Alex has a high pain threshold. Quite often we find him cut, bruised or batter without him ever letting us kow he was hurt. This toe is another example.
9:20 PM Tonic clonic

Blister on my toe

The life and times of Alex Shaver as he battles with Epilepsy.
Here he comes.
Well he is coming but has had a hard time waking up.
We did have meds, but spent nearly 30 minutes looking at and never eating blueberry pancakes. He did eat 3 pieces of bacon but just stared at the other 3. And never did get his drink of water. All of it sat there until the bus showed up 5 minutes early.
So we rush to get his shirt and coat on. His belt is in his backpack. There are also 2 wrist bands in there.
The we get the squawking because he can not now stop to drink his water and eat his bacon. I told him Ms Linda would get him water at school.
Oh well, at least no seizures last night!
Regards,
Neal
Morning Linda,
Here comes Alex.
He had a pretty good weekend. Most of Friday and Saturday was spent laying around the house.
But by yesterday he seemed back to about 75% of normal.
He slept well and ate waffle with bacon this AM. Like many of us with cotton, he to was thirsty. Three cups of water this AM.
We have surgery for the VNS tomorrow
But then there is Thursday. Before he has Friday off.
Regards,
Neal
I forgot. His incision may look raw, but it is covered with ‘durobond’ which is waterproof.
Just in case you see it.
Neal
11:15 PM TC
Even after the sheets have been taken away Alex gets up and wants to sleep in our bed. Still clutching that garage door opener!
Recovering from a day of seizures
Alex gets up a little after 7 PM. He decides he is hungry and has bacon, crackers & cheese. A cup of root beer and now he wants sausage. I guess if you dont eat or drink all day you get hungry.
After doing some puzzles, visiting with neighbor Charloette and watching some videos it was time for bed. I was chosen to spend the night with Alex. Good call for Marycke.
Seizures began at 12:23 AM he had a tonic clonic (grand mal). Then again at 12:52 AM- too soon. I chickened out and woke Marycke up. We agreed to give him 15 mg Diastat (a valium derivative administered rectally). It should knock him out.
1:43 AM another tonic clonic but shorter duration, 1-2 minutes
2:42 AM tonic clonic - shorter one
3:35 AM yeah, no seizure.
4:05 AM Man he snores loud. I roll him over. 10 minutes later he is on his back again - snoring. This is what Marycke means when I keep her awake. Oh well, time to sleep.
4:58 AM Strong tonic clonic, 2-3 minutes
5:16 AM tonic clonic, I give him 10 mg Diastat
Linda,
Another good night.
Hard to get the boy up again this AM, but he is on the bus.
He had pancakes and bacon. Two cups of water.
Then a little typing with his Grandpa.
And he is all yours.
Have a great day.
Neal
PS. No Alex tomorrow in the AM.
Linda,
The surgery next week is just to replace the battery of his VNS (vagal nerve stimulator) which is just underneath the skin under his collarbone on his left side. You can actually see and feel the outline of it now. The replacement battery will be smaller than what he has now so less noticeable. If his preop appt tomorrow goes well and doesn't last too long Neal will probably drop him off at school afterwards. The surgery itself is done on an outpatient basis, so he'll be home the same day (Feb.8th)...not sure if he'll make it to school the next day or not.
Good luck on your eval.
Marycke
From: Linda Higgins
Sent: Tuesday, February 01, 2005 11:16 AM
To: Marycke Shaver
Subject: Re: Alex
Neal & Marycke,
This is my two-week window to be observed so I have been kept really busy and the bake sale on Monday as well as the CBI to Miss Nelson Is Missing on Thursday so I apologize for not answering all your e-mails but thank you for keeping me current on Alex. He has been having wonderful days here at school also and no seizures but a great appetite. A little feisty sometime but we can work with that. What is the surgery going to correct and we will miss him tomorrow. Thanks for being great parents, Linda