Thursday, February 29, 2024

Rare Disease Day: 2024

Rare Disease Day is always celebrated the last day in February, and it feels extra special when it falls on February 29 because that's extra rare. It's a day to focus on rare diseases and raise awareness of them. 

One of the common sayings you'll hear is Show Your Stripes. The reason is that often the medical community thinks of the most common diagnosis just as people most often think of a horse when they hear hoofbeats, for example. The challenge is to consider rare explanations as well, such as a zebra (or in Teddy's case PIGN-CDG).  This year, I was on top of my game and created these little key chain cards to share with Teddy's team and classmates at school to raise awareness. 

Another PIGN mom gave me the idea for these key chains. 

I time traveled this week, reading this blog post from 8 years ago in 2016:  Teddy's Triumphs and Trials: Rare Disease Day (teddystriumphs.blogspot.com) This was 3 months after we first learned Teddy's diagnosis. In the past 8 years, so much has changed. To name a few of the most significant:

  1. Teddy's diagnosis is now PIGN-CDG, a more encompassing and accurate description than his original diagnosis of Multiple Congenital Anomalies-Hypotonia Seizure Syndrome 1 (MCAHSS1 for short because that's still not a mouthful.)
  2. Instead of knowing less than 5 families with this diagnosis and being the supposed 15th in the world, our .community has grown to closer to 100 with the diagnosis and their families. 
  3. Teddy is now 10 and capable of doing so much more than we could have imagined 8 years ago. Not to mention, he's thriving and has made an outright mockery of the life expectancy (3 years) given in the first medical research papers. 
  4. An Internet search of PIGN-CDG now yields 6,360 results instead of 3 for MCAHSS1 in 2016. Seriously, that blew my mind that Google didn't have results for our son's diagnosis. 
Yet one significant thing has not changed: 8 years later, and there's still no treatment for this disorder. AJ does a great job explaining this in this Facebook post. (For whatever reason I couldn't get the video directly into this post.) If you'd like to support AJ's in fundraising for PIGN-CDG research, you can place your fidget order here.

This fundraising is so important because research is expensive. While there's much interest (and therefore money) dedicated to researching treatments for wide-reaching disorders and diseases, there's not much interest and money in researching treatments for a diagnosis that affects approximately 100 known people. 

But trust me, the effect this disorder has on those families (and their families, friends and communities) is far reaching. It's an honest statement to say Teddy's diagnosis has impacted every single aspect of our lives. Some of those impacts have been beyond positive: friendships forged, connections created and memories to last a lifetime. Others have been beyond challenging: sorrows shared as we lose children with PIGN (2 within a week of each other this month), trauma from seizures and sicknesses, endless appointments and therapy, elopements and other scares. 

For each of us impacted by this disorder, we care deeply about a treatment. We want to change the fact that we grieve the losses of our children every year. We want less hospital stays and better quality of life for all. Honestly, we want to sleep at night without fearing our children won't wake up in the morning. We want hope, not only for our children, but for those who have yet to receive this life-changing diagnosis.

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