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AVA MILAM'S STORY

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Ava Grace Milam weighed less than
four pounds when she was born because of a fetal stroke. Tami Milam
named her daughter Ava Grace because it sounds like "Amazing
Grace." Ava suffered a stroke while she was still in her mother's
womb. "They didn't know at the time how bad, but they knew
it was bad," Milam said. Doctors found blood in Ava's brain
and her body had stopped growing after the stroke.
Ava's parents gave their daughter
a chance at life and she has beaten the odds. "She shows
emotion. They said she wouldn't be able to do that--that she would
just exist, is what they told us," she continued. Ava laughs,
cries and eats like normal babies, even though doctors had predicted
she'd need a feeding tube. But the stroke did affect Ava's speech
and movement, and at ten months old, she still can't crawl or
push herself up. She was also showing signs of cerebral palsy.
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Milam says for Grace,
she's willing to do whatever it takes. "Because life is so
much more than this, and I want her to experience all of this,"
Milam assured. Within a month of receiving neuron brain stem cells
and nerve cell growth factors introduced into her central nervous
system via the spinal canal by Dr. Feinerman and his team, Ava
is scooting on her abdomen, reaching out for objects, lifting
her body with her arms from the abdomen, making sounds, and has
neck control for the first time since birth. Recently Ava has
begun to walk with assistance and is scheduled to attend pre-school.
Articles:
WBKO.com - Sept 25, 2007 Barren
County Baby Hopes to Beat the odds
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