The
Story of Margaret Doll:
Born with Phenylketonuria
(PKU)
(Editor's note: Margaret
is the niece of Robert Guthrie, the Father of Newborn Screening, who is
mentioned in this story.)
Margaret was 13 months old when diagnosed with
PKU. The earlier diaper test was
being done in some doctors' offices and well-baby clinics, but not ours.
The wine diaper test was not effective until the baby was several months
of age-not always perfect-and too late for early brain damage.
Bob Guthrie's original inspiration to develop
a test for PKU came from his son John, who was also retarded, but not because of
PKU. Bob switched from cancer
research to research on trying to prevent retardation.
When Margaret was born in 1958, it was a complete shock to Bob that she
was a PKU victim, as he graduated from the University of Minnesota and made
trips to the PKU clinic here to gather frozen urine specimens!
We phoned him in Buffalo when Margaret was 9
months old, as our general practitioner diagnosed petit mal seizures at that
time and referred us to his pediatrician friend who broke the news that he felt
she was retarded to some degree and when she was a little older, we should take
her to the University for an EEG. No
hurry! How wrong-as time meant
everything.
Bob is the one who actually referred us to the
University, but she was 13 months of age before we went in for the appointment.
They did the diaper test, which confirmed the diagnosis, but it was far
too late for preventing brain damage.
Actually, she didn't sit up until about 18
months and walked at 27 months. It
took about three years of medications to wipe out the petit mal seizures.
Margaret was started on the PKU diet
immediately at 13 months. That's
when her motor skills improved quickly. She
was on the diet for about seven years when we took her off, as the medical
establishment was thinking the brain is fully grown by then, and food wouldn't
matter.
Twenty-five years later we put Margaret back on
the diet after her behavior changed radically at about age 19 to 20.
She became violent, destructive, self-abusive, and screamed hysterically
at things we couldn't understand. Obviously,
she was hallucinating.
Now she is calm and contented once again, and
is speaking in more complete sentences with more complicated thought patterns.
We should never have abandoned the diet, and now because of her
and other adult PKU people, our philosophy is to stay on the diet for
life. Amazingly, she adjusted back
to no meat, cheese, eggs, milk, etc., very easily as she certainly must
feel better. Her diet supplement
(powder mixed with water).is made in the U.K.
She is still on some anti-psychotic drugs, minimal dosages, to help keep
her behavior under control.
Despite the promise of Bob's test, we elected
not to gamble on more children. We
had seen several families in the PKU clinic in the early years who had two or
even three children affected. The
Mendelian issue (of one affected out of four, two carriers out of four, and one
clear of PKU out of four) did not necessarily ring true.
We opted instead to do foster care and eventually adopted three brothers
for Margaret.
Margaret is considered severely to profoundly
retarded. Socially, however, she
can be taken to church, simple concerts, restaurants, to people's homes for
visits, and even rides a 2-wheel bike well!
She enjoys music and food. Especially
loves French fries and pop! She is
a happy young woman, and we're very proud of her!
She can pare potatoes, load and unload the dishwasher, and open cans and
packages. Though she can't read,
she's always interested in what a package says.
She lives successfully in a four-person group home eight miles from me
and comes home often for visits. She
goes to a cabin with us for a week every summer-loves the paddle-wheel boat,
fishing off the dock, and playing in the lake.
She attends a Developmental Achievement Center
(DAC) five days a week where they do simple crafts, sing, and go to coffee
shops. She loves coffee! She can also bowl about 60 to 70 but has developed neuropathy
and wears braces on both legs. She
throws one foot very badly so walks best with a walker or a cane.
She doesn't complain, but long distance walking is not an option.
Last fall the Sutherland Media Productions
wanted to use Margaret's image in a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Holiday
Lecture Series regarding biomedical research.
The book, "The PKU Story-Robert Guthrie", has one chapter that
profiles patients with PKU. Margaret
is one of them. Her picture is
included on p. 155. Jean Holt Koch
is the author, the wife of Dr. Richard Koch who is in California, a world expert
on PKU.
Sincerely,
Mary
Lou Doll
Written February 2003 by Mary Lou Doll
Mother of Margaret (PKU)
HOME | ABOUT US | PRESS RELEASES | DONATE NOW | VOLUNTEER NOW
Contact
Save Babies Through Screening
for questions about the content of this site or
the Webmaster
for questions about technical issues related to this site.
Terms of use
for this site.
