Mohammed’s Malnutrition Prompted MRI of Brain Today Revealing No Abnormalities – Fit to Fly Home on Thursday
August 3, 2009 by Jeremy



Mohammed is still being tube-fed & will probably continue to be fed this way at home in Iraq for one month.

The last few days have been difficult for Mohammed and his dad as doctors diagnosed him initially with Tapia’s syndrome – a congenital problem affecting the vocal chords, causing atrophy of the tongue, and other problems. But after a full check up with a neurologist on Saturday, doctors wanted to run an MRI of his brain to see why “ten or eleven different nerves were so seriously affected by his condition.”
The morning was very tense as we talked through the implications of what they might find in such a test.
Thankfully, the MRI revealed Mohammed’s brain to be “completely normal,” and though that leaves the doctors a little bit baffled as to why he has had difficulty eating, speaking, and why he has been so persistently malnourished, they have declared him “fit to fly” and we are preparing for a Thursday night departure.
His heart is in good shape and he will almost certainly go back to Iraq on a regimen of tube-feeding (to be carried out at home).
Follow 11-year-old Mohammed on Twitter: @mohammedgaelan. Subscribe to Mohammed’s updates via RSS here. Follow Mohammed’s thread of longer stories (with pictures) on the PLC blog here.
The doctors and PLC helped secure good prices from the hospital for Mohammed’s MRI, but ultimately PLC asked Mohammed’s family covered the minimal costs of these diagnostic tests for his brain, as PLC exists to fund treatment for hearts and not inquiries into neurological issues.
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Jeremy Courtney lives and loves in Iraq as a co-founder and Executive Director of the Preemptive Love Coalition. He's also the father of two spectacular children, and married to the lovely Jessica Courtney. When not absorbed in PLC work he can be found writing songs and singing about hope and future. Follow Jeremy on Twitter: @Jeremy_Courtney. |






