Children with epilepsy......a real solution
Reported September 26, 2013
Fighting Epilepsy with Bacon, Butter, and Hot-Dogs
BALTIMORE, Md. (Ivanhoe Newswire) --About 3 million adults and children in the U.S. suffer from epilepsy or seizures. Many find relief through medication. However, when drugs fail seizures can have a huge impact on daily life. That’s where fatty foods could save the day, even for those with life-threatening forms of epilepsy.
The fact that 14 year old Nilu is sitting here today doing homework is nothing short of what her mom calls a miracle.
The active teen was rushed to the hospital after having her first of several seizures.
“We were so worried and we were so emotional,” Niranjala Wickremasinghe, Nilu’s mom, told Ivanhoe.
Nilu had status epilepticus, a life-threatening condition.
“She was in very bad shape, to say the least. She had ongoing seizures for three months. She was essentially comatose during that entire situation and tried about seven or eight anticonvulsive medicines, none of them were helping her seizures,” Eric Kossoff, MD, Pediatric Neurologist, Johns Hopkins Children’s Center, told Ivanhoe.
That’s when Dr. Kossoff decided to try something different, a high fat, low-carb diet, much like Atkins.
“Bacon, eggs, whipping cream, and oils, you know very high fat foods,” Dr. Kossoff said.
Doctors aren’t exactly sure why the 90 percent fat diet works, but, “about half the children we put on it will do better and about ten percent become seizure free,” Dr. Kossoff explained.
Since Nilu was unconscious, her diet was delivered through a feeding tube.
“When it works, it works pretty quickly,” Dr. Kossoff said.
One week later, Nilu woke up.
“I feel that I’m a really lucky person. I mean, I got another chance to live again,” Nilu told Ivanhoe.
Now, with a new clinical trial underway others like Nilu could get the same second chance.
Nilu was on a modified Atkins diet for six months once she emerged from her coma. She is now back to a regular diet and is able to control the few short seizures she’s had since with medication. The most common side effect of the diet is constipation, temporary higher cholesterol, and kidney stones are also possible.
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FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:
Ekaterina Pesheva
Public Relations
Johns Hopkins Children’s Center