PHOTO | JEFF ANGOTE Mr Stephen Mwangi who suffers from orthopaedic and trauma at the KNH, Nairobi.
NATION MEDIA GROUP
One could easily mistake Stephen Njoroge
Mwangi for a Class Four pupil, possibly 10 years old, just by looking
at his small body frame.
It’s only when he starts to speak, in deep voice declaring that he is 19 years old, that one comes to terms with his age.
His
is a story of a young man living with a rare disease that weakens the
bones so much that even an ordinary walk can cause multiple fractures.
Since
he was 14, Mwangi has sustained nine fractures, leading to an equal
number of operations in which surgeons fixed metal plates on his fragile
bones.
Now, he is bed-ridden in the orthopedic ward at Kenyatta National Hospital, Nairobi, after sustaining fractures last month.
And no, he was not involved in an accident; the fractures just happened.
Doctors call the disease Osteogenesis Imperfecta and have other scientific words to explain Mwangi’s condition.
His
doctor, James Mogire, explained the condition in simpler terms: “Like
concrete pillars in a house, we have the bones. The bones are woven with
proteins and the spaces in between are filled with minerals, just like
sand and cement in concrete. In this case, the protein component is not
strong enough and so it snaps.”
“Not that he is poorly
fed. Stephen was born with this condition, which is a genetic disorder.
The patient will live with it for life.”
In the past,
the doctors at KNH coped well with Mwangi’s condition but the most
recent fractures have presented a big challenge. The fractures are on
the hip joints on both legs.
Already, Mwangi has metal plates fixed on both thigh bones.
Dr
Mogire said: “Now we need something special for him. We require
expensive implants. They must be custom-made and we do not manufacture
them here (Kenya).”
He estimated that at least, the patient needs between Sh400,000 and Sh500,000 to restore just one hip.
Mwangi
comes from a family of seven children and his widowed mother, Ms Wambui
Njoroge, described herself as “a peasant farmer without a regular
income”.
“I do not want to be here,” Mwangi said of his
condition when the Nation team visited him in hospital. “I would like
to be school. This condition is not good. It’s not anybody’s wish to
break a leg. It can happen to anybody.”
His mother said
Mwangi was the only one in the family with the condition. All his
siblings, including a set of triplets, are all fine.
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