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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/05/22/wbrook22.xml&sSheet=/news/2005/05/22/ixworld.html

Brooke looks like any other baby girl. But in fact, she's 12 years old

By Charles Laurence in New York

(Filed: 22/05/2005)

Brooke Greenberg has celebrated 12 birthdays according to the calendar and her family photo albums. In terms of growing up, however, she has yet to reach her first.

To the mystification of the medical world, Brooke is frozen in time, a real-life, female Peter Pan. She weighs 13lb and measures 27 inches, and looks and acts as if she were a six-month-old baby, not a girl about to become a teenager.

Brooke lives with her parents Howard and Melanie Greenberg and her three sisters in Reisterstown, a Baltimore suburb, and doctors credit her survival to their love and support.

"She hasn't changed in 12 years," Mr Greenberg, 48, told The Sunday Telegraph. He does not see his beloved daughter as an object of pity. "Why is it sad?" he asks. "We love her the way she is."

For 12 years the family has changed her nappies, rocked her to sleep and taken turns to give her cuddles. On school days, she is carried gently into a yellow bus and taken to a special school for handicapped children. Her condition has no name and doctors are unaware of any other child in her situation.

Brooke has learned to pull herself up in her cot, crawl across the floor and scoot along in a specially adapted baby-walker. She smiles at people she recognises, but has never been able to say a single word. She does finger paintings when presented with a pot of paint and sheet of paper.

She recognises her family, and giggles when tickled. She has no language skills but has a "sense of self" in that she suffers from healthy sibling rivalry. When her younger sister Carly, now nine, was born, Brooke would cry with jealousy until Mrs Greenberg, 44, picked her up along with the new baby.

That, however, is about as far as she has developed. She simply does not age. "There is no diagnosis. We don't know what is going on," said the family's doctor, Lawrence Pakula, "There is no one else like her in the world."

He describes her as being the equivalent of between six months to 12 months old in terms of height and weight, and says that most doctors who see her compare her to "maybe a handicapped two-year-old".

Brooke was born after a 36-week pregnancy on January 8 1993 in the Sinai Hospital, Baltimore, weighing 4lb 1oz. As an unborn baby, her spasmodic development puzzled doctors. In her first year, she was treated with human growth hormone, but it had no effect.

Until she was five, she suffered a succession of life-threatening health problems, including strokes, seizures, ulcers and breathing difficulties - almost as if she was growing old despite not growing up. Four times, it seemed that she might die. At one point she was diagnosed with a brain tumour the size of a lemon, but it shrank away of its own accord, and Brooke simply woke up.

Brooke now has to be fed through a tube, but her health seems to have stabilised. There is no expectation that she will develop, but, equally, no one can predict how long she can survive.

"People wonder how we have managed to look after her because she has been a baby for such a long time," Mrs Greenberg said. "We just keep going because she is our daughter."

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Originally posted by richard saunders

And I'm sure was terribly sad for the parents...

If you mean that my remark sounds callous, maybe it does, but that doesn't make it any less true. The parents have said they don't view her as an object of pity, and seeing as she's the only known case in the world, her condition is fascinating.

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Originally posted by dfitzo53

If you mean that my remark sounds callous, maybe it does, but that doesn't make it any less true. The parents have said they don't view her as an object of pity, and seeing as she's the only known case in the world, her condition is fascinating.

No, not at all.

It is fascinating, and at the same time very sad for the parents. I know the parents don't want pity on their daughter, but having to go through the years of unknown and various surgeries must have been heartbreaking.

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Man, that's gotta be tough on the family. :(

"In related news, doctors at The University of Miami have determined that Sean Taylor of the Washington Redskins appears to suffer from a similar ailment, known to physicians as "22 Year Old Baby Syndrome".

This affliction, while rarely fatal, inhibits the emotional development of some NFL players, often to the detriment of teams unfortunate enough to draft them.

Symptoms include an inability to respond to the everyday demands placed upon the individual player, a puzzling propensity to change agents at whim, and an inability to answer the telephone or return phone calls.

"We don't know what causes it," states Dr. Michael Irvin of the University of Miami, "and we don't know why so many former Miami players suffer from it, but we refuse to search for a cure unless you double our salaries."

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Originally posted by The Chief

Man, that's gotta be tough on the family. :(

"In related news, doctors at The University of Miami have determined that Sean Taylor of the Washington Redskins appears to suffer from a similar ailment, known to physicians as "22 Year Old Baby Syndrome".

This affliction, while rarely fatal, inhibits the emotional development of some NFL players, often to the detriment of teams unfortunate enough to draft them.

Symptoms include an inability to respond to the everyday demands placed upon the individual player, a puzzling propensity to change agents at whim, and an inability to answer the telephone or return phone calls.

"We don't know what causes it," states Dr. Michael Irvin of the University of Miami, "and we don't know why so many former Miami players suffer from it, but we refuse to search for a cure unless you double our salaries."

Now THAT is pretty funny :laugh:

and hard on the 'family' too!

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Originally posted by jenmdixon

I wonder if they have tried to teach her sign language to try to communicate with her...

As an educator and administrator of a deaf program, I can say my teachers have started sign with baibes that young. It depends on their attention span and ability of fine motor coordination.

Some 6 month old babies can learn basic signs..milk........mama.......but not a full range of vocabulary. And there are very few that can learn that young. They are still learning to track movement at that age.

Blondie

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