mattsmom
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My son, Matthew, has moyamoya.
Posts: 59
Albuquerque, USA, usa, 180, 215, NM, New_Mexico
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I have to say that I am surprised to hear of so many with MM and renal artery stenosis. All this time, I thought Matthew was just DOUBLY rare.
Matthew was found to have his right renal artery stenosis at the same time as his MM. When he stroked, and we began looking for reasons, his bp was HIGH. It was running 150/105. At first, I thought that was the reason he had stroked. The pediatric neurologist referred us to his pediatric nephrologist. We did an ultrasound, which showed that his right kidney was smaller than his left. The doctor explained that it wasn't supposed to be that way.
When we did the arteriogram to look for a reason for the stroke, the nephrologist said, "Well, while they are in there, let's swing on by the kidneys and see what's going on." Apparently he would normally have done other less invasive tests first . . . but since we doing it for the stroke, he took advantage of it.
Matthew's doctors do feel that his MM and his renal artery stenosis are related. In fact, his nephrologist had seen a previous case in Seattle.
Here's where he messed up though . . . when we returned to Dr. Scott for the one year arteriogram, the nephrologist wanted to try angioplasty to open the vessel. He figured Boston's Children's Hospital was a great place to have it done. What I didn't know . . . angioplasty has been shown to be ineffective in children, especially those under 12. Matthew was 8 at the time. When the angioplasty was done, small bits of blood vessel broke off and occluded the small blood vessels to about one-third of his kidney. The doctor in Boston told us this, but didn't explain the full implications. At the time, we thought the procedure had worked because his bp returned to normal and we stopped one of the two meds. Later, during a 24 hour bp study, we found that his bp was back up. The docs then asked for a renogram. Basically, they inject a nucleotide and watch the kidneys filter it out of the blood. We had had this done before and had seen Matthew's right kidney filter slow. This time -- his right kidney did NOTHING!! It wasn't working at all! I freaked!! I had the docs in there. They admitted Matthew and did another arteriogram. At the time, they thought the vessel was good. It was at this point that I started researching and found out about the ineffectiveness of angioplasty. I wasn't too happy, but they explained that they had wanted to try the "least invasive" first. I said I wanted to go with the "most effective". I even had the new doctor scold me for contacting other nephrologists for their opinion. He told me he was the doctor and I needed to leave it to him. I responded with absolutely NOT! I am his mother -- and we are a team. We need to both research, find the best procedure, and discuss it together! He did get it and understood.
That was how we found Dr. James Stanley in Michigan. I was surprised to see someone else mention him. He is a vascular surgeon. His procedure was to take an iliac (I think) artery -- an artery that supplies blood to the groin area -- and use it to replace the renal artery. He was the one who assured me that moyamoya would not continue to show up in other vessels overtime. He is the doctor who told me it picked the vessels, affected them -- and didn't "spread". However, once he started the surgery, he found that the angioplasty had actually killed one-third of Matthew's kidney. The renal artery had looked fine on the last arteriogram because they had only x-rayed it from the top. From the side -- it was paper-thin!! He felt he had no choice but to perform a nephrectomy. And that's how Matthew lost his right kidney.
Since then, he has done well. His bp returned to normal -- or at least until puberty when testerone became a normal part of his bloodstream. That slightly elevated his bp. He began running pressures of 140/80. With a single kidney, they want it lower. He currently takes 2.5 mg of lisinopril 1x day. It's the smallest dose possible. He now runs bp's of 120/60.
His main concern (being a kid) -- he couldn't play football. This year, however, his senior year, he talked to the nephrologist. We found out he could have pushed the issue. It was more a risk of damage than loss. And he really wanted to do it. And hey! He and I match blood types!! (I am being sarcastic!!) To conclude, he did play football. He had the time of his life and enjoyed every moment. He cried HARD when his team was eliminated from the state play-offs.
That's his story -- and the story of how I learned to: 1. Research EVERYTHING as much as I did MM to find Dr. Scott. 2. Not look back on decisions. It's done, I can't undo it, and I have to move forward.
Kimber - mom to Matthew, 17, three strokes due to moyamoya at age 7 and single kidney due to renal artery stenosis, Laura, 22, Jacob, 14, and Kay, 10.
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