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Kyle Dobbins
USA
23 Years Old
Optic
Nerve Damage from Neurofibromatosis
Check out Kyle's video on Vimeo here

Medical History
When Kyle was 2 years old he
was diagnosed with Neurofibromatosis, a rare cancer which results in
various growths in the body. It is most famously and incorrectly known as The
Elephant
Man's Disease. In Kyle's case neurofibromatosis presented itself as a tumor in his
brain. He explains,
"It was a grade 3 cancer,
rapidly growing, grade 4 is the fastest, but mine was still growing
pretty fast, it was an atrocytoma, it was a star shape in the beginning,
but then it grew and all connected and wrapped around my brain."
After undergoing chemotherapy,
the tumor thankfully went into remission. However Kyle still had some
nerve damage. He explains the effects,
"I had optic atrophy, my vision
was around 2400. I have trouble with my peripheral vision, in my left
eye I have no peripheral and only limited in my right eye. This also
causes problems with nystagmus."
Treatments
5 umbilical cord blood stem
cell transplants plus acupuncture and rehabilitation therapy.
Treatment in China
Kyle did not let his vision
problems affect the way he lived. He is currently working as a massage
therapist while also attending college. He also leads an active life
outside of school and work, playing guitar and going snow boarding.
It was on one of these snow boarding trips that he heard about stem
cell treatments for optic nerve damage. After doing his research he
decided that the trip to China was the proper next step for him.
While in China, Kyle started
to see some changes to his condition. He explains,
"For example, say I am sitting
at my computer with my huge font. I can actually sit back from the
screen
much farther than I could before. Or if I am running at the gym. Usually
I have to get pretty close to read the time on the treadmill, but now
I can sit back and run normally."
He offers up this advice to
other people with similar conditions,
"Blind people are taught that
there is no hope. That they basically have to live their lives relying
on other people. I don't feel that that is right, I feel we need to
try."