Child born without bones saved by experimental drug therapy
Nurses didn’t know a breakthrough drug was on the horizon when they dressed the tiny little girl in a pink outfit for a hospital photographer to take her picture.
It was a photograph for her parents — an image of solace so they could remember Janelly Martinez-Amador free of tubes. Doctors told them then there was nothing more they could do for a child without bones.
Born with the most severe form of hypophosphatasia — a genetic disorder that prevents skeletal mineralization — the girl didn’t have the ribs to support breathing. Her parents, Salvador Martinez and Janet Amador of Antioch, were facing the prospect of deciding whether to take her off a ventilator.
But Janelly held on long enough for a last chance at life. At age 2 years and 8 months, she entered a clinical trial involving an experimental medicine at Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt. Four years later, Janelly can dance.
http://www.tennessean.com/article/20130422/NEWS07/304220023/Nashville-child-born-without-bones-saved-by-experimental-drug-therapy-Vanderbilt?gcheck=1