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Hope for a Pediatric Cure - Help Fight a Children's Autoimmune DiseaseCharity Scene Presents Hope For a Pediatric CureWednesday, December 9, 2009 from 7:00 PM to 10:00 PM (EST)New York, NY |
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Event Details
Please join us on Wednesday, Dec 9th at the Village Pour House (Vegas
Room) to support efforts to help find a cure for a children's
autoimmune disease called Ataxia-telangiectasia, or "A-T." This is a
progressive, degenerative disease that affects a startling variety of
body systems. Diagnosis leads to a predisposition to cancer, immune
issues and early death.
For more information:
http://www.communityatcp.org/Page.aspx?pid=588
Wenesday, Dec 9th @ The Village Pour House (Vegas Room)
http://www.pourhousenyc.com/
7 - 10pm
1 Hour Open Bar (7 - 8pm); 10% discount on all food
Complimentary cupcakes donated by Baked by Melissa
http://www.bakedbymelissa.com/#/home/
Specialty Holiday Cocktails, Buy 1 get 1 free All Night
Chocolate Dipping Tasting Fountain
$15 online/$25 at door
*Presented by Charity Scene*
When & Where
Village Pourhouse (Vegas Room)
64 Third Avenue
New York,
NY 10003
Wednesday, December 9, 2009 from 7:00 PM to 10:00 PM (EST)
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Organizer
Charity Scene Presents Hope For a Pediatric Cure
A Multi-system Disease...
Ataxia-telangiectasia,
or "A-T," is a progressive, degenerative disease that affects a
startling variety of body systems. Children with A-T appear normal at
birth, and the first signs of the disease usually appear during the
second year of life. These first signs are usually a "wobbly" lack of
balance and slurred speech caused by "ataxia," which means a lack of
muscle control.
Ataxia...
The
onset of this ataxia marks the beginning of progressive degeneration of
a part of the brain, known as the cerebellum, that gradually leads to a
general lack of muscle control, and eventually confines the patient to
a wheelchair. Because of the worsening ataxia, children with A-T lose
their ability to write, and speech also becomes slowed and slurred.
Even reading eventually becomes impossible as eye movements become
difficult to control.
Telangiectasia...
Soon
after the onset of the ataxia, the A-T patient usually shows another
clinical hallmark of A-T: "telangiectasia," or tiny red "spider" veins
which appear in the corners of the eyes or on the surface of the ears
and cheeks exposed to sunlight. Although these telangiectasia are
seemingly harmless, their unique appearance together with ataxia is
what led to naming this disease "ataxia-telangiectasia."
Immune System Problems...
For
most (about 70 percent) of children with A-T there is another clinical
hallmark: immunodeficiency that usually brings recurrent respiratory
infections. In many patients, these infections can become life
threatening. Because of deficient levels of IgA and IgE
immunoglobulins, the natural infection fighting agents in the blood,
children with A-T are highly susceptible to lung infections that do not
respond to typical antibiotic treatments. For these A-T patients, the
combination of a weakened immune system and the progressive ataxia can
ultimately lead to pneumonia as a common cause of death.
Predisposition to Cancer...
Children
with A-T tend to develop malignancies of the blood system almost 1,000
times more frequently than the general population. Lymphoma and
leukemia are particularly common types of cancer, although the
frequencies of most cancers are elevated. Ironically, another facet of
the disease is an extreme sensitivity to radiation, which means that
A-T patients cannot tolerate the therapeutic radiation usually given to
cancer patients.
Other Features of A-T...
Other
features of ataxia-telangiectasia that may affect some children are:
mild diabetes mellitus, premature graying of the hair, difficulty
swallowing causing choking and/or drooling and slowed growth. Even
though A-T is a multi-system disorder, the children afflicted have and
maintain normal or even above-normal intelligence. Their dispositions
seem to remain equable and help them to maintain a healthy outlook on
life despite the progression of their disabilities.
How Frequent is A-T?
Ataxia-telangiectasia
respects no racial, economic, geographic or education barriers. Both
males and females are equally affected. Epidemiologists estimate the
frequency of A-T as 1 in 40,000 births. But it is believed that many
children with A-T, particularly those who die at a young age, are never
properly diagnosed. Therefore, this disease may actually be much more
common.
Prognosis...
A-T
is presently incurable and unrelenting. If they are lucky enough not to
develop cancer, most A-T children are dependent on wheelchairs by the
age of ten, not because their muscles are too weak, but because they
cannot control them. Later, A-T patients usually die from respiratory
failure or cancer by their teens or early twenties. A few A-T patients
live into their forties, but they are extremely rare.