MamaHextell

Archive for December, 2009|Monthly archive page

Our new website is live!

In Uncategorized on December 10, 2009 at 4:36 pm

We are so excited to announce that after months of development our new website has launched! We are so excited thinking about how many families we will be able to help with our new site-based fundraising tools. We are also so proud of Dallas and the many many children he has already helped! The Doctor’s Show did a story on him last week during the episode ‘Amazing Medical Surgeries and Procedures’. We are blessed to have him as our son!

Dallas Hextell

In Uncategorized on December 10, 2009 at 4:29 pm

Hi I am the mother of Dallas Hextell, who was born with Cerebral Palsy. Dallas was born on January 8, 2006. From the beginning there were signs. Dallas wouldn’t suckle and had to be fed with a tube taped to his parents’ finger. He also had a sensitivity to light and didn’t seem very alert. Around 6 months he was diagnosed with Torticollis (shortened muscles of the neck) that would require physical therapy and Plagiocephaly (flattening of the head) which would require him to wear a helmet 24 hours a day, and Nystagmus (involuntary movement of the eyes) other than that the pediatrician seemed to think he was “just a little behind”.

Something kept tugging at my heart that this was more than “a little behind”. By his eighth month, he still couldn’t sit up without assistance. I was persistent in insisting that he be seen by a neurologist, he was referred to a Pediatric Neurologist who diagnosed Dallas with Cerebral Palsy. The world stopped for a brief moment while we tried to grasp the news that had just been given to us. After the initial shock and heartbreak and even the loss of dreams we had for Dallas, we realized there were new dreams. Immediately we had him enrolled in every therapy possible. If Dallas could get better we would give him every chance possible. After marginal improvement with conventional therapy, Dallas still could not walk, crawl, talk and was missing most milestones. One day it just hit me that we had banked his umbilical cord blood. Although I hadn’t heard of any treatment, I began to research ways to use his cord blood to improve his condition.

The research led to Dr. Kurtzberg at Duke University in North Carolina. Dr. Kurtzberg was performing re-infusions of stem cells on children with Cerebral Palsy using their own cord blood. Dallas’ parents just knew this is why they had banked his cord blood. It was meant to be!

After extensive testing and interviewing with Dr. Kurtzberg, Duke University Medical Center accepted Dallas as a candidate for the stem cell re-infusion. The cord blood from Dallas’ own umbilical cord wouldl be re-infused into him intravenously and the hope was that the new cells would replace the damaged cells in his brain. Dallas became one of the first children in the United States to receive this treatment for Cerebral Palsy. Unfortunately because it is so new, most insurance will not cover this procedure. The procedure is very expensive and this is why we have started the Dallas Hextell Foundation in an effort to help other families with these expenses and also just to be a support to them. Dallas is doing great now and is attending pre-school and is going to be a big brother in March!

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