Morgan Dougall had only been a new mum for two weeks when she received an urgent phone call from the hospital about baby Nixon's screening test results.
"My husband Jimmy had just gone back to work, and I was at home alone with my baby when I got a call to say I needed to stop feeding him immediately and come straight to hospital," Morgan tells Leigh Campbell and Tegan Natoli on this week's episode of This Glorious Mess.
Listen to Morgan talk on This Glorious Mess talk about her son's rare genetic condition. Post continues below.
When they arrived at the neurology ward, she sat in a waiting room filled with a mix of kids with disabilities before meeting with a panel of five medical professionals to help explain Nixon's rare diagnosis.
"They told me he has a condition called Phenylketonuria, which is also known as PKU. It means that our son's body cannot break down an amino acid found in protein, because if he has too much of it, it will cause irreversible brain damage.
"Hearing this news, I was on autopilot. I was sort of nodding and smiling, but it was very overwhelming to take it all in."
According to Health Direct, PKU is a rare inherited genetic condition where your body cannot break down foods that contain protein. Babies diagnosed with PKU will develop normally in every way, as long as they keep to a strict, low-protein diet.
Screening for PKU occurs for all babies born in Australia, with approximately 1 in 15,000 diagnosed with the rare condition.
Top Comments