Matthew
had his full spine MRI last Tuesday. His cervical spine shows a 9 mm herniation
of the cerebral tonsils. His last MRI it was 7mm. It also showed that a part of
his skull called the clivus is shorter than normal. From what I can gather, the
part of his skull that is supposed to contain the cerebral tonsils is too
small, which causing the brain to be pushed down and out of his skull.
His
thoracic spine images show a mild right curvature. Which means my 2 year old
has scoliosis. It is extremely rare for a 2 year old to have scoliosis. My
understanding is that this is directly caused by the Chiari malformation. The only way to stop the progression of the
curving of the spine is to decompress the Chiari malformation: i.e brain
surgery.
His
lumbar spine MRI showed the lower part of his spinal cord, called the conus, at
the L2 vertebrae. It depends on what part of the L2 vertebrae the neurosurgeon
considers “normal” to know whether this is clinically significant. However,
Matthew’s leg issues cannot be explained with the Chiari alone. Given all his
symptoms and the sacral dimple, he may have what is called an occult tethered
cord, which means hidden, not seen on MRI.
Thankfully
we will be seeing the neurosurgeon on Friday morning. From everything I have
read in the past few weeks, I am fairly certain she will recommend the decompression
of the Chiari given all of his symptoms and the scoliosis. With what urgency he
will need it I don’t know. As for the tethered cord issue, of this I am much
less sure. It seems to fit, but then again, so did cerebral palsy. My biggest
concern with regards to the tethered cord, is if he does have one that is
hidden, it is still causing irreversible damage that will only get worse if
left untreated.
The
neurosurgeon comes highly recommended from a variety of sources, including
parents of former patients and from the hospital nursing staff. After his MRI
on Tuesday, the nurses could not stop raving about his neurosurgeon. I am also
very happy with the fact that if and when we have to hand our 2 year old over
to the neurosurgeon, she will be the only one operating. We won’t have to worry
about a young resident practicing for the first time on our son’s brain; the
hospital he will be at is not a teaching hospital.
I
am terrified for my son. He doesn’t seem to be able to catch break. September
seems to be particularly bad for him. Last September he was diagnosed with a
peanut allergy (to which he also added lentil and black beans). This September
is the Chiari malformation. I worry about his immediate future and his
prognosis before, during, and after brain surgery. But I also worry about his long
term emotional health. The peanut allergy alone sets him up for a childhood
full of bullying and exclusion. Adding the limitations the Chiari puts on him
(with or without surgery) I am scared for when my 8 year old little boy comes
to me in tears asking why he is different. Asking why he can’t do what the
other kids can. I wish I could take it all away. But knowing that I can’t,
makes me fight even harder. He is the strongest kid I know. He doesn’t take
crap from anyone. I just hope that personality trait stays with him throughout
his life.
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