TYPES WITH TEETH
GIRL’S REMARKABLE ACHIEVEMENT.
Since she was born 20 years ago, Sy via Eugenie Davis, of Kansas City, has not been able to use her arms or legs. The nerve tracts in the neck region of her spinal cord were injured at birth, causing spastic paralysis (muscular rigidity). But Sylvia was endowed with high courage. She learned to read, turning the pages of her books with her tongue. She used a typewriter by poking the keys with a pencil held between her teeth. With a brush between mer teeth she tinted photographs, made drawings. She was careful of her appearance, applied her own cosmetics by moving her face against lipsticks and powlder-puffs. Her parents took her to the pictures in her wheel chair.
Recently Sylva heard there was a chance of improvement by surgical operation—crushing the malformed nerve tracts in her neck in the hope that they would grow together normally.
Such an operation, though not unique, is rare. Stocky, bespectacled Dr. Frank Randall Teachenor, one of the most brilliant neurological surgeons in America, had never before performed it.
LIFE OR DEATH?
De warned Sy via that although it might help her, it might make her worse or even cause her death. Sylva decided to take the chance. Her mother tried to dissaude her, but lhe girl persisted in her determination. Recently Dr. Teachenor exposed the nerve tracts, determined which ones were injured, crushed them. After the operation blood transfusions were given and the girl was placed In a respirator. When she regained consciousness, she cheerfully asked her nurse to sing a song. Not lor some time can it be known whether her paralysis will be cured. The surgeon, however, found “a favourable indication of successful recovery.”
Not every spactic paralytic can take a gamble like Sylva’s. Sometimes tne motor control centres of the brain are injured at birth. Such children may learn to walk after a fashion, but their movements are disordered and uncontrolled.
They are often mistakenly considered feeble-minded, although the intellectual centres of the brain are intact and the sufferers may be intelligent. Best hope of imrpovement for such persons is in patient self-education and enlightened help from others. One of the most eminent spastic paralytics in the U.S. is Dr. Earl Reinhold Carlson, of Manhattan’s Neurological Institute. Once a convulsive cripple, an orphan at 18, Earl Carlpon conquered his handicap by dint of iron determination, ploughe through college and medical school, He advises hundred of mothers on is now practically normal. Xvhat to do for their spastic paralytic children.
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Bibliographic details
Grey River Argus, 20 May 1938, Page 3
Word Count
425TYPES WITH TEETH Grey River Argus, 20 May 1938, Page 3
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