An eight-year-old autistic boy in Texas is fighting to recover his ability to speak and even stand after his flu turned into a rare brain infection.
Witten Ramirez developed cerebrellitis, an infection that causes brain inflammation after this year’s aggressive virus – which he is still fighting – broke through the barrier between his body and brain last month.
In the aftermath of the infection, Witten will have to relearn to walk and talk, and it is unclear yet how extensive the damage to his brain might be, or if he is even cured of the infection yet.
A similar flu-related brain infection claimed the life of a five-year-old boy in Georgia died on Saturday, making him one of 37 people in state and more than 40 children in the US to die of the aggressive H3N2 strain so far this season.
Witten Ramirez, eight, is relearning to stand, walk and talk in a Texas rehabilitation center after his flu moved into his brain, causing a rare infection
The boy from Georgia, Eli Snook, was one of three that were killed by flu-related illnesses in the last week alone. Seven-year-old Kevin Baynes in Virginia and an unnamed 10-year-old in California both died after developing secondary infections.
But Eli’s flu had become deadly when it turned into a brain infection, according to WSB-TV, and that was what really shook Witten’s mother, Desiree Buckingham-Ramirez.
When Desiree, a 30-year-old stay-at-home mother, read about Eli’s death ‘I did not sleep well that night,’ she says.
Desiree read the story – which someone had posted on the support Facebook page she started for Witten – while sitting at a rehabilitation center where own her son is slowly relearning to speak and stand.
Last month, Witten’s father, Mike, came home from working as a UPS driver during Christmas break feeling under the weather. He insisted it wasn’t the flu, but soon the entire, normally healthy family was sick.
Witten has always loved sports like football (left) but now he can only move or hold his younger sister, Cora, age three, with the help of a wheelchair (right)
On January 9, just after Witten had returned to school after the new year, a school nurse called his mother to tell her he had 101 degree fever.
The next day, a doctor confirmed Desiree’s suspicions: Witten had the flu, as did his three-year-old sister, Cora, and Desiree probably did to.
The whole family started on a Tamiflu regimen that knocked the virus out for everyone but Witten, who not only did not seem to be getting better, but had a bad reaction to the drug that gave him that made his muscles spasm uncontrollably.
After Witten slept for the better part of the next two days, it was clear that he was suffering from much worse than a reaction to the flu drug.
Witten – an active and athletic boy who loves basketball and football – was stumbling every time he stood, and as Desiree tried to help him dress on Thursday morning, he fell backwards and could not get back up on his own.
Witten and his Star Wars toys have been a hospital or rehab center since January 11
This week, three other little boys died of flu-related complications, including 10-year-old Kevin Baynes of Virginia (left) and Eli Snook, five, (right) who developed a similar brain infection to Witten’s and died in Georgia
‘I looked at my husband and said “this is not normal flu, something is wrong, I’m taking him to the hospital,”‘ Desiree told Daily Mail Online.
The doctors there explained that Witten was ataxic, meaning that something happening in the little boy’s brain to disable his motor control.
An MRI revealed that he had brain swelling, inflammation of his cerebellum, and meningitis, or inflammation in the cell membranes of his brain and spinal cord.
A blood-brain barrier typically protects the brain and nervous system from viral infections, but in rare cases like Witten’s that barrier is not strong enough to hold back aggressive invaders like his flu.
This year’s epidemic has forced school closures, led to overflowing hospital waiting rooms, and is anticipated to kill more than 50,000 Americans, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The flu is most likely to turn deadly for children – whose developing immune systems are particularly susceptible to this year’s aggressive H3N2 virus – when it gives way to secondary infections like pneumonia.
Because the infection had moved into Witten’s brain, and, more specifically, his cerebellum, the part of the brain that coordinates movement – including of the muscles in his mouth – he was rendered immobile and speechless.
Before he got sick, Witten’s autism did not stop him from much, Desiree says. Her son is in the second grade, can speak, read and write (though at a level closer to kindergartners than to children his own age) and has always been very active.
‘He loves school and being around his friends. he’s super popular, [the other kids] call him “the rock star,”‘ Desiree says.
But in the hospital, her rock star could not even sit up on his own. He was moved from the emergency room to the ICU, and from the ICU to a larger hospital in Dallas.
At one point, Desiree recalls a doctor saying they may have to drill holes into Witten’s skull to insert cameras and get a better look at his brain.
‘I looked at her and said “is my kid going to die?’” And she said “we don’t think so…but we don’t know if he’ll be able to walk or talk again,”‘ Desiree recalls.
‘We used to have this kid that would bound around…then hearing he might not walk or talk again…it was pretty terrifying,’ she says.
Witten was treated with a massive dose of steroids and IVIG – a cocktail of antibodies meant to help boost his immune system so it could mount a better fight against his brain infections.
Witten’s mother, Desiree Buckingham-Ramirez used the first syllable Witten relearned, ‘beh,’ as a tagline for his support Facebook page, #TeamWitten (left). At Christmas time, just before he got the flu, Witten was a social child, grinning for a picture with Santa (right)
Witten now spends much of his days in occupational, physical and speech therapy. ‘He smiles a lot, but he gets really frustrated with not being able to do things,’ his mother says
The drugs started to do their work, and last Tuesday, Witten was transferred out of the ICU and into a rehabilitation center where he could begin occupational, speech and physical therapy.
Witten regained his ability to sit up, and a single syllable, ‘beh.’
It was the one thing he could get out that made any sense, so he would just yell, it was his answer for everything, so it became a family joke,’ and the tagline for the family’s Facebook support page, #TeamWitten.
Now, Witten can say the beginnings of words, and can stand or walk with assistance, but there is no telling how long he and Desiree will be at the rehab center, or when – if ever – he’ll fully regain the physical and verbal abilities he had only a month ago.
Witten still tested positive for the flu as recently as Monday, and his family won’t know the status of his other infections until his MRI on Friday.
While Witten and Desiree stay ‘indefinitely’ at the rehab center, she says, Mike is at home, and their daughter, Cora, is with family.
‘The isolation is the hardest thing,’ for Witten, Desiree says.
‘He’s a social kid and thrives mentally and developmentally and learns best from his peers, so not being able to do that at all is really hard on him.
‘He smiles a lot, but he gets really frustrated with not being able to do things he was a month ago,’ she adds.
Ataxia like Witten suffered is most common in children between two and four years old. Recovery varies widely once the age range is extended, but the prognosis is good for most children.
Witten’s family just won’t know what that is until after his MRI, but so far, ‘he’s worked so hard, he is my rock star,’ Desiree says.
‘I just really want parents to know what to look for when it comes to the flu. If it’s not just coughing, if you see your kid stumbling, unable to sit or stand like my kid was, that’s an emergency, and I learned that the hard way,’ Desiree says.
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