Wednesday, November 18, 2015

11/18/15 UPDATE!



Greg is progressing with excellence. We were able to purchase the Teeter Hang Up (pictured below) and he has begun to use it.


Here also is a youtube video of Greg doing Tonic Neck Reflex which benefits, in part, deep coordination and spatial issues (knowing where you are in space). This is life-changing.


This is a link to other youtube videos we hope you'll check out. 
(Please realize they may automatically flow into someone else's video.)   




Wednesday, October 28, 2015

These videos are from Greg's youtube posts, so after you've watched each once, it flows to the next youtube video unrelated to Greg.

Please scroll below the videos to read the reason and purpose for this therapy. And please, think about anyone you might know who has had a brain trauma or stroke, or is diagnosed autistic, bipolar, etc.

Greg's Neuro Therapy - Creeping 10-28-15

Greg's Neuro Therapy - Crawling 10-24-15

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Welcome to Greg's Neuro Therapy Blog Woot Woot!

To all who contributed to and/or prayed for Greg S. Fitzpatrick to begin the new therapy
– Neurological Reorganization –
for furthering his recovery from a traumatic brain injury, we first want to thank you for it is now underway.

Following is the first comprehensive update, written and posted by Mom, Marylynn G. Stults.







WHAT INITIALLY HAPPENED 
(For those reading this for the first time, here is a blurb of Greg’s history)

Greg was born. 10-20-69. 10 pounds 12 ounces. Whew.




In a moped accident at the end of his high school freshman year in 1984, Greg sustained a massive skull fracture and severe closed head injury (bilateral contusions) that hemorrhaged. Though his critical condition was considered inoperable, he coded and emergency surgery – a bilateral frontal craniotomy (substantial removal of the frontal lobes of his brain) – had to be performed. He survived the surgery yet was not expected to live and, subsequently, spent weeks in ICU and years doing every therapy then known to man (or at least us) to relearn everything, including all skills of cognition and the basics of movement and speech. His great intellect and sense of humor returned, but many deficits have remained including temper issues and inability to stay on task and hold a job. I did not know there was anything to help him further. I was wrong!! Also, none of us close to Greg knew what he continued to be going through. (The one thing Greg has always had, though, throughout all of his trials, is an incredibly wonderful sense of humor.)

OUR PURPOSE HERE IN BLOGGING
Greg wants to blog to track the progress of his recovery
AND to cause awareness of this therapy so others with brain issues can also be helped!

WHAT WE FOUND
By a “chance meeting,” (Jocelyn Williams thank you SO MUCH), ­­I learned of Neurological Reorganization Therapy (http://neurologicalreorganization.org/), a clinically tested method to treat neurodevelopmentally-based challenges in children and adults to bring about recovery from extensive brain damage. Because of your generosity, Greg had his evaluation by the organization’s founder and counselor, Bette Lamont, October 22nd, and has begun his therapy. He has committed to a daily program for one year; this is the beginning!

1. WHAT WE DIDN’T KNOW: THE THERAPY AVAILABLE
It has been 31 years since the accident. Throughout this time, we mistakenly believed that all that was damaged (as if it weren’t enough) were Greg’s frontal lobes (the area of the brain concerned, in part, with emotions, behavior, learning, personality, and voluntary movement). Over time, and time and time again, many – including the therapist – have noted Greg’s exceptional intelligence, but they – not including the therapist – wondered why he didn’t drive or hold a job or keep rein on his temper. I myself would often become frustrated, expecting great things out of him because he had so much apparent potential, but he just wouldn’t stay on task and, say, clean his room or keep a civil tongue in his mouth or accomplish more than one thing in a day. Living with him, I knew deep inside me that there was an actual INABILITY to do or control these things and I would defend him as a mother bear, but day after day, we (he and I) would just get exhausted trying to figure it all out. Frankly, you just keep going on day after day, knowing there’s more but having no idea what it is or how to access it. But then, through Jocelyn, I learned of this therapy I did not know existed and eventually learned it will help Greg in ways I didn’t even know he needed!

2. WHAT WE DIDN’T KNOW: THE INJURY’S DEPTH
Did you ever try to make a deaf person hear your voice? A person without legs walk to you? Those are deficits that quickly become obvious and I use as examples, for you would be unreasonable to have expectations of their hearing or mobility. But daily, Greg faces inabilities to do things most of us take for granted, for Bette determined in her examination that the damage done to him was far more extensive than frontal lobes. In short, when the front of his head struck the pavement, the impact jarred and injured far more of his brain than just what contused and bled.

3. WHAT WE DIDN’T KNOW: SPECIFICS
The temper outbursts are limbic rage, a physiological brain disorder over which Greg (and anyone with this issue) has no control and no recollection of what has transpired. Bette cited similar examples of other patients who experience this rage. Understandable irritants might trigger the outbursts Greg has, or they could be as meaningless as annoyances like the Fresh Market let the creamer run out or I swallowed too loudly; others might be without any reasonable justification whatsoever.

Tests Bette performed on Greg revealed that he has deficits of eye movement, auditory appreciations, tactile incompetence, mobility issues, and manual incompetence (prehensile grasp issues). Due to issues of the cerebellum that controls balance, he doesn’t know where he is “in space.” The issues incorporate the areas of the pons (the part of the brainstem that links the heart/lung control center the medulla oblongata and the thalamus which relays sensory information and provides pain perception) and the midbrain (the central part of the brainstem). The corpus callosum – the nerve fibers that join the two hemispheres of the brain – is also greatly affected so that, figuratively, at times, the right hand doesn’t know what the left is doing. Now, guess what?

WHAT WE NOW KNOW!
First, Greg is so RELIEVED to have learned not only the best news – that there is help and hope for RECOVERY – but that his deficits ARE NOT HIS FAULT OR DOING. What a burden to be lifted!

An example of what Greg sometimes encounters and his good humor in handling situations just happened. He has been working on a homework assignment about an ethical accounting issue that was to have been turned in by midnight last night. Its length is 800 words, which is the equivalent of about three typewritten pages. It is now 18 hours late and he is on page eight! Page eight. He mixed up the number of pages and words. He has some serious editing to do. (He laughed and said, “I suppose this means I can’t just delete the last five pages…”) And now, he knows why he does things like this.

Greg with his godparents, Chris and Larry Prange

Greg received his Associate's & Bachelor's Degrees from Indiana Wesleyan University.
He is pictured here with his sister Jenny, dad Terry Fitzpatrick, and moi. 

He is now studying for his Master's in Accounting 

AND THIS IS ALL GOOD NEWS BECAUSE THE THERAPY GREG HAS BEGUN ADDRESSES ALL OF THESE ISSUES. THE BRAIN CAN RECOVER! IT IS CONSTANTLY GROWING NEW CELLS. AND BETTE HAS ALMOST 30 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE IN DEALING WITH THE ISSUES OF TBI (TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY), AS WELL AS OTHER BRAIN DISORDERS INCLUDING STROKE, AUTISM, BIPOLAR, AND SCHIZOPHRENIA. 

In our next post, we'll add some pictures and videos of the therapy. Thanks for coming!