Friday, August 10, 2018

Landrey's Journey Part 13 (The Official Diagnosis)


 A future undetermined. A past too complicated to explain. A present that requires relentless tenacity.

“It’s an answer with no answer,” I said to the Pediatric Geneticist. “Yes, you’re exactly right,” he responds.

“She’s the first documented case in history with the specific error in that gene. She’s only the fourth in the history of the world with even a notated abnormality in that gene. She’s the first in the United States with an error in that gene at all.” His findings seemed to astound and intrigue even him.

Landrey on Easter morning in a Children's hospital in 2018
 “So what do we call it?” I asked along with 10 consolidated yet in-depth questions I had prepared to ask rapid fire. I scribbled his answer. The other nine took him two hours to explain. He didn’t seem to be in a hurry. We sat in a room the size of most American closets filled with an odd combination of awkward hospital furniture as he, alongside his nurse practitioner, drew genetic code and almost science-fiction level research. The consult cost me a specialist copay, but I’m pretty certain most physicians around the country would have paid to sit in on this lecture.

“Rare Genetic Condition with a gene mutation of the CSNK2B gene.” I wrote down his response on the right side of my paper. The name was a little longer than I anticipated when pre-writing my questions, as was the brevity of her future.

“So there’s no road map?” Nothing on google. Nothing in a medical textbook. Just two case studies done in 2017 that linked two of the four major illnesses Landrey has to this gene. Three other individuals known in history have an error in it, but not the same type of error. It’s if someone broke their left arm and another broke their left leg. The same side of the body was impacted but their life would be impacted differently.

No one can determine life expectancy, quality of life, potential intellectual IQ or mental capacity in the future. We don’t know if she will ever potty train, or understand how to not run away from danger, such as not running to the oven when it’s open, or straight into the street. One of the most brilliant people I’ve ever met then proceeds, “There are 22,000-25,000 genes in your body. We know about the functions of 4,090 genes. This one is one we don’t know about. With your permission, we will write an international case study on Landrey to document these findings.” It was discovered in 2017 that three people had myoclonic epilepsy and intellectual disability and shared an error in that gene). Landrey has those exact illnesses but we don’t yet know if it’s tied to her cardiac condition or the cause of her immune-deficiency.” We do know it was not inherited, so it cannot be passed through future generations. We don’t know if her immune system will break down now or in the future. We don’t know what this gene does, so what part of the brain does it impact as you age. We know every time she needs the CSNK2B gene from the time she was being formed in-utero and building her brain and body to daily human function today, the gene is not making the correct protein. Genes make proteins. Each gene is really just a recipe for making a certain protein. You are made of proteins. They build, grow and regulate your body.

We learned two things. They know nothing concrete about it and there is no cure.

We learned two things. They know nothing concrete about it and there is no cure. It took a few weeks to settle in. One day it just hit us. Of course, this would be the diagnosis: an unknown future, an uncertain plan and unsettling journey, a complete inability to repair, a complete inability to control the outcome. No amount of money, power or influence at this time would be able to heal her.

We need God.

We didn’t know it when we started this journey several days before Easter of 2012 that this would be the story. To be honest, we prayed in full faith for a complete miracle. We believed she would be healed. I wasn’t really comfortable with the idea that God could allow a baby to continually suffer in pain in multiple ways for life. The entire journey I have flare ups. “Hmm God, you’re letting her suffer? You’ve allowed this to be so expensive that we have depleted every single resource and maxed our credit line. We keep standing in faith for healing. You heal, we tell the world You moved and kept her alive, but then allow another storm to come. Are we being tested or showcased? Are we failing? Or are we being used by You in such a way in this day in age that you are asking us to carry this torch.”

Landrey fighting bacterial and viral pneumonia in 2018
Of course, it would be this diagnosis. This entire journey is about what do you do with your faith in God when your circumstances don’t line up with what you’re praying or seeing. When you can’t control it. When you’re absolutely helpless. When you have to lean on His presence minute by minute. Will it change our perspective on God when we can't understand His perspective of us. A few years ago, the Lord spoke to me, "Just because you have been given a validated reason to fear (or worry, feel anxious, or be depressed) doesn't give you the right to hang on to this crippling emotion for a lifetime. "My brethren, count it all joy when you fall into various trials, knowing that the testing of your faith produces patience. But let patience have its perfect work, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking nothing. " James 1: 2-4 What does that look like? That means that in the middle of your situation, maybe even your unfair situation, that you don't have the right to walk in anger, fear, worry or doubt. That means we are to choose joy, choose peace, choose to trust in God. You don’t have to choose joy when things are going your way. I may have been give a reason to fear but it does not give me the right. You can ask my best friends, I have not done this every day.

“If Landrey were healthy….” I think about that a lot. What would it be like to hear her talk like her age. What would it be like to hear her version of coding and coming back. What would it be like to hear her tell me what it feels like to meet my eyes when she’s choking during a seizure. What would it feel like to hear her thank a teacher who left their entire job to be her one-on-one aid in school. What would it be like to hear her thank the people who fought to even get her an aid, or the nurses in a cube who have never met her who write stuff so insurance will pay for more. What would it be like to hear her thank grandparents who pause their life and try to find ways to help us. What would it feel like if every moment I didn’t have to trust God that we would have enough money to pay for pediasure for her. What would it feel like to not need Him but to just occasionally show up at church on a Sunday.

Would I be different? I probably would not have told the story of His faithfulness in the dugout this spring during softball. I probably would not have shared my faith over and over and over on social media or in a hospital to resident physicians brought in by the droves to see her every time she gets ill. I probably wouldn’t care quite as much about anyone around me.

Landrey saved us from ourselves.

Why did God choose us? How can we help the next family? These were the questions I started with while I’ve tried to write this multiple times. That’s why the blog is here again.

Is there ever hope for a cure? That’s the sci-fi stuff. No, really it is. Deep level research that no one is doing right now. Why? Because she’s the only one in the United States that has it. The more people who are diagnosed, the more people will be able to put pressure on medical centers to research genetic disorders and how we could rebuild a protein. That type of science is being done in other capacities in other countries, but not on the CSNK2B gene. Why? Because before this diagnosis in the U.S. and this blog post no one even knew to research it, much less throw some funding to hire some to research it.

Will Landrey live long enough for science to catch up to her life-threatening needs? No one can answer that. This little blog I started six years ago will be insight for physicians and people who can read through perhaps similar symptoms and get diagnosed. Because I’m a journalist, it’s in me to write. I’ve documented every critical illness and how many hospitalizations. One of the most helpful things to her current host of specialists is being handed a two-page document on almost six years of life, instead of the 20,000-page chart from her previous medical center in Texas.  

Landrey is a trailblazer.

She is a picture of His unearthly grace for every moment through a journey of pain. What is your biggest fear? Stop and think about it. If ____ happened, it would be too hard to overcome. I would probably be pretty angry with God. I’ve felt that emotion before. I’ve asked Him a lot of questions. Sometimes all I hear is “My Grace is sufficient for you.” I have a choice right then to continue to be angry, fear, doubt, panic, mostly panic or I can trust in Him no matter what report I’m reading on my hospital app.

I believe that’s why Landrey is here.

A picture of His promise. An earthly story of His grace. 

A picture of His promise. An earthly story of His grace.

You’re a fighter, Landrey. You’re not alone.

“But we have this treasure in jars of clay to show that this all-surpassing power is from God and not from us. We are hard pressed on every side, but not crushed; perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not abandoned; struck down, but not destroyed. Therefore, we do not lose heart. Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day. For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So, we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal.” 2 Corinthians 4:7-9, 16-18

Our pretty little warrior 

#GodIsReal #LandreyIsProof
#TilTheWholeWorldKnows

Tuesday, August 7, 2018

Landrey's Journey Part 12 (Fighting iIllness)


This was originally posted January 23, 2018
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Twenty-nine times before this, I had seen things most can go a lifetime without witnessing much less managing. Twenty-nine critical or acutely ill sicknesses. Sometimes clearing an airway. Sometimes Oxygen. Sometimes only silent prayers.
He called back pretty quickly after I texted him. “Yes, you can have clearance to fly. How is she?” My doctor asked as he informed me that I could fly with Landrey in the Children’s leer jet.
It was January 20, 2016. Landrey quite simply was on the brink…again. This was time number 30.
She was three.
I was five months pregnant with our son Stallings living in Texas. Joshua had taken a job in another state about 10 hours away. I also had a four-year-old.
Earlier that day I had an interaction with one of Landrey’s physicians that has challenged and changed my entire perspective as I sit here and type. We were 2.5 hours from Children’s hospital because she was too critical to make it all of the way. We were at a smaller local hospital waiting for transport. I thought they would send an ambulance. I flippantly said, “I’m just going to drive her. I can make it. I’ve seen her sicker.” One of her pediatricians slowly shook his head no, “I’m afraid she is sicker than that.” During this wait for transport, I mentioned some of the fears I face with her in the future. Some too ghastly to type. He paused and said,
“You need to be thankful for every day you have with Landrey.”
I can’t shake it. Those words. They are so basic. But something coming from one of her brilliant physicians who knows more than they can explain about her made me understand something that can’t be described.
Sometimes I feel like Landrey’s life is like waiting for the Children’s Jet to come save us. To take us to a place where they understand her better, where they are equipped to manage her issues and can fix it. Surely, someone’s on their way with answers. I mean all of these tests we always run. Someone today, January 23, 2018 will find an answer as to what is tying this together and how to help her.



Just three nights ago, I held her at 4:30 a.m. as her breathing became irregular with seizures. Surely, they will find a drug that works on her to stop the seizures.
Landrey kept digressing that January 2016 day. She went into the ER with respiratory distress, we finished the day barely hanging on at one of the top-rated Children’s Medical Centers in the U.S. The medical center was full. It took 12 agonizing hours to come get us.
I kept watching her digress rapidly. I felt like I was watching her die and no one was able to save her.
I kept watching her digress rapidly. I felt like I was watching her die and no one was able to save her.
Someone will charge in like Children’s Transport does with the flight suits on. They command the ER room, an air of confidence that is unmatched in an undefeated college football team. Maybe you’ve never seen it. Their voices are louder. Their hands are steadier. Their steps are purposeful. They take control.
My phone rang. It was Landrey’s cardiologist. I’ve been around some coaches but I’m not sure anyone can give pre-game talks like this woman. “Kristen, I need you to do something for me. I need you to be strong. She will feed off of you. If you’re at peace, Landrey will sense that peace. You don’t want them to have to intubate her in the air.” I wanted to cry. I was pregnant. It’s normal. Every time I wanted to cry I pretended I was winning something. Like I was beating the sickness for her with my smile.
Every time I wanted to cry I pretended I was winning something. Like I was beating the sickness for her with my smile.
“You must be Landrey. You must be Mama.” We’re Children’s." They bring in their stretcher. They go to war. They didn’t flinch and neither did I.
Landrey being careflighted Jan 2016
Within 24 hours after the flight and them deeming Landrey completely under control, she took a severe and near-death turn. Landrey’s cardiologist then was in private practice. She wasn’t at that hospital. She cleared her schedule. Every been at a doctor’s office and they are running behind? They might not even be there. They might be 30 minutes away in the CVICU of a hospital they don’t round on, sitting with a mother whose baby is fighting 80 breaths per minute on aggressive Oxygen support. Her body is tiny and helpless. She didn’t have energy to open her eyes. Her chest moved at least two inches out each time just panting to get oxygen as the rest of her body was completely limp.
We’ve learned a lot since then and yet we know less medically than anyone would imagine. The things we have learned are my worst fears. You know the ones you pray in a whisper and beg God that you’ll do anything not to have to bear. And yet, you’ve been chosen. You’ve been selected to showcase at this moment what to do with your faith and attitude when you don’t get your way, at pretty much anything.
I’m reminded today that Landrey is someone I can talk about on social media. But you too probably have something you face. It might not be as dramatic or something you can publicly discuss, but it’s big because it’s what you been asked to carry. Maybe you are waiting to be rescued. Maybe you’re waiting for your break, some answers, some relief. Maybe the future feels more complicated than it even did two years ago.
Some things we may never know. Some things we may not ever understand. But what I do know is that He is real. God. He has been changing my heart from fear to gratefulness. Sometimes I don’t have enough faith to believe that it will play out like I pray it will. So today I just chose to be grateful for what He has done. If I focus on what He has done instead of what He hasn’t in my life, then somehow my bitterness subsides and my faith grows.

Sometimes I don’t have enough faith to believe that it will play out like I pray it will. So today I just chose to be grateful for what He has done. If I focus on what He has done instead of what He hasn’t in my life, then somehow my bitterness subsides and my faith grows.

10 more times since living in our new state.
40 critical illness in the first four years.
“Thankful for every day”
A very simple message that drives me to investigate my motives, surrender my pride, eradicate my fear, and focus on His provision.
“But the eyes of the Lord are on those who fear him, on those whose hope is in his unfailing love, to deliver them from death and keep them alive in famine. We wait in hope for the Lord; he is our help and our shield. In him our hearts rejoice, for we trust in his holy name."
Psalm 33:13-21