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The Celle Seminars – Page 336

(Father): He is always outside during the day, but he cannot walk long distances, he gets tired very quickly when he does. (G.V.): How quickly? After a hundred meters?
(Father): Four or five hundred meters, or even longer sometimes. (G.V.): Is he better now after the operation?
(Mother): We can’t really say that he walks better after the operation. (G.V.): Is it worse?
(Mother): They told us at the outset that it could take up to three months for anything to materialize.
(Father): What we were told was that, if this operation is done, the child will be able to keep moving for a longer period of time because the muscular contractions, which will eventually keep him from being able to move, can be prevented.
(G.V.): Did the child have pains from the contractions?
(Mother): No, never.
(G.V.): Besides his legs, are any other muscles affected?
(Father): Well, the entire body.
(G.V.): How is the strength in his hands?
(Father): Okay.
(Mother): At the moment he can grip and hold everything; so it’s very difficult for us to say.
(Father): What we’ve been told is that, as time progresses, eve-rything is supposed to become more difficult for him.
(G.V.): How old is he now?
(Father): Six years old, he will be seven in May.
(Mother): There are some children who, even at his age, are no longer able to walk. And only children who have not yet suffered any effects from contractions are eligible for the operation he had.(Father): This was originally a French method developed by a pro-fessor from Toulouse who has been operating at Aachen; but more recently it has been done at Aachen by a German professor, with his colleague from Toulouse coming in to assist. In the near future they are going to set up a center for this same type of operation in Ulm.(G.V.): Phosphorus was given before the operation?
(Therapist): After the operation.