Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, she was born full term via c/s. She was a good nurser and fine and strong and had no problems but she just never rolled over or played with her feet or bounced in my lap or sat up. We finally called Early Intervention and initially we got a diagnosis of hypotonia/low tone/developmental delays. Around a year I started to suspect she had CP and it was confirmed when she was 2.5 at Kennedy Krieger. CP is a lot more than just low tone/hypotonia. I have a nephew with low tone/hypotonia and although there may be a connection with CP you could tell he was going to progress to walking/crawling and she just could not get it together.
You really can't tell much about a 10 week old baby because their brains haven't even fully myelinated yet. My daughter couldn't have her first MRI until she was 16 months and that was inconclusive.
I'm sorry, PP. It sounds like she has a great, committed Mom and advocate.
She is a great kid and I don't spend a lot of time feeling sorry about her situation.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You could take your son to a neuroligist. We were referred when my twins were about 4 months. They were born 9 weeks premature. The neurologist at Georgetown was wonderful, but he moved. I'd ask your pediatrician for a referall. Frankly, I'd be very surprised if you kid had CP.
PP, can you tell me a little about this? What prompted you to go then and what was your experience like? Any diagnosis that early? Thanks so much.
My son was refererred by his physcial therapist basically because of his lack of ability to sustain eye contact - he would zone out and his eyes would drift. He grew out of this - it was some kind of neurological immaturity resulting from prematurity. That was twin A. When we took twin A in, twin B was with us. The nuerologist was more concerned about Twin B who had clonus or an inappropriate reflex in his ankle. The neurologist told us twin B had a 60-70% chance of having mild CP.
They are both 4 and a half now and neither has a neurological condition. Both twins had physcial therapy until they were walking (around 15 months). Twin B was tracked by a neurologist until he was walking. We had a later CP scare about twin A (courtesy of the Gtown developmental clinic), but this was resolved by another neurologist. Twin B had low tone but that is completely no biggie. We are starting OT for fine motor skills, but I think they have fine motor issues due to DH's bad fine motor genes not because of prematurity and it's not a big deal.
We are starting out on our journey now...Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You could take your son to a neuroligist. We were referred when my twins were about 4 months. They were born 9 weeks premature. The neurologist at Georgetown was wonderful, but he moved. I'd ask your pediatrician for a referall. Frankly, I'd be very surprised if you kid had CP.
PP, can you tell me a little about this? What prompted you to go then and what was your experience like? Any diagnosis that early? Thanks so much.
Anonymous wrote:No, she was born full term via c/s. She was a good nurser and fine and strong and had no problems but she just never rolled over or played with her feet or bounced in my lap or sat up. We finally called Early Intervention and initially we got a diagnosis of hypotonia/low tone/developmental delays. Around a year I started to suspect she had CP and it was confirmed when she was 2.5 at Kennedy Krieger. CP is a lot more than just low tone/hypotonia. I have a nephew with low tone/hypotonia and although there may be a connection with CP you could tell he was going to progress to walking/crawling and she just could not get it together.
You really can't tell much about a 10 week old baby because their brains haven't even fully myelinated yet. My daughter couldn't have her first MRI until she was 16 months and that was inconclusive.
Anonymous wrote:My child is profoundly handicapped by CP. No, your experience is very different from mine.
First of all, my daughter woke up every 45 minutes to eat. There was no long sleeping at all. Sleepiness is not a sign of CP that I have ever heard of from any CP mom. Kids with neurological problems are typically very poor sleepers.
Secondly, if your child is bouncing on your lap (standing up) at ten weeks, he DOES NOT have CP.
My child is very handicapped -- can't walk at all -- but I did not notice anything wrong until she was 6-9 months old. At 10 weeks I did not suspect anything was wrong. This is way, way too early to be looking for problems. As another poster said, CP is not diagnosed at this age. Kids aren't walking and they just can't tell the different between hypotonia, slowness, low tone, delays, and CP.
Again -- NOTHING you have posted makes me think CP.
. It is probable that what you are seeing is related to his low tone, and at 10 weeks, it's certainly a bad idea to see something like CP in a handful of frankly normal baby issues. From your post it sounds like you have discussed this with your ped-if so, what did they say? If you haven't you can always bring it up at the next appointment but I would be surprised if they say anything due to the fact DC is meeting all milestones.
Anonymous wrote:You could take your son to a neuroligist. We were referred when my twins were about 4 months. They were born 9 weeks premature. The neurologist at Georgetown was wonderful, but he moved. I'd ask your pediatrician for a referall. Frankly, I'd be very surprised if you kid had CP.