most parents do - we started researching autism therapies online and looked into biomedical kind of skeptically. I thought it sounded like a load of crap and really wasn't interested in it at the time. So after a year of home therapy and then a year of autistic support preschool, and hardly any progress, we were getting desperate. This was around the same time Jenny McCarthy's book came out and she appeared on Oprah to talk about the biomedical approach and how it helped rescue her son from autism. I watched the entire show and couldn't buy her book fast enough. I immediately searched for a DAN! doctor in my area and made an appt. pronto. He was a homeopath and should never have been listed on the DAN! list but whatever, live and learn, right? We only stayed with him 6 months. He got Sean going on supplements and got him off gluten, which he's allergic to. We saw some progress, but it got to the point where we were telling him what we needed to do next in terms of treatments.
We went to the DAN! Conference in Cherry Hill, NJ this past April and were referred to Dr.Stu Freedenfeld, who treats autistic children. Our chief complaint when we first met with Dr. Freedenfeld was that Sean couldn't wear underwear because his diarrhea was so bad it leaked out of his Pull Up and down his legs.
Within 2 weeks from that first appointment, Sean was pooping out solid bm's. We were so excited! After some expensive pee tests, we found out Sean has way too much lead in his system so to get it out, we began using glutathione iv pushes once a week. Once we worked our way up to the max dose, we started with CA-EDTA chelation. Sean potty trained within a few days after starting that. Coincidence? I think not!
Don't get me wrong, we have a long road to travel, but we're in the right hands. We have a doctor who knows what he's going and has a fabulous reputation in the autism community. I don't know if we'll ever get Sean back to where he would have been before the autism set in, but I do know that as his parents, we're obligated to try to get him as close as we can to his fullest potential.
There are so many idiotic parents out there who call autism a blessing. How stupid is that? I'm sure their kids would agree that it's a blessing not fitting in at school, it's a blessing having the shits or being constipated every day, it's a blessing being so frustrated over not being able to communicate that these kids often injure themselves, or others, in desperation. Autism is a thief that steals children away from their families. And we're trying to find our little guy...