A Melbourne mum reveals the struggles she faces to care for her daughter.
When Julieanne Bugeja’s daughter Alyssa was just 4-months old, she began to worry. Her baby girl wouldn’t roll, crawl, or sit up without help. In a search for answers, a 23 year-old Julieanne and her husband, Chris, sought help from maternal nurses. One said Alyssa was “a delayed baby,” another said she was “a lazy baby.”
Not satisfied with the answers she was being given, the Melbourne mum sought advice from a pediatrician, when Alyssa was 6-months old. After 3 months of testing, her daughter with the smile of an angel, was diagnosed with Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA).
“Our lives were crushed at that moment. We were told take your daughter home and love her as she won’t live to see her second birthday,” Julieanne, who is now 33, revealed.
SMA is a rare disease, which affects approximately 1 in 6000 children. It is a Motor Neuron disease, similar to Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), which is caused by a missing gene, necessary to provide protein to motor neurons in the spine. There is no cure or treatment to stop or slow the progression. Without the protein provided by this gene, motor neurons in the spine slowly die, leading to muscle wastage.
This disease would cause Alyssa to lose the ability to move and swallow. Her radiant smile would begin to fade. Julieanne recalling the moment Alyssa was diagnosed explains, “It’s a numbing feeling, when you are told your child is going to die, while she’s sitting on your lap smiling at you is crushing.”
Not long after, Alyssa caught a simple cold. A cold that caused Alyssa to spend 4 weeks in an intensive care unit (ICU), riddled with breathing tubes due to the SMA. This is where Alyssa spent her first birthday.
But Julieanne continued to fight for Alyssa, explaining, “We couldn't give up on our girl. We weren’t going to lose her without a fight. We flew her to America and tried a natural treatment in Texas which didn’t work. So we went to enroll in a drug trial in a Californian hospital.”
“Unfortunately Alyssa caught another cold there, and ended up in ICU where they were using a machine called a cough assist on her. She was medically airlifted back to Melbourne as she was not entitled to partake in the trial after being in ICU,” Julieanne went on to explain.