09/01/06 14:02:38
>>184ですが続きがありました。再度申し訳ないですが、お願いします。
In the course of these procedures, Eric and Andrea learned more than they ever wanted to know about ultrasound,
CT scanners, MRI machines, and emergency surgeries of all sorts. By the spring of 2006, Ryan Cole was suffering the frightening effects of one of his birth defects, hydrocephalus.
Fluid was accumulating under his skull, pushing the bone outward and putting pressure on his brain. Doctors inserted a shunt to drain fluid from the brain into the abdomen,
but it failed within 48 hours, requiring more brain scans and a second operation. As he recovered from this operation, Ryan was struck with a new affliction. It began with a twitch,
but in a matter of hours, the entire left side of his body was paralyzed. For the fourth time in less than a month, the Coles packed their child, drooling and vomiting, into their car and took him to the ER.
Ryan was having seizures, which doctors eventually quelled with prescription drugs.