Australian Herald
AustralianHerald.com Tuesday 7th September 2010 Edition 2918
  • More Australia News

  • Samantha Stosur through to the US Open quarter-finals
  • James Cameron set to return to Amazon for 3D film
  • Meet the US 'black widow' who gobbles 180 chicken wings in 12 minutes
  • Kelly Osbourne hated 's**tting' herself "dry-humping" co-star in film
  • Now, a plastic that can heal itself
  • White House correspondent livetweets his heart attack saga
  • Australian jailed for killing wife of 50 years
  • Commonwealth Journalists Association's Australia chief dead
  • Australia votes the carrot as its favourite vegetable
  • Tamil Nadu XI, South Australian XI engage in friendly cricket match
  • New breed of pineapple has double Vitamin C
  • Police hunt for Indian-looking sex predator in Australia
    Get Australia News headlines emailed to you daily.

    Oz toddler with Goldenhar syndrome doesn't know how to eat
    Australian Herald
    Friday 30th July, 2010  
    (ANI)


    A one-year-old boy from Australia has never learnt how to eat, as he suffers from a condition called Goldenhar syndrome.ccording to AdelaideNow, Asher White, from Encounter Bay, Adelaide, has been left with several facial deformities, including a jaw and tongue that have failed to form properly because of the condition.

    He has never learnt how to eat solid foods, and his mum and dad, Joanne and Shannon White, who feed him through a tube, say doctors have given up hope of getting him to eat like other children his age in the near future.

    "He has never learnt how to eat and we've done everything, from simple things like rubbing his gums to more complex things and doctors are at their wits' end," News.com.au quoted Asher's mum as saying.

    "People say 'why don't you offer him something sweet, that will work', but it's just not that simple. His tongue doesn't work, there's a lot of problems," she revealed.

    The family hopes to travel to the Austrian city of Graz, with their six-year-old son Daemon also in tow, so Asher can take part in a world-renowned, intense three-week feeding program that teaches children how to eat with a high success rate.

    The trip, however, will cost about 30,000 dollars, with treatment accounting for 25,000 dollars of this. (ANI)

      Email this story to a friend

    Have your say on this story

    Your nickname (optional)
    Message