Cannabis cures schoolgirl of crippling seizures so deadly she was forced into a medically induced coma
12-year-old Annalise Lujan was taking part in gymnastics when she began vomiting suddenly
[caption id="attachment_5561" align="alignnone" width="300"] A GoFundMe page has been set up to help with her medical bills and therapy (Photo: GoFundMe)[/caption]
A little girl who suffered from a rare condition causing such debilitating and dangerous seizures she was put into a coma has been cured by cannabis.
Annalise Lujan, 12, was taking part in a gymnastics class when she began vomiting and lost all feeling in her legs.
She suffered a severe seizure and was rushed to hospital where paramedics put her in a medically induced coma to stop any further damage being caused to her brain.
The youngster was flown to a specialist unit at Phoenix Children’s Hospital where she was diagnosed with febrile infection-related epilepsy syndrome (FIRES), an incredibly rare condition affecting just one in a million children.
Her mother, Maryann Estrada-Lujan, told KVOA : “One day, she was just a healthy young lady, going to school, participating in her community and her gymnastics, and the next day - fighting for her life.
[caption id="attachment_5562" align="alignnone" width="300"] She suffered a severe seizure and was rushed to hospital (Photo: GoFundMe)[/caption]
“She was put on a ventilator, and put into a medical coma, and, we haven't talked to her since.
“We had no idea that our whole world would be 180-degrees turned around in such devastation, such heartache, such confusion.”
The condition was causing Annalise to suffer constant seizures which can prove to be fatal, but normal epilepsy medication was ineffective against FIRES.
Doctors were not able to bring her out of her induced coma until they found a method of controlling the seizures.
Her mother began researching alternative remedies and discovered a cannabis -derived drug, Cannabidiol, which had been successful in previous epilepsy cases.
She lobbied for the drug, which has low levels of THC which is the active ingredient making people ‘high’, to be given to her daughter.
Doctors had to rush through its approval with the FDA and DEA as the drug was not yet approved.
After just three treatments the schoolgirl, from Tuscon, Arizona, was able to be brought out of her coma, and no longer suffers from the crippling seizures.
Her mother said: “She opened her eyes, and she was scared. She was afraid. She cried. And, I whispered to her that she was very strong, she's beautiful, and she's strong, and she needed to keep breathing, and she did.”
Currently undergoing therapy after suffering the seizure in April, she is hoping to regain her cognitive abilities and resume gymnastics.
FIRES normally appears between one and 14 days after a child has a mild fever, and is thought to be caused when a virus spreads to the brain or autoimmune system after a cold or stomach flu.
Source: Mirror
Author: KVOA, Rebecca Flood
Website: Mirror
URL: http://drugsense.org/url/R9d3ScUO
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