Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Maine Girl With 'Mermaid Syndrome' Dies at Age 10

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Maine Girl With 'Mermaid Syndrome' Dies at Age 10

    Maine Girl With 'Mermaid Syndrome' Dies at Age 10

    Saturday, October 24, 2009


    AP

    Dec. 20, 2007: Shiloh Pepin laughs with her parents while sitting on a counter in the family's Kennebunkport, Maine home.


    KENNEBUNKPORT, Maine ? Shiloh Pepin, a girl who was born with fused legs, a rare condition often called "mermaid syndrome," and gained a wide following on the Internet and national television, has died. She was 10.

    Doctors had predicted she would only survive only for days after her birth at the most, but the girl, described by her mother as "a tough little thing," died at Maine Medical Center on Friday afternoon, hospital spokesman John Lamb said. She had been hospitalized in critical condition for nearly a week.

    Being born with "mermaid syndrome," also known as sirenomelia, meant that the Kennebunkport girl had only one partially working kidney, no lower colon or genital organs and legs fused from the waist down.

    Some children who have survived sirenomelia have had surgery to separate their legs, but Shiloh did not because blood <NOBR id=itxt_nobr_3_0 style="FONT-WEIGHT: normal; FONT-SIZE: 100%; COLOR: darkgreen">vessels</NOBR> crossing from side to side in her circulatory system would have been severed. She had received two kidney transplants, the last one in 2007.

    Her story was featured recently on "The Oprah Winfrey Show" and other national television programs.
    Earlier this month, her mother, Leslie Pepin, said her daughter came down with a cold that quickly turned to <NOBR id=itxt_nobr_5_0 style="FONT-WEIGHT: normal; FONT-SIZE: 100%; COLOR: darkgreen">pneumonia</NOBR>. Shiloh rushed to Maine Medical Center on Oct. 10 and was placed on antibiotics and a ventilator.

    For a while, Leslie Pepin said, things were looking up. "She's a tough little thing," she said of her daughter earlier this week.

    Shiloh was a fifth-grader at Kennebunkport Consolidated School. "She was such a shining personality in that building," said Maureen King, chairwoman of the board of the regional school district. Counselors will be available next week to talk to students.

    Through the television shows, news articles, Facebook and other Web sites, Shiloh inspired many.

    "I live in Iowa. I have cerebral <NOBR id=itxt_nobr_9_0 style="FONT-WEIGHT: normal; FONT-SIZE: 100%; COLOR: darkgreen">palsy</NOBR>. I love your video," 12-year-old Lydia Dawley wrote to Shiloh on Facebook. "You have a great personality I wish you lived close so we could be friends and hang out. You opened my eyes because you are so brave."


    "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
    -Nelson Mandela

  • #2
    Re: Maine Girl With 'Mermaid Syndrome' Dies at Age 10

    I watched the story of this little girl not long ago on the Learning Channel. I was so impressed by her will to live, her laugh, her desire to learn.
    "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
    -Nelson Mandela

    Comment

    Working...
    X