http://www.nytimes.com/2016/10/18/nyregion/one-familys-struggle-with-microcephaly-the-birth-defect-now-linked-to-zika.html 2016-10-17 11:31:57 One Family’s Struggle With Microcephaly, the Birth Defect Now Linked to Zika Watching the unfolding epidemic and concerned that many people did not grasp what it meant to raise a child with the condition, a Manhattan couple offered to share their experience. === The morning after Christine Grounds gave birth to her son Nicholas, she awoke to find a neurologist examining her baby. It was summer 2006, and Nicholas was her first child. There had been no indication that anything was wrong during her “Did you know he has Confused, she replied, “What is microcephaly?” This was before the Ms. Grounds, a 45-year-old psychotherapist, and her husband, Jon Mir, who live in Manhattan, had no idea what microcephaly would mean for them or for their child. “We had a diagnosis but no prognosis,” recalled Mr. Mir, 44, who works in finance. The doctors could offer few answers. “We don’t know if he will walk,” the couple recalled being told. “We don’t know if he will talk. He might be in a vegetative state.” But the truth was, even the doctors did not know. As mosquito season draws to a close in much of the country, taking with it the major risk of new Zika infections, there are still more than 2,600 pregnant women who have tested positive for the virus in the United States and its territories, according to the Like other neurological disorders, microcephaly runs along a spectrum and its severity can vary widely. Zika-related microcephaly is believed to be somewhat different than microcephaly caused by Watching the unfolding epidemic and concerned that many people did not grasp what it meant to raise a child with microcephaly, Ms. Grounds offered to share her family’s experience. “I was hysterically crying all the time,” she recalled of her son’s early days. By the time Nicholas was 2, his developmental problems started to become evident. He crawled awkwardly, did not start to walk on time and would not make eye contact with others. Fortunately, New York City has a robust early intervention program for toddlers with developmental problems, and Nicholas was able to get special instruction and care. Unfortunately, that care ends after three years. While the city’s special education program in the public school system gets generally high marks for helping children with conditions like “A child with microcephaly needs scaffolding around every aspect of his life,” Mr. Mir said. This summer, the C.D.C. and the American Academy of Pediatrics published interim The C.D.C. put the cost of care for each child at $10 million over a lifetime. Ms. Grounds is quick to note that her family is more fortunate than many others because they can afford for Nicholas to get the best possible care and to enroll him at When Nicholas, who shares his father’s surname and is often called Nick, entered school, he was 5 and could barely communicate, mostly grunting and pointing. “He couldn’t even close his mouth,” Kevin McManaway, a clinical coordinator at the school, said. A full day could be spent on reinforcement techniques to control his drool and keep his mouth closed. In year three at the school, when Nicholas was 8, he started to combine words. For instance, he could say, “boy-eat.” But he could not communicate his own desires. The breakthrough came in his fourth year. Just as he was getting started on a new communication device, “it was like a switch went off,” Mr. McManaway said. “Look the blue car,” Nicholas would exclaim. “Throw ball. Jump. Get a haircut.” Mr. McManaway said, “He just had this burst of language.” Now, sitting in an art class, Nicholas is quick to say hello to a visitor and attentive to his teacher. On the playground, he grabbed a basketball and shot hoops, sinking as many as he missed. He is quick to offer the ball to others and to join in games. He is nothing like the child he was six year ago, his instructors say. But all the progress came only after years of intensive and expensive intervention, and there is much work yet to be done to ensure that he has as full a life as possible. On a weekly basis, Nicholas sees roughly a dozen different specialists and teachers, all concentrating on different parts of his development. Every week at school, he has speech therapy four times, occupational therapy three times, At home he receives more speech therapy, as well as additional physical and occupational therapy. Recently, he has also been able to participate in a variety of recreational activities. Ms. Grounds said it was hard to imagine how parents could cope without the resources her family had. She was angry at the protracted Whatever the cost of prevention, she said, it would not compare to the cost of care. Dr. Wendy K. Chung, the director of the clinical genetics program at Columbia University Medical School, has spent years working with children with neurological development issues. She said people with microcephaly need care beyond childhood. “They need support their entire lives,” she said. Dr. Chung met Nicholas when he was a baby and came in for testing. His parents, seeking to learn why he had been born with microcephaly, turned to Dr. Chung, hoping to find an answer in his genetic makeup. “The first tests we had were unsuccessful,” Dr. Chung said. “The science was just not that well developed.” Ms. Grounds and her husband, thinking it was highly unlikely that lightning would strike twice, had a second son, this one born without complications. About three years ago, Dr. Chung was finally able to provide an answer to the question they had long asked: Why? Nicholas was “ It meant the odds their second child could have been born with the condition was not like lightning striking again. They were one in four.