Baby Born with most of his brain and skull missing
Born
with most of his brain and skull missing, baby Jaxon Emmett Buell was
not expected to live. In fact his parents had been told to abort him
when doctors discovered his condition.
But
he has defied all odds – and now he has just celebrated his first
birthday.Baby Jaxon’s devout Christian parents, Brandon and Brittany
Buell, were told by doctors that he had an extreme brain malformation,
which meant he would probably not survive the pregnancy.
But Jax Strong
– a nickname he has earned on social media – is now one years old. His
inspirational story has captivated families across the U.S., with nearly
90,000 people ‘liking’ his page on Facebook and 18,000 people sharing
his story. Jaxon was diagnosed as having Anencephaly, a neural tube
birth defect in which a child is born without parts of the brain and
skull, but doctors were still unsure of how severe his condition would
be.
About
1 in 4,859 babies in the United States will be born with Anencephaly
and usually die shortly after birth, according to the Center for Disease
Control and Prevention.
30-year-old
Brandon, said: ‘After our second ultrasound at 17 weeks, when we found
out he was a boy, we knew something was up when the ultrasound
technician went towards his head and went very quiet.’
‘Brittany
got the call the next day from the doctors saying there was a concern
with the MRI results. She was in tears and told me there was an issue
with the baby. Of course, I lost it at work so they sent me home and the
rest of the day was a blur truly.’
For
the next few weeks, the anxious couple were transferred between doctors
and given five possible conditions of what it could be. Spina bifida,
Dandy-walker syndrome and Joubert syndrome were all possibilities.
Doctors
gave them the option to terminate the pregnancy at 23 weeks but the
young couple, who are against abortion, believed it was not their
decision to make.
Brandon,
who is an assistant to the CEO of a small community bank in Florida,
said: ‘We went home that night thinking if you are telling us to abort,
we would never know what Jaxon could have been, if he could have
survived.’
‘Who are we to decide? We were given a child, we are given a chance and we have to be his voice.’
‘We did everything we could to give him a fighting chance and all he’s done since being born is fight right back.’
Jaxon’s
27-year-old mother, said: ‘I was devastated. It was heart breaking
because something I always wanted my whole life was happening, but then I
was told there was a possibility it might be a stillborn.
‘It took all the joy away from me. The happiness that normal women have when they are pregnant – I had none of that.’
The miracle baby survived the pregnancy and was born by caesarian section on August 27, 2014 weighing four pounds.
He
spent his first three weeks connected to multiple tubes in a neonatal
intensive-care unit in Winnie Palmer Hospital, Florida, as brain
surgeons tried to understand his condition.
Brandon
said: ‘It was very emotional. I remember holding him on day two and
listening to the doctors say my son would probably never walk, never
talk, never know when he’s hungry, or never hear or see. They really did
not expect him to make it.’
Following
multiple hospital visits and a two-month scare of multiple seizures,
inconsolable screaming, and feeding tube issues, Jaxon was taken to the
emergency room at Boston Children’s Hospital, a top U.S. hospital for
pediatric neurology, in August.
They
went in with the unknown and came out with a burst of hope: a true
diagnosis – Microhydranencephaly – and new medicine that has since eased
Jaxon’s condition and made him a lot happier.
Yet Brittany and Brandon still wake up everyday knowing the reality they face – that Jaxon may not be here tomorrow.
Brittany said: ‘It is always in the back of my mind. I’m very aware that today maybe his last day. I’m aware tomorrow he may not be here.’
‘I
try to stay positive 99 per cent of the time but there is that 1 per
cent because I know the reality of the situation – that we’re probably
going to outlive him.’
Brandon’s
work colleagues set up a GoFundMe page when Jaxon was born to help out
the family with the pricey medication and extra expenses.
Nearly $55,000 has been raised by 1,181 donors since then and the outpouring of support is growing day by day.
The
couple, who are living on only one salary, described the support as
‘incredible’ and said they ‘never dreamed that this would happen.’
Jaxon’s
father said: ‘He thrives with his mom, that one-to-one stimulation that
no other therapy can give. If we can keep Brittany at home, giving him
that 24/7 care is truly priceless and that’s what his account allows us
to do.’
Brittany
said: ‘It’s all been so overwhelming in a positive way because we can’t
go anywhere without someone stopping us, and saying, ‘hey, what’s your
story?’ or they would have seen his picture and say, ‘hey, look it’s Jax
Strong!’ – his nickname! It’s truly incredible the amount of people he
has had an impact on.’
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