3 Indiana brothers diagnosed with rare crippling condition after suffering frequent headaches

Three young Indiana brothers have all been diagnosed with the same rare crippling condition after the trio experienced frequent headaches, according to the boys’ parents who recently opened up about the health battle.  Lincoln, Norrin and Remley Niece have matching scars on the back of their heads after undergoing surgeries for Chiari malformation, which affects slightly less than one in 1,000 people across the globe, according to experts.The condition occurs when the brain at the back of the skull presses through a normal opening and extends to the spinal cord, according to John Hopkins Medicine.The symptoms include neck pain, unsteady walking, poor hand-eye coordination and dizziness among other side effects, according to the Mayo Clinic.The boys, who live in Greenfield, each suffered frequent headaches and vomiting before being diagnosed.“It’s pretty scary,” the kids’ father, Ron Niece told WRTV on Friday.“There is no doubt about it.”All three brothers underwent surgeries, leaving the family emotionally drained each time.“You just kind of become numb and go into autopilot,” mother Whitney Niece explained to the station.“But it doesn’t make it anymore emotionally easy.

Sending your kid off into surgery.”Remley was the first Niece boy diagnosed with the condition in June 2022, but at the time didn’t need surgery, according to the Greenfield Daily Reporter, which interviewed the family in March 2024 when Lincoln was 10, Norrin was 5 and Remley was 2.Lincoln reportedly started having headaches at 5 but they were initially thought to be tied to a congenital heart defect.A CAT scan later revealed in Feb.

2023 that he also had Chiari malformation and underwent a procedure the following month.Remley was still struggling, including randomly falling, and went under the knife in August 2023 – the same month Norrin began having headaches before he had surgery in January, the news outlet reported.Dr.Laurie Ackerman, of the Riley Hospital for C...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

Recent Articles