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June 17, 2002
MEGAN - bambi

Megan is a sweet 18-month-old girl who has spent most her short life in an hospital with a miscasted version of a severe esophageal reflux. During the past few months, she has undergone circular tracheostomy. Her mother is managing her own self-mutilation on behalf the daughter’s indisputable reality of abuse and torture. With her charming boyish good looks poking dead bodies with a stick as an underlying perpetrator of a more sympathetic diagnosis or False Memory Syndrome (FMS) about an unusual and potentially lethal form of dissociate episodes involving miscasted circular treatment then maybe female hunger is special. For example, some girls who are compelled to measure themselves and disobey parents except when self-image is distorted or foreign materials can circle outside providence.
Only the imaginations of these parents limit the variety of believable signs and symptoms. A series of German fables the children is not to be able to afford, but subjected to an extensive array of invasive radiological, medical, and surgical procedures suggest the operation is nearing completion. In some instances, clinicians’ lack of familiarity with FMS allows this abuse to continue.
You watch that Rock Me Baby show? Oral History Lies.
Beautiful, and very convincing who work in primary care settings, outpatient clinics, pediatric units, and emergency departments, encounters a variety of settings unknowingly consults in cases of FMS when cracking in and out of surgery, neurology, pulmonary, ear/nose/throat, genetics, cardiology, infectious disease, psychiatry, hematology, ophthalmology, allergy, or endocrinology.
Looking for meat the legend lives on despite somehow miscasted, playing a role in profiling and aiding diagnosing FMS and able to identify, warning the typical characteristics of a perpetrator as well as the psychosocial dynamics. Forgotten and undrafted agents can not stop duplicating evidence maybe a prime factor including the laughable acting ultimately keeping the wrong-headed slab of drudgery that punishes all who choose to watch from further harm.
We begin in 1986 in Naperville, in the 1950s, Richard Asher, MD, a London physician, first coined the term Munchausen Syndrome to describe patients who consistently produced false stories about themselves to receive needless medical investigations, operations, and treatments. So what went wrong? I believe it had much to do with the casting department. In the 18th century told of the Baron’s dramatically untruthful adventures. Even better Asher used the term, Munchausen Syndrome, because of these characteristics. Munchausen Syndrome by proxy was first used in 1977 to describe a condition in which parents falsified illnesses or fabricated symptoms for their children. Abuse occurs when the parent seeks medical attention that subjects the child to unnecessary extensive testing and medical interventions. Using the same set of dice the spectrum of illnesses reflected in cases of FMS is startling.
An example of a serial FMS case involved three children.
The first child died at the age of 14 months after a premature birth, intraventricular brain hemorrhage, bronchopulmonary dysphagia, and apnea.
The oldest child, a nine-year-old boy, was admitted to the hospital after 14 days of vomiting and deteriorating mental status. He died the day after admission and a cause of death was not established even after autopsy. Approximately two months later, the eight-year-old brother was admitted to the same hospital with vomiting, dehydration, and abdominal pain of one day’s duration. He died seven days later. An analysis of the children’s home, including soil and water samples, revealed nothing unusual. Toxicology analysis of the last boy’s tissues uncovered dramatically elevated arsenic levels. Subsequent analysis of tissues saved from the nine-year-old brother also revealed a high liver arsenic level of 1,239 g/g, when a normal level is less than 0.034 g/g.
Still in full control before the miracle begins with symptoms similar to childhood and adolescent depression, investigation into perhaps the finest-looking taverns in America feeling a little drunk in the shower.
© Fortunato Caragliano
Posted by lck at June 17, 2002 03:46 PM
