Sunday, June 27, 2010

Gene Therapy Information

To Find out more about Gene Therapy check out the Gwendolyn Strong Foundation

Thursday, June 17, 2010

A New Year!

Hello from The Micahs March Team 2010,
We cannot tell you how excited we are about this new year! Micah Marshall has turned 2 this June and we Praise God for each new day his family has with him!
Micah's March was such an amazing success last year that we thought we would do it again! Another opportunity to come alongside this family, help them with their medical expenses and or research for this disease!
Here is the Post from Last year! We hope and pray that you will join us this year and raise more awareness of SMA!

Micah March 2009 was a complete success and we cannot thank everyone enough for all of their love, hardwork and participation!
To see friends, family, the community and the body of Christ some together to Love and support Micah and the Marshall family was a beautiful sight to see!
We waited a while to post this because money is continuing to come in...but the wait is over
We had 113 walkers (not including all the children that walked)!
200 attended the dinner!
We raised ...drumroll please...$12, 500 and still more coming in!
PRAISE OUR GOD AND FATHER!
Below are some pictures from the event thanks to shannon dawn photography...but if any of you have picture they want to share please email me at cristinharrell@yahoo.com and we can post more!
Thanks again to:
Ojai Valley Baptist Church for Hosting!
Abigail Davidson and John Harrell and friends for performing!
All our amazing sponsors, particiapants, volunteers and
the Strong Family for UNITE FOR THE CURE!

To keep posted on Micah please visit:
http://micahpaulmarshall.blogspot.com/

Faces of SMA

SMA Statistics

SMA Statistics

SMA is the #1 genetic killer of young children.
SMA is estimated to occur in nearly 1 out of every 6,000 births.
1 in every 40 people, or nearly 10 million Americans, UNKNOWINGLY carries the gene responsible for SMA. Few have any known family history.
SMA is a pan-ethnic disease and does not discriminate based on race, ethnicity, or gender.
There is currently no treatment and no cure, but the National Institutes of Health (NIH) selected SMA as the disease closest to treatment of more than 600 neurological disorders.
Researchers estimate that a viable treatment and/or cure is attainable in as little as 5 years – IF provided adequate resources.
The American College of Medical Genetics recommends that SMA carrier testing be made available to ALL couples planning a family, regardless of ethnicity or family history.

What is SMA?

Most babies with SMA are born after a normal pregnancy, are seemingly healthy, and pass all current newborn screenings. SMA is a terminal and degenerative disease that causes weakness and wasting of the voluntary muscles in infants and children. Specifically, the disease is caused by an abnormal or missing gene known as the survival motor neuron gene (SMN1), which is responsible for the production of a protein essential to motor neurons. Without this protein, lower motor neurons in the spinal cord degenerate and die. As the motor neuron network breaks down, the ability of the brain to control muscles diminishes and with less control and use, muscles weaken and waste away. Simply, SMA eventually impacts every muscle in the body hindering the ability to walk, sit, stand, eat, breathe, and swallow. The mind always remains unaffected and children with SMA are bright, sensitive, and playful in spite of their failing bodies.

How does SMA occur?

Approximately 1 in 35 people, or nearly 10 million Americans, unknowingly caries the gene responsible for SMA. These people are referred to as “carriers”. Non-carriers have two healthy copies of the SMN1 gene. But, carriers have one healthy SMN1 copy and one defective, mutated SMN1 copy. The one healthy SMN1 gene is more than sufficient to direct the production of SMN protein in carriers. However, when two carriers have a child, that child randomly gets one SMN1 gene from each parent: 25% of the time that child receives two healthy SMN1 genes (one from each parent); 50% of the time that child gets one healthy SMN1 gene and one defective SMN1 gene; and 25% of the time that child gets two defective SMN1 genes. It is this last 25%, where the child is passed two defective, mutated SMN1 genes, in which the active form of SMA occurs and the child is left without the functioning SMN1 gene that is responsible for the production of a protein essential to motor neurons. Most couples that have a child with SMA had no known prior family history.

How is SMA diagnosed?

SMA can be diagnosed through a simple blood test that screens for deletion of the gene called survival motor neuron, SMN1.

Are there different Types?

In general, there are four types associated with the group of diseases known as SMA: Type I, II, III, and IV. The type is generally determined by the age of onset and the severity of symptoms.

What is the prognosis?

The prognosis varies between the different Types. Type I children typically die before they reach the age of two. For Type II children the prognosis for life expectancy ranges from early childhood to early adulthood. Type III and Type IV typically live into adulthood and some Type IV’s can have a close to normal life expectancy. All Types experience muscle degeneration, but at varying speeds and severity with Type I progressing the most rapidly.

Is there a treatment or cure?

No. Research and the potential for both a viable treatment and even a cure is promising, but there is currently nothing to stop SMA from progressing.

Is there Carrier Screening?

Yes. A simple blood test will determine if you are a carrier of SMA. Both parents must be carriers for the baby to have the active form of SMA. Currently you must request this test from your doctor, as it is not yet a standard test. Visit the Claire Altman Heine Foundation for more information on carrier screening.
We received all our information from the Gwendolyn Strong Foundation

WHAT IS SMA???

SMA is the leading genetic killer of infants. It is a terminal, degenerative disease that results in the loss of nerves in the spinal cord and the weakness of the muscles connected with those nerves. SMA impacts the ability to walk, stand, sit, eat, breathe and even swallow. The mind and spirit are no different from that of a healthy baby, but the body eventually fails. Typical babies with SMA Type 1 have a life expectancy of between one and two years and they require around-the-clock medical assistance and monitoring.
for more information on SMA please visit the Gwendolyn Strong Foundation