[blindkid] our introduction

Carol Castellano carol_castellano at verizon.net
Tue Jan 1 17:06:13 UTC 2013


Hi Tuesday,

Better late than never???

I hope that by now you've received some clear helpful information on 
the medical front.

Here's a thought that I hope will be helpful.  It is important to 
know the medical situation and details, so that you can plan 
appropriate and necessary  interventions and maybe even know what to 
expect for the future.  It is frustrating to wait for months for 
appointments and solid information.

But here's the good news--there are vitally important things you can 
get started on while you're waiting, that can empower your family and 
your son in this journey.  All blind/VI kids--regardless of the cause 
of their blindness, it turns out--need to learn the "alternative 
skills" that Dave referred to.  These are the techniques that enable 
blind/VI people to do all the tasks of daily life with little or no 
eyesight.  These run the gamut from Braille for reading and 
schoolwork to talking computer programs to independent travel with 
the long cane, to techniques for cooking, cleaning, administering 
medicine, and just about anything else you can think of.  A helpful 
way to think about this is to ask "what would I expect my son to be 
doing at this point if he weren't visually impaired?" in the various 
relevant areas, and then go about learning and teaching the 
alternative techniques that will enable him to keep up with sighted peers.

As others have suggested, do speak to a teacher of the blind (TVI) 
and be sure to get connected with the National Federation of the 
Blind of OH--JW Smith, President, jwsmithnfb at frontier.com or 
740-593-3046 or 740-707-5114--and our parents division there--OH 
Parents of Blind Children--Carol Akers, President, 
purplecakers at yahoo.com, 614-570-2083.

We also have lots of blind/VI people on this list who can help with 
tips and techniques.  If you need help establishing a remedial plan 
for his education, take a look at Getting Ready for College Begins in 
Third Grade, which has a whole chapter on this subject.  It's available here:
http://secure.nfb.org/ecommerce/asp/prodtype.asp?prodtype=47&ph=&keywords=&recor=&SearchFor=&PT_ID=

Best of luck with finding ALL the info you need!  Keep us posted!

Carol

Carol Castellano
President, Parents of Blind Children-NJ
Director of Programs
National Organization of Parents of Blind Children
973-377-0976
carol_castellano at verizon.net
www.blindchildren.org
www.nopbc.org

At 02:11 PM 10/7/2012, you wrote:
>Hello all ...
>
>    My name is Tuesday and I am from Cincinnati,
>Ohio. I am 30 years old and have four amazing children. Joey (7), Carson (5),
>Landon (4), Summer (2) These little people are my world! Our oldest Joey has
>always been hyper and struggled socially and in school. He was 4 
>when he started
>preschool and mostly just had behavior issues stemming from him 
>being so hyper.
>Kindergarten was a major struggle, Joey was behind and we noticed that he
>couldn't see all that well. He failed his school eye exams so we went to the
>local eye Dr. which he passed. His vision was fine. It was in 
>Kindergarten when
>we started his IEP for behavior and being so behind. Things that we 
>would notice
>were Joey doing what seemed like adjusting his eyes. He would widen them and
>look to the side. His pupils were also VERY dilated! My mom would 
>question this
>all the time. When we went to the regular eye Dr. we mentioned this 
>but nothing
>ever came from it. Kindergarten and 1st grade he was seeing the same
>intervention specialist who was always keeping in contact with me because she
>just HAD to know what was going on with Joey. She had been working with kids
>with disabilities for 30 years and Joey just caught her 
>attention.1st grade was
>challenging. Joey was so behind that he would just cause trouble in 
>class and be
>sent to the principles office a lot. Up to this point we had tried 
>several ADHD
>medications for his behavior and attention with not much success. We 
>were also
>going through Cincinnati Childrens Hospital for some physiological testing. I
>had told the psychiatrist about Joeys vision and how we hadn't gotten many
>answers. She told me to call Childresns and set up and appointment with
>the ophthalmologist there. I did, & it took 7 months of waiting to get in.
>We saw her April 26th, 2012. She said right away that there was some 
>issues with
>his retina. His central vision was good so there was nothing that 
>prescription
>glasses would do but she wanted us to see a Retina specialist. We 
>saw Dr. Sisk
>with the Cincinnati Eye Institute on May 1st 2012.
>
>This day ... I remember oh so well. After some
>testing we met with Dr. Sisk and this is when he told me that Joey 
>was legally
>blind. The way that he said it "Joey will never be able to drive a 
>car or fly a
>plane, this will limit a lot of things in life for him" As a mother I
>was devastated. I broke down. After getting myself back together to listen to
>the Dr. we were told that Joey possibly has one of two diseases. 
>Leber's congenital amaurosis (LCA) or Retinitis pigmentosa. We did 
>blood work and had samples sent to both Carver Labs and igene labs. 
>Dr. Sisk wanted to do an ERG as soon as possible but their machine 
>was broken and we had to wait until the new one came in. waiting for 
>that felt like forever! When we did finally go in to do the ERG it 
>wasn't working properly so it felt like we had Joey put under for no 
>reason. We did get to talk to the Dr. a little better that day and 
>he was very certain that what Joey was dealing with was LCA. He had 
>never told us that he was leaning more towards LCA so this was news 
>to us. so now, we were just waiting for test results to come back.
>
>Watching Joey we did notice more loss of peripheral vision. Over the 
>summer it seemed to get worse. He started tripping over things and 
>holding on to me whenever he walked. He did fall a few times and you 
>could tell that we was scared. Last week we received a call from the 
>Dr. that the testing from Carver lab came back. Out of the 14 genes 
>that were tested for LCA they were all negative. ?? My initial 
>thought was "WHAT?! you were so sure!! you told us it was...." both 
>his father and I were confused. If it's not LCA then RP? is it RP? 
>so here we are, back at square one. In the dark and no closer to 
>knowing what it is that Joey has. Dr. Sisk recommended that if we 
>could afford it to go through with the phase 2 testing so we could 
>see if it is LCA. He said we need to trust him with this. He still 
>thinks it's LCA. I asked him why he wasn't leaning more towards RP 
>and he said RP is normally in older people. Everything I've read on 
>RP though sounds like
>  Joey.
>
>Joey also had his first seizure in June and another in September. We 
>have had an MRI and EEG which both came back normal. Joey's behavior 
>has been so bad that no one wants to be around him. We have started 
>with a therapist and are scheduled to see the psychiatrist in 
>November. He has ADHD, ODD, ADD, and is Bi-polar. Atleast that is 
>what they say...
>
>What scares his father and I is, what if it's not LCA or RP and it's 
>something else that also includes his behavior and seizures? We had 
>discussed Battens disease with Dr. Sisk in the beginning and again 
>when he heard of joey's seizures but with a normal MRI and EEG it's 
>not likely. I am a member of the LCA boards on yahoo and they had 
>reffered me to this group. I'm just at a loss as to what to do for 
>my child. I feel helpless.
>
>Thank you for listening to my long story :)
>
>Tuesday
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