mom2lillian
New member
I have a mutation classified as 'atypical' with a 'dominant mild effect' in the literature. This year a girls father with the same mutation sought me out.
We have started a website for those of us with our mutation. We are trying to amass enough individuals from across the world to get a good representative sampling. THere is a doctor in the UK who is interested in studying us and writing research papers on us if we can get enough of us gathered up.
We are doing this in the hopes of showing exactly what a wide variety of symptoms there can be for someone even with the same 'dominant mild mutation' and those diagnosed in their 20, 30, and later. Currently many doctors diagnose you as 'atypical' if you dont foot the bill they are used to thinking of but others are diagnosing 'atypical' if oyou are diagnosed as an adult.
SHould someone who only finds out they have CF due to a missing vas def in their 30's be treated the same as someone like me who was diagnosed in their 20's after years of problems? It is hard to know, there is NO data out there, the CFF has no guidelines and truly many doctors have no idea what to do with us.
I have at times felt like I wasnt receiving the most proactive care that I could because I was 'so healthy'. Our hope is that the CFF will address this in the coming years because as was mentioned there is such a variety of ways to address this issue and it is so sad that now that our technology has advanced enough to diagnose us some are still 'failling through the cracks' in the system and not being treated appropriately or perhaps even at all until they are 'sick enough' to meet the bill.
ANd for those who are interested there is a WIDE vary of presentations for those of us with P67L ranging from transplant list to a virtual lack of sypmtoms well into life.
We have started a website for those of us with our mutation. We are trying to amass enough individuals from across the world to get a good representative sampling. THere is a doctor in the UK who is interested in studying us and writing research papers on us if we can get enough of us gathered up.
We are doing this in the hopes of showing exactly what a wide variety of symptoms there can be for someone even with the same 'dominant mild mutation' and those diagnosed in their 20, 30, and later. Currently many doctors diagnose you as 'atypical' if you dont foot the bill they are used to thinking of but others are diagnosing 'atypical' if oyou are diagnosed as an adult.
SHould someone who only finds out they have CF due to a missing vas def in their 30's be treated the same as someone like me who was diagnosed in their 20's after years of problems? It is hard to know, there is NO data out there, the CFF has no guidelines and truly many doctors have no idea what to do with us.
I have at times felt like I wasnt receiving the most proactive care that I could because I was 'so healthy'. Our hope is that the CFF will address this in the coming years because as was mentioned there is such a variety of ways to address this issue and it is so sad that now that our technology has advanced enough to diagnose us some are still 'failling through the cracks' in the system and not being treated appropriately or perhaps even at all until they are 'sick enough' to meet the bill.
ANd for those who are interested there is a WIDE vary of presentations for those of us with P67L ranging from transplant list to a virtual lack of sypmtoms well into life.