Emmalyn’s Journey with Glutaric Aciduria/Acidemia Type 1 (GA-1)

Emmalyn Reese Hudson was born 11 years ago at 35 weeks gestation weighing in at 5 lbs, 7 ozs. and 18 inches long. Our beautiful baby girl was so tiny and perfect, and I couldn’t believe how blessed we were to be her parents. Her Apgar score was an 8, and she seemed otherwise developed and healthy despite being premature. She did have an elevated white blood cell count which required a round of IV antibiotics and an extra day in the hospital for observation. A few days later, we brought our seemingly healthy baby girl home. On our second night at home around 10:30 pm, we received the devastating phone call that no parent ever wants to receive. In an instant, our new baby bliss turned into sheer panic, fear, and grief. That moment, one I will never forget, is when our daughter became a brave and fearless rare disease warrior. The nurse solemnly spoke these words to me, “I don’t want to alarm you, but your newborn baby is very sick and needs to be brought to the hospital immediately.” She then told us to pack our bags because our baby would be transferred to the Children’s Hospital two and a half hours away after she was stabilized. We were given no details about what was wrong except that her newborn screening test came back positive for a rare genetic disorder.

The next couple of weeks were a blur of tears mixed with overwhelming fear, uncertainty, anger, devastation, and immense heartache. After 8 days in the Children’s Hospital, we took our baby girl home with a scary diagnosis of glutaric aciduria/acidemia type 1 (GA-1). GA-1 is a rare genetic metabolic disorder in which the body lacks the necessary enzyme needed to break down the amino acids lysine, hydroxylysine, and tryptophan which are building blocks of protein. The excessive levels of intermediate breakdown product will then accumulate and cause damage to the brain, including the basal ganglia. There is no cure for her disorder, but we manage daily with specialized metabolic formula, medication, a carefully measured low protein diet, frequent blood work, strict emergency protocol management, and extra caution during cold and flu season.

Emmalyn is now 11 years old and living a full, happy, and healthy life. I homeschool her to keep her from being exposed to all the contagious illnesses in the school system.  In addition to GA-1, she has abnormal MRI’s, damage to the white matter of the brain, macrocephaly, many delays including developmental, learning, visual processing and speech, Dyslexia and other learning disorders, ADHD, anxiety disorder, and secondary carnitine deficiency which are all common for her disorder. She also has Brown Syndrome where her left eye has limited rotation and can cause vision disturbances. She has had many therapies over the years, and currently still receives occupational and dyslexia therapy weekly. She also gets bloodwork every 2-3 months or sooner if needed, to manage her prescribed diet, formula, medications, and lab values. Most importantly, she is brilliant, funny, loving, compassionate, beautiful, and exceptionally brave!

Looking back now, the worst phone call we ever received will also be the best call of our lives in that it was what saved Emmalyn’s life. Without the newborn screening program and the quick response by her medical team, she could have lost all her motor skills and become completely debilitated or worse, died, due to metabolic stroke and acidosis, encephalopathy, and striatal necrosis. There is still so much more to learn about her rare genetic disorder, many people to educate and always more people to inspire, improved protocols to be established, and an eventual cure to be found.

Yours truly,

Shannah Hudson, mom to a Brave Rare Disease Warrior, and Founder/CEO of Mississippi Metabolics Foundation

Share this post

Follow us