Corey Chambers Real Estate Newsletter April 2021 SoCal Home – Your Referrals Help the Kids

Here Comes the Tax Man.  And Here Comes a Tax Break:

TAX Day Delay!! IRS extends tax deadline to May 17, 2021.  I recently read where we were working Jan. 1 through June 30th of each year, just to pay all of our taxes. In Canada, add another month or two. After that, you keep all you make. Prior to that, 100% goes to the government in some form or fashion to pay for some kind of government worker, work program, social program, defense, project, health care, common good, common projects, emergency bailouts etc. Whatever you want to call it, April 15th is usually TAX day; the deadline for filing your federal in-come taxes in the U.S.A. But not this year. #coreychambers #realestate #news

So, in celebration of this special time of year, let’s talk TAX relief. If you received last month’s letter from me, you will recall our goal of trying to raise $25,000.00 for Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, the areas #1 Not for Profit Hospital for Young People. But – we need your help and I believe you can benefit from the TAX relief as well.  #chla #referralshelpkids Just down the street from where I am typing this, CHLA has a full house of kids fighting for their lives. For them and their parents’ taxes are not “top of mind”, health is. Living is. Surviving is. As you may have heard, Children’s Hospital is front and center in the fight against nasty diseases that destroy or cut short the lives of Children. Things like Cancer, Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, Leukemia, as well as leading the way in early diagnosis of autism and miracle working around spinal cord injuries. We are thankful to have such a wonderful facility close by, doing such great work to help heal and save young people.   |   Blog Video

So even though we are trying to figure out how much we owe the tax man, many are simply hoping they can be here to actually pay taxes. This is why we here at the Corey Chambers Team have resolved to do what we can to help.

For every house we sell this year, we are donating a portion of our income to Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. Our goal, again, is to raise $25,000 to help them in their quest to Heal, Save, Cure and Comfort Children under their care.This is where we need your help and how you can benefit at the same time…

Charitable contributions are tax deductible to a point. Rather than give your money to the government, you should consider making a donation to a charity. I believe it will somehow come back to you, well beyond a simple tax deduction. A core value at our company is “the size of the hole you give through is directly proportionate to the size of the hole you receive through.”  Either way, your referrals are in good hands and help us contribute to a good cause.  Life moves fast for some and we are eager to make the Home Selling and Buying experience a smooth rewarding one. Over the last two decades of helping thousands of families sell their home and/or buy another, we have met some wonderful, loving, caring people. People like you! So, your referrals, those you know considering a move, that we help – you can rest assured that not only will they get the award-winning service we are known for, but that a solid portion of the income we receive from the transaction will go toward a very worthy cause. It’s easy to refer those you know considering buying or selling a home. Here are the options again: 1. You can go to www.ReferralsHelpKids.com and enter their contact info on line or forward the link to who you know considering a move. 2. Of course you can always call me direct as well at 213-880-9910.

Why I support Children’s Hospital Los Angeles

I grew up right here in the Greater Los Angeles Area, born in Los Angeles County at St. Francis Hospital. I remember when I first heard about a young person close to our family suffering from a nasty disease and getting treated for that at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. It was then that I began to pay closer attention to the work they do at that hospital. Since then, I have learned that it is a collection of hard-working healthcare professionals, most making their home right here in the Los Angeles area, all coming together for a common cause. That cause is to help young people overcome unfortunate health issues that life sometimes throws our way. Being a Los Angeles Area California native, I take pride in supporting in a way that I can the good work these people do at Children’s. My team rallys around our annual goal or raising money and donating portions of our income to help Children’s in their quest to heal young people when they need healing. My team and I are committed to providing outstanding results for buyers and sellers referred to us by our past clients. I have discovered that Children’s Hospital Los Angeles shares similar commitment to their patients. And since their services survive on sponsorships and donations, we are happy to contribute and proud to support them.

Sincerely,

P.S. The story of this young person enclosed may cause you to look at your loved ones differently. It did me. Check it out.

It’s easy to refer those you know considering buying or selling a home.  Here are the Options Again:  Enter their contact information at www.ReferralsHelpKids.com, call me direct or pass my number on:  213-880-9910.

Contact Us

Your Home Sold GUARANTEED or I’ll Buy It*
Corey Chambers Team
200 N San Fernando Rd #119, Los Angeles, CA 90031
(213) 880-9910
coreychambers@yahoo.com
Visit us on the web at www.ReferralsHelpKids.com

A Pair of Daring Heart Procedures Save Preemie Alex’s Life

Combining expertise with ingenuity, a team of cardiovascular specialists fixes a rare birth defect in a premature baby.

Noa stood at the starting line, slightly crouched down, right foot in front of the left. He was so nervous, he was shaking. — By Jeff Weinstock

Sarah Badran, MD, knows her audience. “Let me know if I lose you, all right?” she says.

An interventional cardiologist at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, Dr. Badran starts into a plainspoken description of blood circulation that she keeps for the layperson, whether an anxious parent or an easily baffled writer.

She calls on it here to illustrate the birth defect that led her to perform a virtually unprecedented cardiac catheterization procedure on tiny Alex, born Oct. 26, 2020, at 26 weeks with his lungs unattached to his heart, creating a disrupted blood flow that threatened his life.

She begins with a familiar association to explain how one’s blood moves oxygen from the lungs out to the body: “The blood is like an Uber driver,” Dr. Badran says. By the time she finishes, Alex’s disorder is understood and ready for retelling.

In normal circulation, the lungs load the blood with oxygen and send it through the pulmonary veins to the heart’s left atrium, and then out to the body’s organs through the aorta. Then depleted of oxygen, the blood returns to the right side of the heart before getting pumped back into the lungs, and the whole circuit repeats. Before birth, this exchange is formed anatomically, as the pulmonary veins become anchored to the back of the left side of the heart.

In rare instances—1 in 10,000 births—that attachment doesn’t develop. The pulmonary veins “just get lost,” Dr. Badran says, draining the blood out elsewhere within the body and leaving it without any road back to the heart, a birth defect called total anomalous pulmonary venous return (TAPVR).

“What generally happens is, you have a beautiful little baby, they’re born, and then they turn completely blue. That’s usually a big, big emergency.”

To the liver and back

The condition is not easy to see on a prenatal scan because fetal circulation doesn’t involve the still-developing lungs, but instead draws oxygen from the mother’s placenta, so blood flow tends to appear fine.

Alex’s abnormality wasn’t discovered until a week after he was born, when his breath began to grow short. An echocardiogram revealed he had TAPVR and that his pulmonary veins were depositing blood into his liver. The diagnosis got him transferred to Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.

Alex’s blood, however, was managing to return to his heart through a blood vessel located in the liver called the ductus venosus. The same vessel is employed in utero, though that’s by nature’s design, as it passes oxygenated blood to the heart after receiving it from the umbilical vein, which extends out of the placenta. Shortly after birth, that ductus venosus typically closes off and a new breathing apparatus, led by the lungs, takes over.

The irregularities caused by prematurity may have saved Alex, as his ductus stayed partially open, allowing blood to stream through it and reach his heart. Once there, the blood would pass from the right to left chamber through a hole called the patent foramen ovale, and then, freshly oxygenated, flow out to the body.

“It was a wackadoodle circulation,” Dr. Badran says, “but that’s how he was staying alive.”

The one chance to save him

That passage through the ductus venosus, however, was on its way to sealing shut, so some intervention had to be made. Dr. Badran and her colleague in CHLA’s Heart Institute, Neil Patel, MD, discussed next steps with cardiothoracic surgeon John Cleveland, MD, who would do the open-heart surgery that Alex needed to fix his congenital defect. They agreed that the operation was too risky for a baby so unstable.

The safer option was to wait until Alex developed more, as close to full term as they could get him, before Dr. Cleveland would operate. In the interim, the plan was for Dr. Badran and Dr. Patel to put a stent into the ductus venosus to keep it open so it would continue to convey blood to Alex’s heart.

That decision meant Dr. Badran and Dr. Patel were faced with trying something that, according to Dr. Cleveland, had only been done a handful of times worldwide, and never at Children’s Hospital: stenting a ductus venosus in a premature baby. The procedure is so unusual because TAPVR, as uncommon as it is across all births, is hardly ever reported in preemies.

Dr. Badran and Dr. Patel were unfazed. They were confident they could apply fundamental techniques and their accumulated expertise to an entirely new predicament.

“The thing about pediatric interventional cardiology is that it’s always like that,” Dr. Badran says. “Everything is so rare we’re always kind of engineering our way through these types of situations. I know everything I need to know about premature babies, and I teach embryology in med school. I know everything there is to know about the ductus venosus system, blood flow, and what the vessels are like, how they’re shaped, and why they close and why they open.

“The only chance to save Alex was to try to stent this open, which would not be fixing the problem. It would just basically be making it like he hadn’t been born yet.”

The day after the determination was made to try to install a stent, Alex’s blood pressure and oxygen levels began to fall, signs the ductus venosus was closing. The doctors were compelled to move Alex, only 17 days old, into the catheterization lab. Dr. Badran recounts the delicacy of the procedure—and exults over its success.

“To take this tiny little person,” she says, “and put an IV in his neck vein and try to find this threadlike thing, thinner than a wire—we almost couldn’t find it—then stretch it with a balloon and put a stent in—it was a technical tour de force. It worked, and it stabilized him.”

Restoring the anatomy

He was stabilized but not safe, and would spend the next several weeks watched by neonatologist Jennifer Shepherd, MD, in the Steven & Alexandra Cohen Foundation Newborn and Infant Critical Care Unit. “When I heard we were getting a baby who was 26 weeks with obstructed infradiaphragmatic TAPVR,” she says, “my first thought was, how are we going to keep him alive? It just was unheard of.”

As they worked to maintain Alex’s circulation until he reached an age and a weight suitable for surgery, Dr. Shepherd and her team had to respond to any unfavorable movement in his oxygen levels or blood tests. “We had a very low threshold to get echocardiograms to make sure that stent was still open.”

Alex made it to 37 weeks in gestational age, but not without needing more time in the cath lab to keep the stented area from closing. At 37 weeks, imaging showed the ductus venosus was again narrowing, so on Jan. 5, Dr. Cleveland brought Alex to the operating room to establish a connection between his lungs and heart. Though Dr. Cleveland had done the procedure often, Alex’s size—still only 4 pounds—added to the risk.

“Repair of total anomalous pulmonary venous return is a routine operation; we probably see six or seven cases a year,” he says. “There’s just less room for error when children are that small.”

With Alex on the bypass machine and his body cooled to about 65 degrees Fahrenheit, Dr. Cleveland removed his heart from his chest and began the repair. He tied off what he calls the “anomalous pathway,” the ductus venosus that had kept Alex’s blood flowing, then sewed the pulmonary veins to the back of the left atrium, where they should have originally attached. He set Alex’s heart back into his chest, warmed his body up and returned him to intensive care.

“Everything went well,” Dr. Cleveland says. “The goal of the operation was to restore normal anatomy, which we did.”

Follow-up scans have all looked good. With Dr. Patel staying on as Alex’s cardiologist, Dr. Cleveland expects his work has ended. “He’ll get echocardiograms because that’s part of the deal, but this should be the only heart operation he needs for this condition.”

It’s not often that open-heart surgery on a newborn is the postscript, but while it culminated Alex’s heart repair, from all accounts what set it apart was the opening act. Stenting the ductus venosus on a preemie that small was not merely delicate but untried.

“From my review of the literature, nobody else in California had done it,” Dr. Cleveland says. “I think it was a California first.”

While exhilarated by the achievement, Dr. Badran saves her strongest, lengthiest accolades for the efforts of the anesthesiologists and the neonatologists and other support staff, “the village that it took,” she says, to keep Alex intact so she and Dr. Patel could do their work.

“To transport such a tiny baby, that sick, get him safely on the cath lab table without dislodging the breathing tube, and give him the right medications, and the way the nurses and the techs all coordinated, and hospital maintenance heating up the cath lab to 82 degrees to make sure he wouldn’t get cold—they somehow managed to keep him alive while we found that vein.

“We had stented tiny things on lots of babies, getting into small little blood vessels and opening them, but the amount of cooperation and collaboration between all the divisions, it was just a beautiful orchestration of teamwork.”

Article and photos courtesy Children’s Hospital Los Angeles

How you can help:

Refer your friends, neighbors, associates or family members considering making a move:

www.ReferralsHelpKids.com or call Corey at 213-880-9910.

LOFT & CONDO LISTINGS DOWNTOWN LA [MAP]

Lofts For Sale
Map Homes For Sale Los Angeles

SEARCH LOFTS FOR SALE  Affordable  |  Popular  |  Luxury  |  Sold Browse by   Building   |   Neighborhood   |   Size   |   Bedrooms   |   Pets   |   Parking

 Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog and LAcondoInfo.com with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, BRE#01889449 We are not associated with the homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact (213) 880-9910 or visit LAcondoInfo.com  Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.

Corey Chambers Real Estate Newsletter March 2021 SoCal Home

Your Referrals Help the Kids   #realestate #news #socal

Corey Chambers SoCal Home Real Estate Newsletter
Corey Chambers SoCal Home Real Estate Newsletter

The Lucky Month

All I can say is WOW! I am sitting here at my computer thinking of how grateful I am for the value so many, like you, bring to my real estate business, looking out my home office window and the skies are blue. Spring is here and we can be thankful of our wonderful Southern California weather.   |   Blog Video

For many across this great country it’s still freezing COLD and snowy! We in the Greater Los Angeles area never see a snowflake all winter long unless we decide to go on a ski trip. It very well could be super stormy or drought dry today here (but it’s not). One thing is for sure, it’s a lucky month as West L.A. homes sales boom and Downtown prepares to re-open for business.  #coreychambers

Just like the weather seasons come and seasons go, so do the seasons of life. I’m sure you have noticed, as I have, the older I get the faster the seasons move by. These “seasons of life” go by so fast, my hope is that you enjoy each one or at least grow from each one. Yes. Some of life’s seasons will be HOT and others will be COLD, some high and some low. The lows we want to move by quickly, the highs we want to stay in forever.

Seasons of Life
Seasons of Life

So, what does this have to do with you or your home or real estate? 

Well, spring is a time of action, people busy trying to get things done they could not do during the winter months. Sort of a renewing of the mind, spirit, of many things GOOD! Hopefully this special season will bring awesome happenings your way as your year unfolds. Wouldn’t it be great to simply just grab your favorite book along with your favorite lounge chair, set it right down in your favorite spot somewhere, outside or next to your window, while looking out on a beautiful Spring day and simply ‘RELAX”. Yea, that would be nice. My hope is that you will get to something like that on more than one occasion this Spring. Really enjoy the place you call home! The NEXT season will be here before you know it.

Unfortunately, there are some that will have a Spring Time they would much rather forget. Like it says in the Seasons of Life, with all the beauty this time of year brings, there is also the ugly for some. Just down the street from where I am typing this, Children’s Hosptial Los Angeles has a full house of kids fighting for their lives. For them and their families, the Ground Hog seeing or not seeing its shadow is the furthest thing from their mind. Don’t get me wrong, these families long to see their kids out in the yard playing or riding their bikes – but for now, they are praying this Spring will be a season of healing.

Your Referrals Help the Kids…

As you may have heard, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles is front and center in the fight against nasty diseases that destroy or cut short the lives of children. We are thankful to have such a wonderful facility close by, doing such great work to help heal and save young people. Even though we are eager to enjoy Spring, others are simply hoping they can be here to see it. This is why we here at the Corey Chambers Team have resolved to do what we can to help.

As you know Children’s Hospital depends on sponsorships and donations to help in their work to heal and save the kids. So we have pledged to donate a portion of our income from home sales to Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. Our goal is to raise $25,000 (we have already raised over $3,500) to help them in their quest to heal, save, cure and comfort children under their care.

This is where you can help…

Life moves fast for some and we are eager to make the Home Selling or Home Buying experience a smooth and rewarding one. Over the last 15 years of helping thousands of home buyers, sellers, landlords and renters, we have met some wonderful, loving, caring people. People like you!

For anyone considering a move that we help, you can rest assured that not only will they get the award-winning service we are known for, but that a portion of the income we receive from the transaction will go toward a very worthy cause.

Your Referrals Really Do Help the Kids…

I want to make it easy to refer your friends, neighbors, associates or family members considering making a move, so here are your options: 

You can go to www.ReferralsHelpKids.com and enter their contact info on line or forward the link to who you know considering a move. 

Of course you can always call me direct as well at 213-880-9910.

You and your referrals mean more than ever to my team and me. As we move forward in this new season, please know we are extremely thankful for you being a special part of our business.

With all my appreciation.

P.S. The story of this young person enclosed may cause you to look at your loved ones differently. It did me. Check it out.

It’s easy to refer those you know considering buying or selling a home. Here are the options again:

You can go to www.ReferralsHelpKids.com and enter their contact info on line or forward the link to who you know considering a move.

Of course you can always call me direct as well at 213-880-9910.

Why I Support Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles

I grew up right here in Los Angeles. Born right nearby at St. Francis Hospital. I remember when I first heard about a young person close to our family suffering from a nasty disease and getting treated for that at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. It was then that I began to pay closer attention to the work they do at that hospital. Since then, I have learned that it is a collection of hard working health care professionals, most making their home right here in the Los Angeles area, all coming together for a common cause. That cause is to help young people over come unfortunate health issues that life sometimes throws our way. Being a Los Angeles area, California native, I take pride in supporting in any way that I can the good work these people do at Children’s. My team rally’s around our annual goal of raising money and donating portions of our income to help Children’s in their quest to heal young people when they need healing. My team and I are committed to providing outstanding results for buyers and sellers referred to us by our past clients. I have discovered that Children’s Hospital Los Angeles shares similar commitments to their patients. And since their services survive on sponsorships and donations we are happy to contribute and proud to support them.

Sincerely,

888-240-2500

Your Home Sold GUARANTEED or I’ll Buy It* Corey Chambers 888-240-2500

Referrals help the kids at Children's Hospital Los Angeles

A Preemie’s First Year: 12 Months of Worry

By Jeff Weinstock  |  A preemie bingo card is not one that any parent wants to have success filling up, but as darkly humorous recreation it served its purpose for Josie. She found it posted on an Instagram account by a fellow parent of a preterm baby and decided to play.

“It was like all the different things that can go wrong with your preemie,” she says.

Once she was done matching the squares to her son Lincoln’s many maladies, there was hardly an empty box left.

“I think we had like five bingos on there. Not everything that can go wrong, but most of it.”

Classified a micropreemie because he was born at 25 weeks—any earlier than 26 weeks earns the designation—and weighing only 2 pounds, Lincoln has faced a string of serious conditions. His need for expert, comprehensive treatment led Josie and her husband, Josey, to transfer Lincoln to Children’s Hospital Los Angeles in fall 2019, where he has been receiving care across several divisions, including Neurosurgery, Pulmonology, Cardiothoracic Surgery and Neurology.

“I feel like there’s been 12 months of worry,” Josey says. “I said to my mom early on, ‘I just want the worry to stop.’ And she said, ‘Oh, honey, I’ve been waiting 35 years for that.’”

Fixing the brain’s plumbing

Within hours of Lincoln’s birth on Sept. 5, 2019, the many perils associated with prematurity began to surface. He was found to have an intraventricular hemorrhage—bleeding in and around the brain’s ventricles, which contain the cerebrospinal fluid. The bleed can impede the flow of the fluid, causing a surplus to build up in the ventricles, a condition known as hydrocephalus. That overload of fluid puts pressure on the brain and can harm its development.

CHLA neurosurgeon Peter Chiarelli, MD, says he monitored Lincoln intently but didn’t act straightaway as Lincoln’s system was absorbing almost all the fluid his brain was manufacturing, so the excess took time to collect and show itself. “The presence of hydrocephalus was very subtle,” he says. “It wasn’t apparent until months were allowed to pass.”

At a visit in January, the indicators began to coalesce. An MRI showed that the surplus fluid was mounting, and in five weeks the growth of Lincoln’s head size had begun to accelerate, a sign his skull was trying to accommodate the increased pressure.

Plus, some anecdotal evidence weighed in. The family reported that Lincoln’s eyes would occasionally drift downward, more warning that the brain was under extra pressure. With that, the decision was made to move ahead with a procedure to divert the spinal fluid.

“Even though it was a lot to take in,” Josie says, “we knew the facts were clear. This is what he needs, this is what we’re going to do.”

In June, Dr. Chiarelli placed a drainage system, called a shunt, into the ventricles of the brain to siphon off the excess spinal fluid, which would then be emptied into the abdomen, where it could be reabsorbed. The pressure inside Lincoln’s brain returned to normal.

“Everything else in his body stayed completely in balance,” Dr. Chiarelli says. “It’s basically solving the brain’s plumbing problem.”

The shunt will stay put, continuing to drain excess fluid from the surface of the brain and grow as Lincoln grows. “That same shunt can support him at adult size. He’ll check in with his neurosurgeon once a year to make sure everything’s OK. If everything’s going well, it’s a quick visit.”

A sleep study disappoints

The brain bleed was unfortunately only one of two bleeding episodes Lincoln experienced. A day after his birth, he suffered a rare, frightening pulmonary hemorrhage that caused blood to stream out of his nose and mouth. Doctors were able to arrest the potentially fatal event, but it left a mark.

“We sort of knew it set us up for a longer-term pulmonary journey,” Josie says.

With preemies, intubation usually follows right after birth, to provide sufficient oxygen that their inexperienced lungs can’t deliver. At about a month old, the tube was removed from Lincoln’s airway and he began taking oxygen through a nasal cannula. Once needing it 24 hours a day, Lincoln now wears the cannula only when he sleeps.

His parents hoped that an overnight sleep study done in mid-September would show that Lincoln was able to stay oxygenated while asleep so he could stop wearing the nasal cannula altogether, but with 90 minutes remaining and his oxygen level falling, the cannula had to be reactivated.

“Given his degree of prematurity, it’s not entirely unexpected that he would continue to need oxygen,” Lincoln’s pulmonologist, Mark Selleck, MD, says. “We have children who need oxygen as late as 2 years. It’s disappointing for the parents, but it’s not surprising. He just needs to grow a bit more.”

Dr. Selleck says there will be some lasting impairment from the lungs’ underdevelopment, but it’s unlikely to be significant.

“Will he become an Olympian? Maybe not. Will he be able to play a good game of racquetball? Can he participate in sports and do all the things the rest of us do? Probably.”

A hole in the heart

A blood vessel called the ductus arteriosus caused more trouble for Lincoln. While babies are in the womb and drawing on the mother’s oxygen, the ductus arteriosus carries blood away from the inactive lungs, which are still developing, and sends it straight down to the aorta, optimizing fetal circulation.

After birth, the vessel should naturally seal up. Lincoln’s remained open, creating a doorway between the heart’s two main arteries—the pulmonary artery going out to the lungs and the aorta, which serves the body—where there should not be one, an abnormality called a patent ductus arteriosus (PDA). Blood meant to go out through the aorta to nourish the body flows into the lungs. Hence the condition’s informal name: a hole in the heart.

In preemies like Lincoln, cardiologist Patrick Sullivan, MD, explains, the ductus is more likely to stay open because, by its timetable, it’s still needed.

“It wasn’t meant to close until later in gestation,” he says. “They’re not supposed to be outside the body of their mom, right?”

The influx of blood forces a newborn’s lungs to work harder while depriving other organs of their portion.

“It places babies at greater risk for brain injuries, kidney injuries,” Dr. Sullivan says. “All of these organs can be compromised by having a ductus siphoning blood away from them.”

Weeks of medication failed to close Lincoln’s PDA, which began gaining in size, so Dr. Sullivan intervened. He had the benefit of a new device called a Piccolo Occluder specifically sized to close PDAs in premature babies. A catheter is entered through the groin and threaded up to the heart. Once at the blood vessel, the doctor releases the device—a plug that gets laid atop the vessel and caps it.

After a year of monitoring, if the plug is still functioning successfully, the issue is considered cured. Eventually, the once-troublemaking blood vessel goes away. “There aren’t really any problems that you anticipate developing after a year,” Dr. Sullivan says.

The post-op cardiology visits have been the least worrisome, Josey says. “They do an EKG and a little ultrasound, and then they say, ‘Yes, looks good.’ Those are our favorite appointments.”

Signs of seizure

In mid-August, Lincoln’s parents noticed he was repeatedly turning his head to the right.

“It seemed like something he couldn’t help,” Josey says. “He brought his hands together like he was trying to console himself, then he would come back to the center and look at me. But he would just keep turning his head to the right.”

That observation was enough for neurologist Andrew Ng, MD, to make a determination.

“A lot of times we don’t have the benefit of seeing the events, so we go off the history,” Dr. Ng says. “Based on the description, it sounded like a seizure. And if it sounds like a seizure, we treat it as a seizure.”

He started Lincoln on anti-seizure medication but had to switch it up a month later when Josey and Josie’s watchfulness led to a second abnormal finding. They saw that Lincoln had begun to let his head droop and was smiling less. Was it simply a negligible change in mood, or a sign something aberrant had occurred?

A six-hour video EEG, which allowed Dr. Ng to observe Lincoln’s behavior, unfortunately proved it was the latter. This time the diagnosis was infantile spasms, an epilepsy syndrome associated with early childhood.

Dr. Ng replaced the medication he had prescribed to deal with Lincoln’s initial seizure with one that he says can handle both.

This need to keep a trained eye on Lincoln’s demeanor can put his parents in a hard position, trying to discern an insignificant gesture from a notable change in behavior. Consider the puzzle they face with drowsiness, which can be an alert for seizures or a malfunctioning shunt.

“You don’t want to always be thinking that, oh, he’s drowsy, therefore there’s some terrible thing happening, because people get drowsy,” Josey says.

“Yeah,” Josie follows up, “maybe he just ate a big breakfast.”

Dr. Ng says it’s something they will become more attuned to as they continue to live with the specter of seizures. “It’s not like the skin, where if you have a cut it heals up. We’re born with all the neurons we’ll ever have. Unfortunately, this is not something the brain can outgrow.”

Prospects and promises

Shortly outside a year since he was brought to CHLA, Lincoln’s care now focuses on his development. He’s working with therapists on his motor skills, speaking and cognitive function, all of which are lagging. It’s unknown how much catching up he can do, and to what extent the effects of prematurity, particularly the initial brain bleed, will obstruct him.

“We don’t know what that might mean for him going forward,” Josie says. “We’re going to keep pushing him toward all the milestones, and we’ll figure out what his prospects are as we go along.”

The only hard cap placed on his potential precludes him from ever becoming an astronaut, a consequence of the shunt. “If that’s his limitation, to stay on Earth, then I suppose it could be worse,” Josie says.

There have been victories, too, recorded dutifully by his parents: feeding himself with a spoon, sitting up for longer stretches of time, his first utterances.

“For the first time, he’s almost on the growth chart,” Josie says. “He’s in the 1st percentile, which for us, we’re like, ‘Yeah!’”

She recalls the first time she got to see Lincoln, after he had been rushed off to intensive care right after birth. She could talk to but not touch him.

“He didn’t look like a normal baby. He was hooked up to so many monitors, and he had the breathing tube down his throat. And he had a little mask over his eyes because he was having the blue-light treatment for his skin. I saw him and I cried. And I said something like, ‘I love you and I’m your mom.’ Then I paused and I said, ‘I don’t really know what to say yet, but I’ll get better at it.’ And then I told him about a lot of things. I told him, and I remember I needed to tell him in that moment, I said, ‘It’s not supposed to be like this, and it will be better. I promise.’”  Story and photos courtesy Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.

How you can help

To help kids just like Lincoln, refer a friend at www.ReferralsHelpKids.com or call Corey at 213-880-9910.

Find out how much the home down the street sold for. Get a free list of lofts, condos or houses that sold nearby recently, with photos and prices, as wells as currently listed homes.  Fill out the online form:

LOFT & CONDO LISTINGS DOWNTOWN LA [MAP]

  Lofts For Sale     Map Homes For Sale Los Angeles

SEARCH LOFTS FOR SALE Affordable | PopularLuxury
Browse by   Building   |   Neighborhood   |   Size   |   Bedrooms   |   Pets   |   Parking

Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog and LAcondoInfo.com with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, BRE#01889449  Story and photos courtesy Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. For more information, contact (213) 880-9910 or visit LAcondoInfo.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.  Children’s Hospital Patient Story and photos copyright Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.   |   Blog Video