Cheyenne Liccardi

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Cheyenne’s Story…

Cheyenne was born on January 6, 2001. From the second she took her first breath, she was in distress. With a collapsed right lung, extremely low tone, and no suck, swallow or gag reflex, she was immediately intubated and placed on a vent and a feeding tube was put in place. After many unsuccessful attempts to remove the ventilator, the doctors realized she would need it long-term. So, she had surgery to have the trach put in. Muscle biopsies and lots of blood tests all came back normal.

Moving to Specialized Hospital
At 3 months, she was moved to the Children’s Specialized Hospital and remained there for another 3 months. At 6 months old, Cheyenne finally came home for the first time. But it has not been an easy road. After many doctors, many nurses, and many therapists, Cheyenne is finally weaned from the vent during the day but continues to need it at night. It was not til 2 years ago (2014) that Cheyenne was finally given a name for her condition. The RYRI Ryanodine. A rare genetic myopathy that affects all the skeletal muscles. It is still very new to doctors and scientists, so there are currently no treatments or cures. It is a lifelong physical illness.

Wonderful Recovery
Cheyenne had scoliosis surgery in 2014 to correct 80% curvature of her spine and has recovered wonderfully. We were told she may never walk, talk breathe on her own, or eat. Well, not only is she walking and talking, but she is fully mainstreamed and started her first year of high school this year.

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