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Cri Du Chat Support
Group of
Australia
Chantelle
4 years old
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Hello Margarette,
My name is Dawn Harris and I have a little girl called Chantelle
who is now
7 months. Even during my LONG pregnancy I knew something wasn't
quite right,
developing a blood clot on my lung halfway through, and with the baby lying
transverse
most of the time causing great concern. She was finally
delivered by
c-section and weighed an amazing 9lb 2oz but I could tell something
was
amiss.
She had the strange cry we all know, in fact we called her the
kitten for
awhile! Her eyes were wide apart and she constantly slept and
slept, not
eating at all. As my other 3 babies were huge and good feeders I
was alert
to this.
I kept on at my doctor and health visitor who said she was normal (I
thought I was
mad at this time!) Finally we were referred to our lovely
consultant
who sent off for the DNA tests and diagnosed cri du chat when
Chantelle was
4 months old. In fact it was a relief to have a name.
Chantelle has 9 out of 10 of the major characteristics, an ASD
(Atrial Septal Defect - heart defect), hearing
loss, curvature of the spine and very low muscle tone BUT she is
the most loving and delightful child to have. A real little
scamp. I'm discovering
that all
of these CDC kids have a wonderful nature despite the problems.
She doesn't head bang so much now, just when really upset, and
since the doctors
sorted her acid reflux out she doesn't cry much either.
She is my 4th child, so we're pretty busy and I've given up full
time work
to care for her. I know the future differs for all of these
children but you
always hope for the best don't you?
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We have a strong faith, she comes to our church every Sunday and
gets
massive amounts of attention, but life has changed dramatically
with her
arrival and we have all had to make adjustments.
Here in South Wales in the UK, the support has been fab,
consultants, health
visitors, physio, speech therapy you name it, we've got it! I
believe by
bringing her on in the best way we know how, with early
intervention and the
help of her siblings, (Curtis 16, Chelsea 9, Courtney 7) she will
have a far
better chance at a better life.
Yes I have my down moments when she's refusing all solid food, or
most often
refusing her bottle as she has an oral aversion, or head banging,
or refusing
to sit and throwing herself about, not using her arms like they
were broken,
BUT, I am surviving, and slowly we are coming out of the long dark
tunnel,
managing better, coping more and trying to live like a normal
family would. Please include us on your directory to let others see
Chantelle....it
encourages me when I read of other parents going thru the same.
Thank you for your time, Margarette Best wishes Dawn Harris
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UPDATE SEPTEMBER
2004
I think Chantelle has that classic
look of CDC, wide apart eyes, with no nose bridge just yet, and a tiny mouth. She still hasn't grown in
head circumference either, making her look just like a new born prem
baby! The only thing that gives it away is she is incredibly long with
ballerina legs. Her weight gain has been slow but steady and she now weighs 17lb 7oz
which is just under 8 kilos.
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I know most of us parents have a real hard time with the food
issues....months ago it was recommended she had a tube fitted to
help feed, but I just found it too distressing to look at and kept imagining
she was in pain, so I asked if I could feed her my way.
My lovely Dr Falco (tall, dark, handsome, you get the
picture....visits are a joy, lol) agreed that as long as she didn't lose weight I could feed her
my way. It was an incredibly slow process at first, taking 2hours each feed,
I didn't go out, there was no time, but slowly Chantelle made progress
from bottle to solid food and mixed feeding. She hated the milk, so my
dietician put her on Infatrini, a special all-in-one milk feed....and the amount
of bottles I bought from specialised shops for babies with high palates etc,..before she settled on a really cheap
one from a pound shop! She also hated tinned/baby jar foods, so for the first time ever
I
did all home made. My hubby cooks Sunday lunch, so he'd do a huge dinner and
I'd blitz the dinners in the afternoon, making 14 in one go. 2 for each
day. I knew that there was 5 veg/potato/meat and gravy in so I wasn't
worried. She had custard/pureed fruit/semolina/yoghurt for puds.
I still can't get her to eat lumps in her food but for anyone having
this problem too, don't worry bout it coz I've found giving finger foods
helps train her with lumps, and once she gets into a routine of the odd lump or
2 you should be OK.
I mean if she can eat garlic bread, choccy buttons, and all
other
stuff that
she isn't supposed to have, I'm sure she's just having me on!!
But seriously, if you're one of those contemplating a tube, think carefully....a little perseverance works wonders.
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Body-wise, we were hoping Chantelle would be sitting by now....she
can
manage a few seconds by herself, but we all work on this, specially
Chelsea
and Courtney who are desperate for her to sit so she can play
better games. I
guess you have to realise that they were expecting a normal baby as
well as us, and not being able to do normal stuff with her, such as
feeding/walking/playing has hit them too. But we all try and do a
bit of physio with her each day.
She's just been fitted for tiny training shoes to help her feet stay
flat as
she is forever pointing feet, and also a standing frame to encourage
her to
stand straight instead of bending.
Her lower body is strong and she tries to use her feet/legs to play
with her
toys instead of her hands. Her upper body has always been weak, so
hopefully
this frame will encourage strength. One of her hands still 'fists'
most of
the time...hand training splints worked well in early stages and has
pulled
one hand straight but she's now at the stage where she can take them
off of
her own accord, so we've given up on that one.
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Her tummy valve is still lax....gastro reflux continues to b a
problem, and
the medicines are harder to give as she is so strong and it literally
is a
battle. The doctors are considering putting a little tube in her tummy
to
administer the meds.
Head banging is still profound, mainly at night when she is tired,
but also
upon getting excited at seeing people or hearing noises. My health
visitor has
made contact with a child psychologist who is going to contact me
with
guidelines to this bizarre behaviour so I will pass on any info she
gives
me, as I know it is a major problem in CDC. We are thinking, if it
carries on, about getting a padded wall mat just to protect her.
Her hearing has improved, she has full hearing, and her eyesight was
fine at
the test. She does have a hole in the heart, but the heart doc wants
to wait and see before he jumps in with surgery.
Her sleep continues to be a BIG problem. She is totally restless and
rarely
sleeps thru...hubby has taken to putting her in bed with us in
middle of
night but then neither of us are having a good nights sleep, and she
doesn't
care, coz she can sleep in day!Dr Falco gave us melatonin, but I
have to say it made no difference.
Speech wise, she can say dad (why do they ALWAYS say that first?
it's so
gutting!!) But I think on looking at other kiddies she is at a
6 month stage really, and
I know that with each passing month she falls further behind. I do
get a little frustrated when she has a toy in front of her and she
just looks at it half the time....but we're working with her
all the time.
I found respite care myself, as the council here had no one for
her...and they
are just brill. Five kids themselves, but all in school/work in the
day, so just
George and Tracy with Chantelle for the 2 mornings a week they have
her,
plus they go to my church and I do feel a real peace when they have
her. No
worrying, I just get on....mainly packing as we're moving for second
time in a
year!!
BUT, bad news aside, Chantelle is a very happy baby.....rarely
cries, giving
kisses now to anyone who wants one, claps hands for Nanny, and is a
real
grandma's girl, and I have to say most people tell me what a
contented baby she
is. It is MUCH easier than it ever was, so for all parents out
there,
pulling their hair out in the first year, it's OK. Go with the flow,
don't
expect too much, lean on people when they ask. Our marriage has not
only survived this, but has become stronger than it ever was....so
there is HOPE. Believe
it. And love that child more than anything.
Dawn Harris
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UPDATE
FEBRUARY 2005
Just thought I'd update Chantelle's page with how she is doing
and hope it
encourages others.
Chantelle is now 17 months old and has finally learnt to crawl!!
She was
very tentative at first, only taking it slow, but she is now
gathering pace
and roams from room to room, or generally stays in the lounge
and plays with
her toys, occasionally climbing up to the TV and trying to pat
whatever is on
TV. (When we were watching the snooker, she tried to grab the
bright balls
off the screen). But this new mode of movement means she is a
lot more content in
herself as she can get what she wants when she wants it.
Walking is a good way off yet but she has been plastered for
splints which
are being fitted next week and will keep her feet in a flat
position instead
of on tiptoes and pointing outwards.She can now stand up straight instead of leaning forward, so any
parent
despairing of their child looking like a puppet on a string, be
patient,
they do get there.
When the splints are on she should be able to use a walking frame
to hold onto
(I call it a junior Zimmer frame) and learn to walk in the same
way as an
able bodied child would use a trolley. When Chani takes her first independent steps, we have decided we
will throw
a party!
Speech-wise, she goes thru phases of saying things then not
saying anything
for awhile. She can say Dad, bye bye, bear, ta, mama, and mum.
However what
is more important is that she understands a lot more than those
few words.
She understands if I say "wipe your nose" and promptly does so,
or have a
wash, wash your hair, etc....and this is important as it shows
she can follow
direction. She can also use sign language to say thank you, and
other simple expressions.
And for all of you out there who are saying, "yes, well my baby
has a large
deletion and is a severe case" etc...we had the FISH analysis
back 2 weeks
ago that states she has a very large deletion and is in the
severe bracket.
SO there is hope and yes you do have to put in LOADS of work but
it pays off.
Socially, Chani is more interactive and regularly gives kisses
out and hugs
if you're lucky, even managing to go to respite overnight on a
weekly basis!
Here is a tip for those considering respite care but are holding
back....DON'T!!!!
Respite was the best thing we ever did. It's hard at first,
especially if
they cry, and when you think that only you know how to look
after your child.
It's true, only you do know what's best but your respite can
learn and even
if they do it their way, it's still good. Gradually you get used
to the fact
that you can have a bit of time away from caring....and lets
face it, caring
for cri du chat kids is full time and full on. You never seem to
have a minute
without them, even at night when they're in your bed! So build up the care as
you're going, couple of hours to start with, then half a
day, building up to the
full day...once you have experienced that sense of freedom to
either garden
or go browsing or go to bed(!) then it becomes something you can
embrace. And
so does the child, who comes to accept that this house they
visit is fine and the
carers are people they can love and in the end, the child learns
to anticipate it.
Remember that your child likes consistency, so try and provide
care on
consecutive days.
It took us quite a few months to build up to overnight care, and
I only gave
in because George (the carer) nagged and nagged me and got on my
nerves!
So on New Year's eve I sent her to stay over, which the respite
family
thoroughly enjoyed specially being New Years eve, it seemed
significant.
I missed her terribly...my hubby works New Years Eve so he was
absent. My mum
stayed and I had my 2 girls and nobody could mention her name
coz we missed
her that much. But I decided that it was useless to mope, so we
went to the
club, played pool and darts, and did stuff we couldn't have done
with Chani.
After that, it has become a regular Fri night sleepover...it
means I can
teach dance, come home and allow my 2 girls a friend each to
sleep over,
watch a DVD uninterrupted with sweeties and have a good nights
sleep.
It also means that I look forward to the time I pick her up and
have renewed
enthusiasm to start another week of caring for her. My hubby
isn't so keen as
he misses her, but it's me that does most of the caring and I
feel I deserve it!
So I hope I have given some of you hope/inspiration, CDC kids
take
everything at a very slow pace as I have found out, but it is
such a joy
when they finally conquer something that has taken months of
hard work.
Dawn Harris
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Chantelle is now 2 and half and boy is she
naughty!!
I thought she might be walking but as I
write this she is still just taking tentative steps across
small paces and usually puppet like, as well as falling most
of the time...but it is improvement. She has had both legs
in plaster for 2 months to try and correct the positioning
of her feet, but they are off now and splints are back on.
She's taken to crawling like a monkey, hands
and feet on floor. She's pretty quick tho!
I long for her to walk and be able to follow
me about doing every day stuff.
Her hands are still not working properly,
she always uses her middle finger when switching buttons or
moving objects and my son thinks this is hilarious as he's
gotten her to give the middle finger up!
She loves to go on the trampoline and would
spend all day in the garden if it were possible. If she
could walk this would be much better, but as it is, she just
crawls everywhere.
Since my last update, our family dynamics
have changed. My husband and I have started divorce
proceedings but this has nothing to do with Chani or the
demands she makes.
However, I am now her main carer and trying
to run a large house and family on limited money is hard.
The carers she had before have moved 60miles
away so I had to get a new carer involved as well.
Chani's godmother now has her 1 day a week
thru Direct Payments and my mum does 1 night a week, plus
visiting in the week, easing the burden.
Although my 18yr old doesn't need me so
much, Chelsea and Courtney are now 9 and 11 and miss out
quite a bit on individual time.
I'm glad to say the divorce has not affected
them in fact they are more disciplined now.
I too have given up a lot to do with work,
church activities, voluntary work and counselling but I have
to make my family my priority right now.
Back to Chani.....her sleeping is still not
brilliant...I've tried everything...new toddler bed in her
own sensory room, sleeping away from me...different
bedtimes, but even though I persevered, she always ends up
in my bed, pulling my hair to get to sleep and she still
doesn't fall asleep alone. I find this particularly
difficult as I have no wind down time for me.
We are a busy family, music, clubs etc and
we might not get in till 7 or 8pm so her routine is late but
she doesn't nod off 'til 10pm most nights. Then maybe an hour
or two later she's awake, just checking if I'm in bed, then
restless thru the night, kicking etc.
I'm trying to find a time that suits us all
to start winding down.
Eating is still a problem...she still has
pureed dinners and tea, rusks and baby cereal mixed with
Infatrini for breakfast...she still gags if she finds a lump
in the dinner and despite my best efforts, cannot eat proper
solids.
I do give her finger foods, garlic bread,
snacks, fruit, toast and she enjoys the holding but rarely
eats it.
She's very tall and skinny, pretty with long
blonde hair and big blue eyes.
Behaviour-wise...well...she head-bangs when
tired or angry and it only takes something small to set this
off. She cries if you ask her to say sorry, she freaks out
at the sound of sellotape or plaster or carrier bags.
Many things scare her, and she's like a
frightened rabbit! She is very destructive...most of my
bowls have been smashed, the dog bowl was smashed this week.
She tears the newspaper, rips books, licks radiators that
are on, deliberately opens the hot cooker door, touches hot
taps, tips soil and stones into my bath when I turn my back,
eats pebbles and sand, lobs the snooker balls off the table
onto hard surfaces, pulls the dogs ears coz she knows he
hates it, pulls all my ironing off the stairs, puts the
clean washing on the floor, switches the hoover off when I'm
hoovering, pulls hats and mittens and sox off, she bites,
and pinches and pulls hair.
Sometimes I spend all day clearing up after
her and I think when will all this end? She is so strong and
if she doesn't want to do something, its hard to get her to
do it.
She has no meaning of rush or hurry to get
dressed for school and as I'm dressing her, she's undoing it
all...put one splint on and the other is being undone, takes
her coat off when I'm putting her shoes on. The list goes
on.
BUT because she is so impish when she does
all of this, and so delightful to look at, you just laugh
and you cant be angry with her.
She goes to special needs playschool two
mornings a week and normal playschool on a Wednesday
morning. Tuesday is spent all day with her carer and then
Friday and Saturday are my lazy days with her....watching
Teletubbies and going on the trampoline. Sundays we try and
get to church.
So my life has changed...it's hard but she
is so loving and you could just eat her!!
I hope all is well with you and God Bless
anyone living with a cri du chat kid....may the Lord give you
the strength and the humour that you need!
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Dawn and Chantelle |
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September 24th 2007
We were very sad to
learn of the death of Dawn Harris from Wales in the UK on Saturday
morning 22nd September. Dawn leaves a son, Curtis, and three
beautiful daughters Chantelle, Chelsea and Courtney. She worshipped
her children and was a wonderful, devoted mother to them all, most
especially to her daughter Chantelle who has cri du chat syndrome.
Chantelle's grandfather
wanted us to know that Dawn had been able to come home from the
hospital for a few hours on Wednesday the 19th September for
Chantelle's fourth birthday but that she deteriorated after that and
sadly passed away on Saturday morning. He said that Chantelle is a
loving child who gives big cuddles and kisses and now happily
attends a special school Monday to Friday.
I know there are many
parents in the UK and other countries who emailed Dawn and derived
great comfort from her support. She will be missed not only by her
family but by those of us around the world who were touched by her
kind heart, her strong spirit and her devotion to her child.
Dawn wrote that she
hoped to give both hope and inspiration to other families and I know
that she achieved this. Dawn's story and the photographs on
Chantelle's webpage show her obvious joy and love for Chantelle and
will continue to give hope and inspiration to families around the
world whose children are diagnosed with cri du chat syndrome.
Margarette Christie
National Co-ordinator
Cri Du Chat Support Group of Australia Inc.
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Chantelle October 2007 |
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Back to photos & stories page
Cri du Chat Support Group of
Australia Inc.
Association number A0033602W
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Address: -
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104 Yarralumla Drive, Langwarrin, VIC, Australia 3910
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Telephone: -
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61 3 9775 9962
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Facsimile: -
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61 3 9775 9962
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E-mail: -
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Margarette Christie info@criduchat.asn.au
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Date created:- |
18 March
1999 |
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Date
modified:- |
24 October 2007 |
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Created by:- |
Bob Ivison |
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Maintained by:- |
Margarette
Christie |
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