Epilepsy! All my denial—my protective
armor—shattered. But of course…something had been undercutting this realization
for months. Why had he been wetting his pants at his age? And, the times when I
thought he was not paying attention and maybe he seemed confused. Dr.
O’Rourke’s interview…Conner’s secrets…all his hidden spells…these dings…over a year. Oh, God. Oh, my God.
I leaned forward.
“Epilepsy?
So, that’s it. This is epilepsy. Oh,
God!” I leaned back and stared up at the ceiling.
Conner
had been watching me. He grabbed my hand and gritted his teeth, his eyes wide
with alarm. I put my other hand over Conner’s and patted it several times. Sam
wrapped one arm around Conner and blinked hard. He reached across our boy’s
body to cover Conner’s and my hand with his.
The
doctor furrowed his brow as he ran his tongue over his upper lip. “Mr. and Mrs.
Golden, we say a person has epilepsy when he has had more than one seizure.
Conner’s dings are all seizures. It seems like he’s had many of them, a great
many of them.” He looked at Conner.
Conner
stared back.
My
mouth was so dry. I squinted and gazed above the doctor’s head. My preliminary
presumptions surrounding Conner’s convulsion dissolved in tangled confusion. My
temples throbbed. I looked at Conner and lowered my head. Conner has to be
protected now. I stifled a sob.
I
lifted my head and looked into the neurologist’s eyes. My husband gazed
straight ahead. I took a deep breath. “I didn’t want it to register, Doctor.
I’m sorry. Yes, you and Conner were talking about his dings—or whatever he
calls them—those little seizures; apparently there have been lots of them.”
Dr.
O’Rourke swiveled his leather chair to the side and crossed his legs. He kept
his gaze on me as he tapped his pencil softly on his desk.
Conner
watched me, too. He opened his mouth, but kept silent as I turned away.
I
looked at the floor and then I closed my eyes and said, “He’s been having these
things for over a year? Right in front of me? How could I have missed them? How
could I not have seen them?”
I
had known that Conner’s convulsion weeks ago could completely change our lives.
I just didn’t know how. I didn’t want to know. It was deep in that chamber
where I kept secrets, repressed secrets. Conner looked at me again. “Mom!
What?”
“Oh,
honey.” I wrapped my arm around his thin shoulders. Sam clenched his fists in
his lap.
The
neurologist spoke in a slow, deliberate voice. “Your son’s seizures are
different from the grand mal seizure, the convulsion that brought him to the
hospital. Conner’s seizures are caused by abnormal electrical brain activity.
They probably originate in just one part of his brain—that would be in his
temporal lobe—less likely in his frontal lobe.” He paused for emphasis. “Convulsions
affect the whole brain. Anybody witnessing a convulsion would recognize that
type of seizure. However, Conner’s dings—as he refers to them—can be harder to
recognize…they affect just one part of the brain. What’s so difficult for many
people to accept is, as I just said, a cause for epilepsy is often never
identified.”
“You
mean that, don’t you? You don’t know
why they’re happening?” The hostile tone in Sam’s voice surprised me.
“Look.
My patients say, ‘Dr. O’Rourke, there are men walking on the moon. Don’t tell
me in this day and age that you can’t say why the seizure happened. How can that
be?’ Mr. Golden, there are just so many things that we do not understand,
especially when it comes to the brain. Medical knowledge humbles us. The more
our experience and research teaches us the more we appreciate how little we
actually understand. We do not even know how we think or what thinking really
is.
“The
EEG should document where in the brain these seizures are originating,” he
continued. “However, a normal EEG does not mean that there is no seizure
disorder. ‘Seizure disorder’ is another term we use that means epilepsy. An EEG
can still be normal if the epileptiform discharges do not happen while the test
is being done. And that’s common.”
I
lowered my eyes and dug my fingernails into the edge of my chair. “What about
the Dilantin?” I leaned forward and looked up. “Does Conner still have to take
it? I guess so, huh? But I was, uh, we were so hoping, praying, that he could
stop taking it today…”
I
saw Conner’s puzzled expression. Sam’s eyes locked onto Dr. O’Rourke, but the
neurologist focused on Conner.
“Let’s
discuss treatment options after I finish—” Dr. O’Rourke coughed into his fist
and cleared his throat. “Excuse me. After I finish your son’s physical
examination. I want to get a more complete picture of what’s going on before I
make any decision about medications.”
He
asked him a few more questions to affirm that his mental functions were intact.
“Spectacular,” Dr. O’Rourke said with a broad grin. Conner knew the date, where
he was right at that very moment and his home address. “Conner is very
well-oriented to date and place. He even knows who the president is. Not
everyone can tell me that—even adults, believe it or not.”
Our
boy beamed.
The
neurologist demonstrated that Conner could also add and subtract, count and
spell simple words backward—all accomplished appropriately for a third-grader.
His memory and his ability to draw, write and name objects the doctor held up
were normal, too. “You’re very smart for an eight-year-old.”
“I’m
eight and a half, Dr. O’Rourke.”
The
neurologist scrunched his eyes shut, grimaced and slunk down in his chair. “That’s
right. You already told me. Eight and a half. Sorry.” He straightened up and
winked at us.
He
asked me about Conner’s past illnesses, immunizations and symptoms in other
parts of his body. He also wanted to know about my pregnancies. “Has he ever
exhibited any unusual or disturbing behaviors?” His eyes darted between Sam and
me.
“No.
He’s always been a normal child.” I looked at Sam. He nodded several times.
Conner
sniffled and looked up at me.
“Very
good. Do any diseases run in the family?”
“No,
Doctor,” Sam answered in a solemn voice. “None that we’re aware of, anyway.” We
looked at each other. I raised my eyebrows and shook my head in agreement.
Dr.
O’Rourke’s face became very serious as he asked, “Do you smoke, young man?”
Our
son twisted in his chair and laughed. “No-oooo. The sy…the sychilist at
school—the first icky one—she wanted to know if I was married. That was funny.”
“He’s
referring to the school psychologist who first attempted to do testing on him
in the school, Doctor. Apparently, she and Conner didn’t get along. That’s what
both of them told me, anyway. That’s sort of how we got to Dr. Frank Thomas.”
My grim expression softened into a smile.
“Oh.”
He said to me and then turned back to Conner. “So you don’t smoke. That’s what
I like to hear.” The doctor stood up. “Okay, family. Let’s go across the hall
to the exam room so I can check Conner over.”
He
walked around his desk and put his arm across our boy’s shoulders. “Don’t
worry, Conner. I won’t be giving you any shots today. I’ll just be checking
your eyes and things.”
We
shifted in our chairs and began to rise. Conner said to Sam, “I have to go to
the bathroom, Daddy.” His voice had become tremulous again.
“Can’t
you wait until the doctor’s finished, Conner?” I asked with a sharp tone.
“No!”
He practically shouted and cast a sidelong glare at me. He hitched up his pants
and hopped a few times.
“Okay.
Let’s go.” Sam took him by the hand.
I
sat down again. “I had no idea that Conner’s been having these things, Dr.
O’Rourke—and for so long?” I leaned forward. “I’ve gone to the Internet and just
about every...but, I never suspected this.” I licked my lips and hesitantly
asked in a softer voice, “You really think he has epilepsy, don’t you, Doctor?”
My throat and chest were tight. Of course
it’s epilepsy. He just rammed it down
our throats. I was so blind.
Dr.
O’Rourke went behind his desk. He stood there with a hand on the back of his
leather chair, fixed his gaze on me for a moment, and then sat down. He rested
his palms on the desk. An inch of light-blue shirtsleeves protruded from
beneath the sleeves of his white coat. I noticed “HO” embroidered in
dark-blue thread on the left cuff. I did not expect a physician to be so
fashion-conscious as to have a monogram on his shirt. I don’t know why I was
surprised; look at his bowties. I looked for cuff links, but saw none. The
scene was so surreal that for a moment I wondered if I were living it or merely
watching myself and the doctor in a silent movie.
“Look,
Mrs. Golden, we’ve discovered a lot today. I am probably as surprised about
this diagnosis as you are. I did not expect this history of covert, hidden
seizures based on my review of the hospital records. I believe that Conner has
a form of epilepsy called ‘complex partial epilepsy.’ Its newer term is ‘mesial
temporal lobe epilepsy.’ Look at it this way: your son has been suffering; that
is why you are here. That is the reality. Now that we have identified what is
wrong we can do something about it. We can help him.”
Dr.
Choy had said virtually the same thing to me at the hospital. Did they all read
the same script?
The
neurologist arched his eyebrows. “I expect that Conner will do fine, Mrs.
Golden. I understand how upsetting this is for you right now, believe me. But,
you’re all going to be fine.”
His
words morphed into distant sounds. I forced a weak smile and stared at the
framed documents on the wall. Then I asked again, “Are you sure? Are you absolutely sure that Conner has
epilepsy? It couldn’t be something else?” I groped for an admission of doubt. “No,
no. Of course...It’s just that—” I stared out the window.
“I’m
sure, Mrs. Golden. His history is classic: the auras—which are the warnings of
the seizures and the smells that he told us that he gets—his confusion, losing
control of his bladder. All of those phenomena are textbook symptoms.”
Everything
that this neurologist said would be a part of our lives—always, forever. So,
this would be my lot in life. I remained motionless. I felt so hollow.
Dr.
O’Rourke swiveled his chair around to face the computer on the desk extension.
Thuk, thuk, thuk—the keys spoke as he typed. His eyes skimmed the screen, but
occasionally I saw him glance at me as I juggled my pain and anguish.
When
Conner and Sam returned to the office, Dr. O’Rourke ushered us across the
corridor to his exam room. The fluorescent lights flickered on as soon as he
opened the door. Conner turned his head from side to side before he entered the
room with us.
I
remembered that I had read how flickering lights could induce seizures in some
epileptics. Was it better to say ‘people with epilepsy’? What should they be
called? Was Conner an epileptic? Or was he a child with epilepsy? I squeezed my
eyes tight and my body shuddered.
Closed
vertical blinds blocked out most of the late-afternoon sunshine that tried to
stream through a single window. A rack on the back of the door proffered a
selection of brochures on different neurological diseases and various popular
magazines and children’s periodicals. There were a few copies of National Geographic, too. A low shelf
held several rubber dolls, a Barbie doll, a few toy soldiers and several small action
figures similar to the snap-together ones Conner had at home. I wondered if the
doctor put them together himself. He must have many children as patients; maybe
one of them did it.
Conner
was immediately drawn to a colorful diagram on the wall: a gray wrinkled-brain
attached to the spinal cord with yellow nerves projecting to all parts of the
body.
The
neurologist tapped the boy’s shoulder. “Take everything off down to your
underpants, Conner. Shoes and socks off, too.” Dr. O’Rourke looked at me as he
said that and I nodded. “When you’ve undressed put on the folded gown that’s on
the exam table. I’ll be right back.” He smiled and left the room. The door shut
behind him with a loud click.
I
sat on a green plastic chair and waited for Conner to undress. I recognized
several framed photographs on the walls that I remembered having seen on the
Internet. The first picture was of a very young Hal O’Rourke in Papua New
Guinea. Another large frame had a newspaper article about his interest in
Shakespeare and neurology.
Sam
moved closer and inspected the pictures, too.
What
was the doctor doing now? Where did he go? Paperwork? The bathroom? Dr.
O’Rourke had discovered things that all the other doctors had missed. Why
didn’t Dr. Choy or Dr. Jackson or even Dr. Thomas—even the school psychologists—why
didn’t they figure out what was wrong? What about his teachers? Why did it take
so long? And me—his mother! I was the worst of all. I closed my eyes and shook
my head at my stupidity. Well, Dr. Choy did mention that it could be epilepsy,
but I wouldn’t entertain that diagnosis then. That was preposterous.
Lance Fogan, M.D. is
Clinical Professor of Neurology at the David
Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. His hard-hitting
emotional family medical
drama, “DINGS, is told from a mother’s point of view. “DINGS” is his first
novel. Aside from acclamation on internet bookstore sites, U.S. Report
of Books, and the Hollywood Book Review, DINGS has been advertised in recent
New York Times Book Reviews, the Los Angeles Times Calendar section and Publishers
Weekly. DINGS teaches epilepsy and is now available in eBook, audiobook, soft
and hard cover editions.
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