From Deseret News archives:
Gene disorder afflicts Navajos
Things changed in the late 1970s and early 1980s with improvements to health care.
"This is not just kids dying, this is something odd," Hu recalls thinking. "When you start to lower your infant morality (rate), you start to notice when kids die."
But detecting the disorder wasn't easy. What can frustrate parents are that the symptoms of SCID aren't much different from the common cold or flu. Normal kids can have numerous ear infections in a year but are treated with antibiotics and the infection goes away.
In SCID patients, the infection lingers and worsens.
Researchers have identified about a dozen genes that cause SCID. Cowan, director of the Pediatric Bone Marrow Transplant Program at the University of California-San Francisco, argues that Navajos and Apaches suffer from the most severe form of the disorder in which they lack a gene called Artemis. Without it, the children's bodies aren't able to repair DNA or develop disease-fighting T cells and B cells.
"These kids are the most difficult to treat," he said.
The disorder is something Lynnae Redhouse and Sean Frank, a young Navajo couple, never had heard of.
Day after day, their son, also Sean Frank, would cough until he turned blue and sleep more than a baby should. His hands and feet shook, and soon after he was fed, the milk would come right back up.
Redhouse and Frank knew it was normal for a child to occasionally get sick, but something here wasn't right.
"It turned into just a routine of waking up all the time for him because we were so worried he wouldn't wake us up at all," said his father.
Each time Redhouse and Frank would seek care for their son, the message was the same: Take him home, he's fine, doctors told them.
It turns out he wasn't fine, and not until the child was taken to the University of New Mexico Hospital in Albuquerque did his parents find out their son has SCIDA.
Comments
- Jazz: Miles, Kirilenko to play Friday 4:23 a.m.
- Utah Jazz going green with unis 4:17 a.m.
- Celtics stop spurs 4:15 a.m.
- Utah Jazz gameday 4:14 a.m.
- Harpring's NBA career is over 4:11 a.m.
- Past Mr. Football winners 4:09 a.m.
- Mr. Football 2009: Tuni Kanuch 4:08 a.m.
- Westminster campus briefs 2:50 a.m.
- UVU campus briefs 2:48 a.m.
- SUU campus briefs 2:47 a.m.
- Hate not limited to 1 in-state rivalry
- Mr. Football 2009: Tuni Kanuch
- Aggies shoot past Cougars
- Mitchell said to share LeBaron traits
- Phoenix signs off on LDS temple
- BYU prof a 'Top Global Thinker'
- Toddler dies trapped under mattress
- Harpring's NBA career is over
- Aggie 'D' holds BYU to season low
- Crews to seal Nutty Putty Cave
- Hall reprimanded by MWC
406 - Max Hall issues apology
393 - Hall's pain reflects self-betrayal
361 - Why is Y. ignoring spew of hatred?
287 - Utes won't respond to Hall
278 - BYU says Hall incident resolved
247 - Letters: Liberal because LDS
217 - 2 citations issued at Y.-U. game
188 - Aggies shoot past Cougars
175 - Hate not limited to 1 in-state rivalry
159
First, a big thank you to all who posted questions here for me to ask...
I laughed at the names that were given to the snakes, such clever names. I...
I used you to really hope you were always kidding with your political posts....
RE: Anon @ 5:47 There is a BIG difference between freedom of and freedom...
The only ones that are disturbed are the liberal media that hates guns so bad...
Matt it has been awesome to have you here as a player and role model. I hope...
I'm a USU grad, and saw a great shirt about US not you! "DEE GLEN SMITH...
Hey look, Jazz Cop and CL are agreeing with each other on back-to-back...
Hey, the papers are going bankrupt because of their inability to adjust their...
Matt, you will be truly missed. Thanks for showing us what playing with real...
Good job to all the ladies this season. Hard work and determination has it's...




You can be the first to comment on this story.