OK, I'm a mother, and not a neuro physio and I think I have read enough on the site to know we need the right input.
My son had cerebral malaria, were in a coma for just on 2 months, and as a complication, they believe that he had a stroke. What we were told and what the ct scans show, is that his occipital region and both parietal regions were kinda blown away. We are not in a country where sophisticated medical procedures are easily come by. End of this story is that they removed all life-supporting equipment and gave him 6 hours to live. This was 2 months ago. A further complication is that with the cerebral malaria, blood platelet counts were almost non-existent and coupled with sub-standard nursing, he developed very serious pressure sores. These are now being treated by a specialist wound person and they are under control and getting better. Up to know, we've been either battling pressure sores, or sub-standard nursing or something or other. In addition, he had a stomach tube put in for feeding. There was no time to even think of rehab before now.
So, after all of these emergencies, we are now home where we are concentrating on pressure sores, general health, nutrition, getting over the tremendous trauma, and impeccable nursing.
We have to get therapy. Our local town has one neuro physio and she is too busy to take on new patients. What we need to do is to bridge with the correct neuro physio until the pressure sores are in a state that a rehab facility will actually take him. I have input on speech therapy which I am following. We've been religiously doing the passive physio movements that they showed me in the hospital. But this is now not enough and I cannot get help in our town. How do we bridge the gap? What can I do, while his general state of health improves sufficiently to go to a rehab clinic?
Currently:
He has a trachea but does not need the oxygen excepting for wound healing and general oxygenation ... red blood cells very low after the malaria but doing good now .. just on normal.
He has a urine catheter. We think he has ability there but cannot figure this out with the catheter.
He let's us know when he has a need to pass a stool.
Movement - he can move his head, he moves his fingers, his forearms, his one leg.
Communication - He can see despite the ct scan analysis .. he follows with his eyes and we communicate by eyeblinks and frowns ..
He can swallow.
He smiles somewhat.
He tries to open his mouth when I ask him to.
His face is normal ... not down on one side as one usually sees with people that had strokes.
He thinks, he understands, he communicates.
He hears everything around him.
He has a sense of spatial relationships.
He does not speak, make noises excepting when uncomfortable when he calls us with a whoooooo ... remembers his name, my name ... indicates a full thinking and reasoning ability.
He is beginning to heal .. the wounds are healing .. getting the right nutrition and so on - but this will still take a few months.
Where do we start? When he is physically improved enough, I will go to a bigger center for rehab. But currently, he is still too weak and the wounds need to heal further. If I do passive physio on his arms, and they are tight, and I ask him to relax, he works to relax the muscles so that we can do the passives. It is clear that he is trying to co-operate.
I am a total novice but had to learn quickly. Where do I even start without knowledgeable therapists to help? I know, this is a huge big question, but our local area just does not have the resources. Any ideas now as to any kind of treatment protocol that a total novice can carry out will be much appreciated.
Similar Threads: