Thursday, May 16, 2024

Happy World CDG Day!

Happy World CDG Day! Today is a day to celebrate (aka raise awareness) of Congenital Disorders of Glycosylation. There are more than 160 different types of CDG, and Teddy is affected by PIGN-CDG. PIGN is extremely rare, as we were told it appeared Teddy was the 15th in the entire world when we got his diagnosis in 2015. We now know of approximately 100 cases of PIGN-CDG between research and our global PIGN community, which feels like so many compared to the handful of other families we first met virtually in January 2016.  

An oldie, but goodie for World CDG Day!

Today is about raising awareness. AJ, Teddy's older brother, is doing his part in presenting at his school. He's done this every year since kindergarten, at first with me leading the way and then him creating and sharing more and more each year. In fact, this is the first year I think he's flying solo for his presentations because I'll be at a conference presenting about building your community and connecting with others when your child has a unique diagnosis. AJ does a phenomenal job with his presentations, and he also manages to tie in his fundraiser where he's 3-D printing fidgets and dragons for research. If you're interested in ordering from him to support his fundraising, you can click here.  

Speaking of fundraising, I'll put in a shameless plug for our overall fundraising effort. We, as a collection of PIGN-CDG families, are working with scientists, doctors and researchers to research potential treatment options for PIGN-CDG. The current approach is drug repurposing, which evaluates thousands of known compounds (including medications, supplements and other compounds) to see if any of them may potentially benefit PIGN-CDG. This is expensive and time-consuming research, and it's all being funded by donations and fundraising as 100 people in the world doesn't tend to pull in the interest from big pharma. The progress we're making is exciting, with a handful of compounds that show promise to test on skin cells. Teddy provided a biopsy last year, so that his cells and specific mutation may be included in this testing phase. (Fun fact, of the 100 families with PIGN, very few are affected by the exact same mutation ... many of our kids have unique mutations that impact their overall functioning.) If you're interested in helping to fund this important science, you can donate here

If you're wondering why you'd want to donate, simply watch the video at the end of this post. This video represents a large number of the individuals affected with PIGN-CDG. You'll notice little doves by some names. Those are the sweet souls who we've lost, as this disorder takes our children from many of our families far too soon. 

Now, if you're still reading and wondering what in the world CDG is, I'll give you the cliff notes version. It is not Cute, Daring and Goofy, though that is what sometimes I feel is true for Teddy. Congenital means it exists from birth. This is a lifelong, genetic condition. Disorder seems to be pretty obvious, meaning that something doesn't function as intended. Glycosylation is the tricky part of this diagnosis, both to say, understand and do (for those affected). Glycosylation is how the body processes sugars on the molecular level. This has nothing to do with eating sugar but rather the building blocks of cells and how cells process those building blocks. Essentially if you think of each cell as a mini factory, there's a defect in the assembly line and the sugar block can't be added to the protein chains. These chains are what help our bodies do every function, which is why CDG-PIGN affects someone on every level. This site does a much better job of explaining glycosylation than my jumble of metaphors. 

So, there's my bit of education, awareness and fundraising for World CDG Day! Now enjoy the sweet, smiling faces of PIGN that bring so much joy into this world! (I'll try to get the video directly embedded in this post, but for now, here's the link to the reel.



No comments:

Post a Comment