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Heartbroken parents tell of life caring for daughters diagnosed with dementia aged six and 10 | Heartbroken parents tell of life caring for daughters diagnosed with dementia aged six and 10 |
(about 4 hours later) | |
Two sisters aged just six and 10 were among the youngest people in Britain to have been diagnosed with dementia, their parents have revealed. | |
Emily and Sarah Bushaway both developed Niemann-Pick disease type C, a rare genetic disorder, often known as childhood Alzheimer’s, that affects only hundreds of people worldwide. | |
Emily was diagnosed with the condition at the age of six. | Emily was diagnosed with the condition at the age of six. |
Seven years later, her younger sister, then aged 10, began showing symptoms. | |
Parents Mark and Lisa Bushaway, both 48, became full-time carers for their daughters as they lost the ability to walk, talk and write. | |
They have spoken out to raise awareness of the condition after Emily died aged 21. | They have spoken out to raise awareness of the condition after Emily died aged 21. |
“It’s such a cruel disease, one of the worst illnesses I have ever heard of. It’s robbed us of so much,” Lisa told the Mirror. | |
“If anyone developed dementia, we expected it to be me and Mark, when we reached old age. We never expected our young girls to need constant care.” | |
Symptoms of the disease typically begin to show in childhood and include coordination problems, poor muscle tone, and lung and liver disease. | |
Sufferers often experience a progressive decline in intellectual function. | Sufferers often experience a progressive decline in intellectual function. |
Emily’s parents first took her for tests after she began repeating herself and struggling to remember friends’ names. | |
They were initially told she had ADHD, which affects concentration, but neurologists at Great Ormond Street Hospital in London later carried out tests and diagnosed Niemann-Pick disease. | They were initially told she had ADHD, which affects concentration, but neurologists at Great Ormond Street Hospital in London later carried out tests and diagnosed Niemann-Pick disease. |
Mark and Lisa both carry the gene for the disorder, giving their children a one in four chance of developing it. | Mark and Lisa both carry the gene for the disorder, giving their children a one in four chance of developing it. |
“I used to have a faith, but having two children with this disease has stopped that,” said Lisa, from Letchworth, Hertfordshire. | |
“With one, you think you can manage, and they’ve been sent by God for you to look after, but two? That’s simply too cruel.” | |
Sarah, now aged 19, has reduced life expectancy. | Sarah, now aged 19, has reduced life expectancy. |
Emily died at a hospice in Oxford in May 2016 after a nurse mistakenly threw away part of her breathing tube. | Emily died at a hospice in Oxford in May 2016 after a nurse mistakenly threw away part of her breathing tube. |
A coroner last month ruled Emily’s death was partly contributed to by neglect by the hospice, where she had been staying for a few days as her bedroom was redecorated. |
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