The mother of a baby boy in Merseyside is urgently calling for people to register as stem cell donors after her son was diagnosed with a rare blood disorder just before his first birthday. Ronnie, who had recently started crawling, began showing unusual bruising, leading to a diagnosis of aplastic anaemia, a condition where the bone marrow fails to produce enough new blood cells for normal bodily functions. This condition affects around 100 to 150 people in the UK each year.
Laura, Ronnie’s mother, described the alarming moment when her son started bleeding from his nose and developed blisters and red dots on his body shortly after he began crawling. Initially suspected to have leukemia, Ronnie was taken to Alder Hey Children’s Hospital for transfusions. Further tests revealed his bone marrow levels were critically low, and he was diagnosed with aplastic anaemia. The only chance for his recovery is a bone marrow transplant.
Despite undergoing treatments to boost his bone marrow production, Ronnie remains cheerful, but faces the risk of infections due to his diagnosis of neutropenia, a condition where white blood cells drop to dangerously low levels. The family is now working with Anthony Nolan on the Register4Ronnie campaign to encourage more people to join the stem cell register and potentially save lives like Ronnie’s.
Laura emphasized the importance of raising awareness about stem cell transplants and aplastic anaemia, noting the lack of knowledge about the condition. Signing up for the Anthony Nolan register is free and open to individuals aged between 16 and 30. Rowena Bentley, from Anthony Nolan, urged eligible individuals to register online and return swab kits to potentially become a lifesaving match for patients like baby Ronnie.
