My name is Enrique Chávez, I’m from México City and I got diagnosed with NMO in October 2021.
My life used to be the perfect one. I owned and ran my own companies, appeared on an international TV show, had a loving family and a lot of friends. I used to travel a lot inside my country and also to new countries around the globe. Everything was perfect. I believed I was indestructible and that I was climbing the edge of glory.
Everything started with normal pharyngitis. First I believed I had COVID because the antibiotics weren’t working. I had a lot of plans that week so I couldn’t afford to get sick, but one day I woke up with a lot of numbness and I wasn’t able to swallow anything.
My life stopped in hours. I wasn’t able to concentrate and I barely was able to talk. My family took me to the hospital because I started having difficulty swallowing water, food and medicine. No one knew what was happening to me. My body started to stop working and no one knew why.
I spent the first night in the hospital and the next day I had double vision and difficulty breathing and expelling the secretions in my lungs due to a pneumonia I was presenting with. Doctors then knew that it was a neurological issue.
They gave me all the test: the lumbar puncture, MRIs, blood test, and all those necessary to diagnose me. I was so lucky I had insurance because in my country it is very expensive.
The next day they got me into the Intensive Cares Unit but in the night I started to drown with my own secretions and that made me have a respiratory attack, so they intubated me.
I woke up 8 days later, intubated, with catheters in my neck and fully paralyzed in my legs and my right arm. I was only able to move my left hand so I used it to communicate using a board with letters.
They gave me all the treatments: antibiotics for the pneumonia and pharyngitis, steroids to stop the neurological attack and plasmapheresis to clean my blood and start my recovery.
Days and nights in ICU were so hard, not knowing what was happening to me. Constantly drowning with my secretions, so nurses had to suck them out of me every hour. I was not able to move, breathe, talk or see. I did not know how my life was going to be after that. The hardest days in my life…
I started with physical and respiratory therapy, then I had to learn again how to swallow. I had to learn almost everything again: how to move, to walk, to eat. No one values the simple things in life until they lose them, and I was losing my autonomy, my life, my goals and expectations.
As time went on, my body started recovering well. Everyday was full of achievements in terms of my mobility. In two weeks I was able to get up the bed and take some little steps with help. I start visualizing a new life, a new opportunity.
My family were there to support me, my friends were supporting me on the outside and I was feeling full of love and healing energy. I was in the best place to be and I knew I was recovering my life.
Weeks after, I received the first dose of Rituximab and then got home to continue with my recovery.
Now I am able to walk, run, swim, dance and jump. I got back all my mobility. I am breathing again without the help of oxygen or some machine. I can talk and get back to normal vision.
My life changes from one day to another, but I’m sure this is the best life I could have and I’m going to live it with care, with love and with all the energy to enjoy.