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PEDIATRIC INTENSIVE CARE UNIT
Diagnosed at 11,
viral meningitis
and encephalitis
Rosalie was a healthy 11-year-old with
a penchant for playing dress-up and imitating singing star Selena
when she began having an on-again, off-again fever. For several
weeks, Rosalie’s mother, Nelda, battled the fever with
over-the-counter medication. But every time Rosalie’s fever went
away, it came back a few days later.
“Occasionally, Rosalie would ask me
questions like ‘What day is it?’ but I thought she was joking or
being silly,” Nelda says.
After several weeks, Nelda decided she
needed help, so she took Rosalie to the local emergency room. While
they waited to see a doctor, Rosalie began having a seizure.
“I remember them taking her away as her
body jerked uncontrollably,” Nelda says. “It was horrible.”
Rosalie was admitted to the hospital,
but after another seizure she was transported to Texas Children’s
Hospital, where she was diagnosed with viral meningitis, an
infection of the lining around the brain and spinal cord, and
encephalitis, an inflammation of the brain tissue. She spent more
than a month at Texas Children’s, where her illness caused her to
regress to infancy and require diapers, tube feedings and 24-hour
observation.
“We waited for Rosalie to wake up and
be her normal self, but she just lay there,” Nelda says. “It was
really difficult for us to watch.”
As Rosalie’s family sat by her side day
after day and night after night, they never lost hope, but they
often were fearful and anxious about what the future might hold.
Nelda credits Texas Children’s nurses, especially Maricella (Marcie)
Vara, for helping them get through the ordeal.
“We were told Rosalie might have brain
damage and could be mentally retarded,” Nelda says. “The medical
terms and procedures were sometimes very hard to understand, but
Marcie would sit with us and help break down the big words and
explain what was happening.”
Through the entire ordeal, Nelda spent
only one night away from Rosalie’s bedside. She admits it was often
exhausting, but she knew she had to be with her child. Vara helped
give her the strength she needed.
“Marcie spent a lot of time with me,
giving me support,” Nelda says. “She really went above and beyond
and made me feel confident enough to go on.”
After several weeks of hospitalization,
Rosalie’s illness subsided enough for her to go home. She was put on
medication to control her seizures and has made a complete recovery.
Today, 16-year-old Rosalie makes
straight As and is active in Sam Houston High School’s ROTC program.
She remembers very little about her illness and time in the
hospital, but her mother and Vara remember it well. Rosalie and her
mother have returned to Texas Children’s to visit the staff several
times since her recovery.
During one of their return visits,
Rosalie and Nelda gave the nurses silver angel nurse lapel pins to
show their appreciation.
“Marcie was such a blessing for us,”
Nelda says. “She really made us feel part of the family at Texas
Children’s.”
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