Guest guest Posted November 30, 2008 Report Share Posted November 30, 2008 This is so sad that it has to happen to someone so young, especially children. My prayers are going out to him and his family. And to think that we do have people out there that will fake an illness just for the money and say it is caused from mold, and in all actuality it is not. And those people know who they are and makes us the ones that are truly sick from mold that are trying to survive look bad. God Bless this poor child. Please all of you, say your prayers for this young man. Darlene From: tigerpaw2c <tigerpaw2c@...> Subject: [] Faith steels boy with illness (mucormycosis) Date: Sunday, November 30, 2008, 9:04 AM This is awful. Yaeger needs our prayers!! KC Faith steels boy with illness By Staff Writer Published: Sunday, November 30, 2008 at 3:30 a.m. Last Modified: Saturday, November 29, 2008 at 7:14 p.m. Tuscaloosa News - Tuscaloosa,AL, USA http://www.tuscaloo sanews.com/ article/20081130 /NEWS/811290279/ 1007? Title=Faith_ steels_boy_ with_illness When her son was diagnosed with mucormycosis, Suzi Yaeger did what many people would do and typed the unfamiliar word into an Internet search engine. Phrases including " high mortality rate, " " poor prognosis " and " often fatal " jumped off the computer screen. Yaeger, 16, had contracted the very rare fungal infection from mold in the closet of a home the family leased until September, doctors found. He has been hospitalized since Oct. 28, hoping that doctors can get him well enough to perform an operation to remove his right lung, his mother said. The infection is caused by fungi that gain access to the mucous membranes of the patient's nose or lungs, rapidly multiply and invade nearby blood vessels. The fungi destroy soft tissue and bone, as well as the walls of blood vessels. " It's so rare that the doctors were in shock that he had it, " Suzi Yaeger said. The doctors told the Yaegers that while the infection is rare, they have seen one other case in the last six months. Because the infection eats at tissue, a young girl had to have much of her face removed and is now blind, doctors told Yaeger. 's mother and father, , sister Ann, 19, and brother , 22, have been spending their days at UAB Medical Center, where he ended up after spending days at DCH Regional Medical Center and Children's Hospital in Birmingham. The American Christian Academy sophomore was originally diagnosed with pneumonia, after he had caught bronchitis from his mother who is a paraeducator for Special Education classes at ville Primary School. Antibiotics were only making him feel worse, so he was admitted to DCH on Oct. 28. The family had paid a down payment for a home in ville and was leasing from the owners until September. There were so many problems with the house, including leaks that they decided to find a home elsewhere. It wasn't until they moved out that Suzi Yaeger noticed that a lot of her son's T-shirts were covered in mold and that he had likely been wearing clothes exposed to the mold for months. has diabetes and a weaker immune system than the rest of his family, which may be why the mold affected him so profoundly. It's been a rough few weeks, he said. Last week, doctors discovered an obstruction in his colon that could be from the strong medicine he takes every night for five hours. Similar to chemotherapy, the strong antibiotics give him chills make him feel shaky one minute, or might make him nauseous and flushed the next. He had a painful and uncomfortable nasogastric tube inserted in his stomach all week to drain it, and has been unable to eat or drink. Doctors have had problems regulating his blood sugar levels and high blood pressure. His lung is so badly inflamed that the sutures would not hold if doctors performed surgery to remove it now, he said. The infection is concentrated in the middle lobe, doctors are hoping that it's the only portion they will have to remove. With only one lung, knows that it will be much more difficult for him to continue playing baseball, which he has done since he was 3. He has been a catcher on Hillcrest and ACA teams and was always on All-Star teams at the end of baseball season. 's other love is University of Alabama football. He's formed a friendship with running back Glen Coffee, who paid a visit to UAB Hospital when he learned about his illness after speaking to students during chapel at ACA in October. " Before he walked in and I could see him, I thought he was a big ol' nurse coming to give me a shot or something, " said. The two have texted and talked on the phone several times since. Coffee told before the game against LSU that any touchdown he scored would be dedicated to him, said. Coffee scored in the third quarter. has been uplifted by the support of his friends, who he was text messaging from his hospital bed earlier this week. Colorful " Get Well " signs from classmates line the walls of his hospital room and hopeful messages are written on a Web site the family uses to update friends and family about his condition. Friends and family from all over the country have wished him well, people has never met say that they're praying for him. Many say that they're inspired that he has put so much faith in God since he became ill. " My whole life has changed a lot. I've always been a Christian, but not like this, " he said. " I feel like God is using me to get people to come to him. If it takes me being sick, it's worth it. " " We are so thankful for all the prayers, " his mother said. " I don't know how people who don't have God in their lives handle this. " Ann, who takes classes at Shelton State Community College and who has delivered Taco Casa to her brother when he was well enough to eat, said that all of the siblings have always been close. " He's inspirational to me, to see how God is working through him and to see him laying there with a good attitude, " she said. doesn't know when he'll be able to go home, but hopes he may be able to leave the hospital for a day or two if his condition improves. " We're just playing it all by ear, " Suzi Yaeger said. People can write messages to and read updates about his condition at www.caringbridge. org/visit/ danielfyaeger. A family friend has set up a fund for people who have asked about sending donations to the family. Checks can be made payable to the Yaeger Fund and mailed to P.O. Box 71330, Tuscaloosa, AL 35407. Reach at stephanie.taylor@ tuscaloosanews. com or 205- 722-0210. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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