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Friday, May 31, 2013

Media views on Hydrocephalus: Zach Roloff

If this is the first time reading one of your posts or haven't on a regular basis, my main purpose of writing is to talk about Hydrocephalus related topics that aren't easily found online. This can range from my own day to day experiences but also includes topics that aren't necessarily about Hydrocephalus, but about other neurological problems and brain surgery. Today I'm talking about a topic that I've written about several times already. I've been writing about people who are in the public eye (including film characters).

This week I'm writing about one of the first celebrities that I ever heard about having Hydrocephalus. Most of the public figures with Hydrocephalus that I've heard about has only been diagnosed during the last couple of years, or I didn't hear about it until the last few years.

Zach Roloff along with his family, are the stars of the Reality Television show "Little People,Big World". Zach along with his parents have Dwarfism, and the show focuses on living life day to day with it. Zach also has Hydrocephalus which was mentioned during a few of episodes during the first season, when he had to have a shunt revision.

Something that I noticed at that and really appreciate now is that not only was it mentioned on the show but his Dad was able to talk more about it. That's something that is normally not mentioned by other public figures who have Hydrocephalus normally wont or cant mention. If it is mentioned than usually there are few details mentioned,or wrong information is given.

I posted a few links below providing some more information, and a clip from one of the episodes where his Shunt and Hydrocephalus is mentioned.Thanks for reading :)


http://www.tlc.com/tv-shows/little-people-big-world/bios/about-roloff-twins.htm

http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/hydrocephalus/detail_hydrocephalus.htm


Friday, May 17, 2013

recognizing the differences between neurological disorders and Attention Deficit Disorder.


My intentions are not to claim that all kids diagnosed with Attention Deficit Disorder are misdiagnosed, because there are many children and adults who actually have it. However there are many more that are misdiagnosed either because the problems they have are even misunderstood or just not looked into. I am one of many kids with a nonverbal learning disability that was misdiagnosed as Attention Deficit Disorder. I ended up never taking Ritalin for it, but it was something that teachers and others had fought to try to get me put on. Even though they were fighting to put me on Ritalin years earlier I wasn't diagnosed until near the end of elementary school (at least that I remember). I remember testing for it a couple times but I don't remember for sure which time I wasn't actually diagnosed. I do know that I tested out when I was either 18 or 19 when I was transitioning from high school/college to the work force with vocational rehabilitation. I know many others with nonverbal learning disability was put on Ritalin, some tested out or were taken off it when they were young. But I'm sure that there are adults who were misdiagnosed with it as kids who are still taking it.

Nonverbal learning disability is something that's common with people with neurological disorders, either something like Hydrocephalus or a Autism Spectrum Disorder. It is also common with people with Attention Deficit Disorder, but shouldn't be thought to be limited to it. Putting it very basically, it’s when people have really hard time processing information when it's not in verbal form. For a much better description and for information that you would usually not find online I posted the Hydrocephalus Association's teacher guide. It explains a lot of what I had to deal with as a kid but the information wasn't available to my teachers, parents or me so it was thought that I wasn't trying or at least not trying hard enough to do some pretty basic things.

Also there are other side effects to Hydrocephalus and brain injuries in general that affect how well people can pay attention including just simply not being able to pay attention for long periods of time to certain tasks, memory and organizational skills.

I really do encourage anyone with Hydrocephalus, or especially a child with it check out the information Hydrocephalus Association has posted. The same if you're just interested in learning about it and you're a teacher with a student with it or may have one at some point. I think there's a lot more than could have been done for myself and others, if people would have had better access to the information in the past. Thanks for reading.


Friday, May 3, 2013

Media views on Hydrocephalus:Chi Cheng (of Deftones)


This is the first time I've written about someone that has recently passed away. I had found some info about his brain injury, and I was trying to find more when he passed away on April 13th.I decided to put off writing about him because I didn't want it to seem like I was writing about him just to get views for my blog because of how many people must have been looking him up that week. While I have some other ideas for what I want to write about, none of them is anything that I would have been able to finish on time.

Chi Cheng was the original bassist for the alternative metal band Deftones, and played with them for two decades until his accident. Chi was seriously injured in a automobile accident in November of 2008. He had spent the last four and a half years slowly recovering. He had several surgeries and after being in a coma, he was recovering at home and was able to at least move his limbs and he was starting to be able to speak. He passed on April 13th when his heart stopped after being rushed to the hospital.

I had heard about his accident, but I didn't think about what the result of his brain injury could have been. Recently I saw that he had surgery to replace a bone flap in his skull that was removed shortly after his accident. What caught my attention about this was that this is the same surgery that former state rep Gabrielle Giffords had and she was later had a shunt placed and diagnosed with Hydrocephalus. I decided to look more into, and I never found anything about him ever been diagnosed with Hydrocephalus however he did have surgery that treats it. The surgery he had is a ventriculostomy (sometimes also called or referred to as a ETV, or a Endoscopic Third Ventriculostomy).

I don't want to claim that he had Hydrocephalus, but the surgeries he had and the descriptions of what was going on makes it seem that way. I don't know why it may have never been brought up, but it's common that people who to be treated for the condition without finding out what it's actually called. What I do want to do  is use this post to raise awareness for people who may have gone through the same but was never diagnosed. I hope that I can encourage those people to look into it, and find the help that they wouldn't be able to if they didn't have a name for it.

I also want to use this post to encourage people to donate or at least bring awareness to a cause. The "one love for Chi" site was put up soon after his accident by a Deftones fan, and posted updates on a regular basis on Chi. You can even help her out by going to her merch page or leaving a donation on her own page. All the money earned goes to whatever needs Chi's family has now that he has passed, and also the Chi Ling Cheng Special Needs Fund. Thanks for reading :)

The first link is to the "one love for Chi" site


The second link is the Hydrocephalus association ETV Fact sheet,so the procedure that he had can be  better understood.


The third is my source that I used that talks about the second procedure that Chi had,the first being the bone flap operation he had.



Friday, April 19, 2013

What makes you happy? (Guest blog by Keyt Harrington)

The last few guest blogs I have done have been pretty grim so this time I thought I would talk about something a little more light-hearted!

For those of us with medical issues we spend a lot of time talking about it to everyone from doctors to friends and family. Honestly, my family wasn't really one to talk about it without making me feel like I wasn't going to make much of my life. It was early on my life, around 5th grade that I fell in love with photography. My parents didn't care much for it so on every vacation we took I became the one responsible for the camera. Because back when I was kid doctors always thought people with shunts couldn't go in airplanes, we always drove from Michigan to Colorado or Washington State which is where most of my mom's side lives. I didn't mind it for a few reasons; I absolutely love car trips, we got to see all sorts of tourist attractions and it was the only time my parents got along lol.

My 6th grade year I only went to school a few months because I ended up having 3 shunt revisions in a row. That was when I enrolled in a photography class and won my first award from the local paper that held a photography contest. My teacher told me at the end of the class that I had a real good eye which i thought was ironic since I was legally blind at the time!
Since the award I received from the paper wasn't such a big deal to my parents, I knew the teacher's praise wouldn't be either so I kept my love of photography to myself and continued to be in charge of the camera if we went anywhere, secretly using those moments to practice.

Fast forward 10 years or so, I had spent that time practicing on the animals at my sister's ranch, the children at our family's in-home day care and now I was having my own kids to take hundreds of pictures of. People were starting to notice I had a talent despite what my parents thought. I was told for years that it was something I should do for a living but I didn't think I was that good so I quit for a little while. I went to college the first time for a teacher assistant/sub degree and later for a systems analysis degree (computer programming). I also had many more surgeries and lost a few jobs because of it. I didn't really like those jobs anyway, the only thing I liked was taking pictures!


There was one photo though that changed my life. It was a picture I took of my daughter in her Easter dress when she was almost 3 in 1992 and a parent of one of the kids we had in our day care saw it. She said she really loved it and wanted to know if she could have a copy so I gave her one. I think about a week later I received a call from a man that owned a small photography business in town and he asked if I could be a "Second" at a family gathering he was doing a session at. I was about to say no when he said he would pay me $200 for the day. As a young, basically single mother of two toddlers, that was a lot of money so I agreed. I didn't find out until many years later that the parent who showed that man the picture was the man's sister!

Fast forward another...many years...I have since learned that with medical issues it's always good to have something you really enough doing. When I'm not feeling well and need to force myself to go outside, I grab my camera. When I need to cheer myself up, I grab my camera and find some kids or animals. I don't leave the house without my camera anymore, even my expensive one! In fact, it's a running joke in my house that my boyfriend does the run-down of things I need to grab: wallet, keys, camera! I can't even begin to tell you the moments I was glad that I had it with me!

Now I'm a little better at my craft and I have my own small business. I still find myself questioning whether I'm good enough to take a job but I will take the challenge. Animals and children are still my favorite things to photograph all these years later:

These are mine taken last summer. 

A client's daughter taken last fall

I have also had to convince myself I was good enough to take on other projects:


High definition resolution editing



Photo restoration of a friend's grandmother and uncle

I have only taken one photography class in my life and never took one for the last two. 

Now when I hear someone say "I can't do anything", I tell them if I can teach myself stuff, anyone can. I also taught myself how to crochet when I was 18, now I can make anything, like this:


I learned photography and crocheting all by myself. Now days people are lucky, they can watch tutorial videos on YouTube if they want to learn how to do just about anything, that's how I learned HDR and photo restorations.

In the words of Oprah, "Find something you like or that you're good at and run with it!". If you don't know what you're good at, ask a friend or family member what they think. Maybe it's baking cakes for special occasions or making jewelry for presents. Almost anything can be created and sold too! That flag sold for $145! Summer is almost here and you can find something to make a bunch of and take to an arts and crafts show around Christmas time to make money for gifts or just for some spending money! I have also learned over the years that something like crocheting is great to take my mind off any pain I may be having at the time..unless you're a perfectionist like me and rip out rows and rows of stitches just because I did ONE wrong! haha!!








Friday, April 5, 2013

Media views on Hydrocephalus:Gabrielle Giffords



Because my last post has gotten more views than any of my other posts than I've gotten since I started writing this blog 14 months ago, I’ve decided to continue writing about the same subject this week. If this is your first time reading I post on "Media views on Hydrocephalus" once in a while where I pick a celebrity or character that either has Hydrocephalus themselves, or they somehow were/are affected by it. It fits into the subject I picked out in the first place, because it's something that's usually not written about or at least not in detail.

Like last week's post (Roald Dahl) this post means something personally to me, other than the Hydrocephalus part. Gabrielle was the State rep in one of the three districts where I live. On the morning of January 8th, 2011 she was shot in the head by a gunman outside of a Safeway north of Tucson, during her first "Congress on Your Corner" gathering.19 others were shot, including 6 who died.

The results of her injury were a shattered skull and swelling of the brain. They left a hole in her skull for a few months after to allow the swelling to go down. At some point during those first few months, she developed Hydrocephalus. It's common for this to happen after any kind of brain injury that involves swelling of the brain, or a brain bleed. When they replaced the part of her missing skull, they placed a VP shunt for her Hydrocephalus. 

Unfortunately the for the most part Hydrocephalus and her shunt is left out when the media talks about her health problems. But it's been done many times before with other celebrities, and it won't be the last. But that's one of the reasons I've picked this topic in the first place. I hope that by posting about it, people will be able to find my blog when searching for public figures and that it will make people more aware of the condition. We can also try to reach out to these public figures, offer resources if they are needed and encourage them advocate others using their popularity.

I remember the morning this all started because I work in another local grocery store. It was during the last few months of being a courtesy clerk before I was promoted. So I spent most of that morning in the front end, and we didn't know rather they caught the gunman or not. So as least some of ourselves and kept on catching ourselves keeping a eye on the front doors, because we didn't know rather or not that the gunman would show up at our work too. All we know that she was shot at a Safeway, we didn't know until later what she was doing there so we thought that it all happened inside the store.

I also never thought that she would become a hero to the other people I've met with Hydrocephalus on Facebook. I knew about head injuries and Hydrocephalus, but I still didn't think that Gabby would have been diagnosed with it. Both before, but especially after the accident she did what she could for people with disabilities (including a job fair for people with disabilities). She resigned last year, but she still has the power to make a difference.

I don't know how much she knows about Brain Injury or Hydrocephalus, but I know she's strong enough and will be able to deal with it. I hope that you've learned something learned something new from reading this, and I encourage you to look into it more. Thanks for reading.


Friday, March 22, 2013

Media views on Hydrocephalus: Roald and Theo Dahl


This is my third "media views on Hydrocephalus" post. It fits well into the original subject that I had chosen for my blog, and my previous posts on the subject are the ones that are most often searched for on Google, according to my blog stats. I have a number of people I've been planning on writing about, and someone had searched for something similar and ended up reading at least one of my posts this week. So if it's searched again, I want this post to be seen. Hopefully it's exactly what someone is looking for.

Roald Dahl was an author more commonly known as a Children's author, but he also wrote adult fiction and non-fiction, screenplays, short stories and also wrote for television. Some of his children's books included James and the Giant Peach, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, and Matilda. Some of the screenplays he wrote Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. Some television shows he worked on includes Way Out, which was similar to Twilight Zone and several Alfred Hitchcock movies.

Dahl was married to Patricia Neal, he had five children. In December 1960, his middle child and only son Theo's son's baby carriage was struck by a taxi. This resulted in him developing Hydrocephalus. At the time there were shunts available for treatment, but it was a very new technology. At the time the shunts had a much higher failure rate than it does today (and currently half of all shunts fail during the first two years).It also had a higher chance of resulting brain damage if they not replaced right away.

In Theo's case his shunt had blocked six times in nine months. Each time he would go temporally blind and they were never sure that his vision would come back after each revision, or how much brain damage had been done. 

This inspired Dahl to develop a new shunt other than the Holter shunt that had been used for a few years at the time, and was the first successful shunt. During the next couple years with the help of Toy Creator, Stanley Wade he would succeed in the development of a new shunt. The main differences between his and the previous shunt was that the shunt wouldn't touch the brain during the placement reducing the risk of cerebral debris getting in and steel discs, which gave the shunt a wider area to drain the fluid.

By the time the shunt was Developed Theo no longer needed a shunt, but for the next couple years after (1962-1964) Dahl's shunt was used in two to three thousand children worldwide. This was Dahl's first major influence in medicine, but not his last. After his daughter died from measles encephalitis, he became an advocate for immunization. Then after Patricia Neal had a series of strokes, he created his own rehab treatment to help her recover.

I've been looking forward to writing about Dahl and his son more than authors, because of my childhood interest in him that in a way continues on into today. My third grade teacher had us read many of his books, At least six of his them that I can remember. We watched at least a few of the movies that was based on his books as well, and then I saw another in the theaters when it came out the year after I was in his class (James and the Giant Peach). I knew very little about Dahl himself at the time, but it's interesting to me now that the author that wrote all those books helped developed a medical device that has kept me alive the whole time. Thanks for reading; I plan on writing more "media views on Hydrocephalus" posts in the near future. But I'll be including some others and more guest blogs from my friend Keyt.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roald_Dahl

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/biographyandmemoirreviews/7930233/Roald-Dahls-darkest-hour.html

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3029661/



Friday, March 8, 2013

Rosemary Kennedy's lobotomy

I've written a couple times about specific famous people who have hydrocephalus,rather it's a celebrity or a character. I have many more people to cover in that subject,but I'll also like to bring attention to well known people who have had some other kind of brain injury or brain surgery.Today I'll like to talk about someone from a well known family,who isn't exactly well known herself.

Her three brothers who lived passed thirty were well known politicians, her oldest brother died in the second world war. One of those brothers was John Kennedy,the thirty-fifth president of the United States who was assassinated in office. Another brother was assassinated while running for president in 1968.

Rosemary was disabled from early on in her life,possibly because of a delayed birth depriving her brain of oxygen. Her disability was intellectual,and she had a low IQ.During puberty she began to have violent mood swings that her family couldn't figure out how to control.

Now as we're learning more and more about traumatic brain injuries,we can identify these problems. We can pinpoint why certain side effects happen,and in some cases at least how we can recover from them and overcome. But this was several decades ago and very little was known about any neurological problem. Also  the Kennedy's were already popular figures,although nothing compared to who they would be a couple decades later. So how they were seen were a lot more important than most people,and again because of the lack of knowledge about TBI her family at least in a way was ashamed of her.

In order to try to control her mood swings,her father had a surgeon give her a lobotomy. A lobotomy is basically a brain operation removing part of the frontal lobe,cutting off most of the connections to the prefrontal cortex. The purpose is to help people with psychological disorders. It has become less controversial and more common in the last couple of decades. But at the time the procedure was only several years, and they hadn't figure out the "right" way of doing it. In Rosemary's case they ended up going "too deep" resulting in a much more severe disability, and wasn't able to care for herself, or perform daily functions like she had been able to do before, including even communicating effectively.

I had a hard time finding websites or blogs,either that seemed to have legit information, if anything more than basic information. It seemed like every website I've gone to lately looking for information for this blog post had different information than the other. Usually I don't like to do this, because of how the site runs it tends to not have accurate information. But I used Wikipedia just because,in this case it was my best way of getting the most accurate information for this post. Thanks for reading.