More

Ontlametse Phalatse, South African Girl, Struggles With Rare Aging Disease

Ontlametse Phalatse

By MICHELLE FAUL   09/ 9/11 07:06 PM ET   AP

JOHANNESBURG -- The elfin child with the big personality and bright smile calls herself "the first lady" and dreams of the future.

But doctors say 12-year-old Ontlametse Phalatse has only, perhaps, another couple of years to live.

"I call myself a first lady because I'm the first black child with this disease ... Which other black child do you know with this disease?" she challenged.

Ontlametse is the sole living black child diagnosed with progeria, a rare and fatal genetic condition that accelerates the aging process, the Progeria Research Foundation said. It was aware of two other black children ever diagnosed with the disease, who died in the United States and the Netherlands.

Nobody knows how many kids in the world have it, though experts estimate that between 200 and 250 children live with progeria at any one time. In a two-year campaign to identify them, the Progeria Research Foundation says the number of children diagnosed around the world has soared from 54 to 80 on five continents – a 48 percent increase.

The foundation's executive director, Audrey Gordon, says the only Africans diagnosed with the disease were found in South Africa and only two survive – Ontlametse and a 5-year-old white girl. That is probably because South Africa, an economic powerhouse, offers some of the best medical care on the continent. At least one other South African diagnosed, a white male, died in the past year.

Gordon says there are several black holes on the map in her office studded with colored tacks where they have found children living with progeria. "We know that there are children (with progeria) in Africa, in China and Russia, but we just can't seem to get to them," she said in a telephone interview from the foundation's office in Peabody, Massachusetts.

Ontlametse's mother, Bellon Phalatse, says her baby was born looking normal but that she realized early on that something was wrong. The baby suffered constant rashes and by the time she was 3 months old Phalatse thought she had a skin disease.

Before Ontlametse celebrated her first birthday "her hair was falling, her nails weren't normal, the skin problems, we were going up and down to the doctors."

As the child aged prematurely, her father abandoned the family when Ontlametse was 3 years old.

Despite her frequent illnesses, Ontlametse enrolled in school at 6 and proved a bright pupil. But she was often scorned by classmates, teachers and others who thought she was so small and skinny because she had AIDS. South Africa has the highest number of people living with AIDS of any country but the disease still carries a terrible social stigma.

"It was horrible, I don't know how to explain" what we went through, Phalatse said.

It was not until two years ago that a doctor friend suggested she have Ontlametse tested for progeria, and brought her a book about the disease.

It included pictures. Children with progeria look remarkably similar, despite different ethnic backgrounds: small and bald with oversized heads, eyes that bulge a bit, gnarled hands. They suffer from thinning skin which has a network of blue veins showing on the heads of white children. Ontlametse's veins bulge.

Phalatse said she knew immediately, and a doctor confirmed the diagnosis.

"I'm very happy now that I understand what causes progeria," Phalatse said.

The diagnosis came with the news that most children with the disease die at 13. But it also brought a better understanding of what they can do to try to prolong Ontlametse's life, and it has brought her the specialized care she needs.

Each school holiday, Ontlametse and her mom fly to the United States, where she participates in research funded by the Progeria Research Foundation at Children's Hospital Boston. It gives her access to cutting edge drugs that are not yet commercially available.

Back home, they struggle to feed her the required healthy diet. Phalatse is unemployed and the two survive on her daughter's government disability allowance.

Ontlametse is unfazed: "Sometimes when my mommy has money, she buys lettuce and cucumbers and I help her do salad."

At school, Ontlametse keeps her hat on her head, self-conscious of her bald head. One of the things on her wish list is a specially designed wig.

She has two friends in her class but says not all her classmates are kind, but it doesn't bother her.

"I don't care what people say about me," she says, making a throwaway motion with a hand misshapen with arthritis, knobby fingers and discolored nails.

In her rundown brick home in the small town of Hebron about 50 miles (80 kilometers) north of Johannesburg, Ontlametse ditches the hat. She does her homework, reading, watches TV and has daily chores like washing her socks and cleaning her shoes. She can't play sports or even a game of hopscotch because physical exercise tires her out.

Asked what she would like to be, she breaks into a big grin that shows irregular teeth.

"I would like to be a psychologist," she says, "so that I can work on the problems of other people and so that they can accept the way that they are because they can see that I accept the way I am."

That she would live that long would require a miracle. Children with progeria die almost exclusively from heart disease between the ages of 8 and 21, commonly suffering high blood pressure, strokes, angina, enlarged heart and heart failure.

Gordon said research into progeria has had remarkable success since her family founded the foundation in 1999, after her nephew was diagnosed with the disease.

In 2003, the foundation was instrumental in the discovery of the progeria gene. Now they hope it can help provide answers about the ordinary aging process and cardiovascular disease.

(This version CORRECTS Corrects that subject is only living black child with progeria, that other South African sufferers have died, and that numbers diagnosed worldwide rose from 54, instead of 48, to 80)

FOLLOW HUFFPOST BLACK VOICES

JOHANNESBURG -- The elfin child with the big personality and bright smile calls herself "the first lady" and dreams of the future. But doctors say 12-year-old Ontlametse Phalatse has only, perhaps, a...
JOHANNESBURG -- The elfin child with the big personality and bright smile calls herself "the first lady" and dreams of the future. But doctors say 12-year-old Ontlametse Phalatse has only, perhaps, a...
Filed by Gene Demby  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 164
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4  Next ›  Last »  (4 total)
photo
Vanessa1129
Flash Light, Red Light, Neon Light, Ooh Stop Light
02:09 PM on 10/27/2011
How sad!

God bless this precious lil gurl and her family.
06:39 PM on 09/10/2011
her...
06:38 PM on 09/10/2011
some dirty doctor probably injected him with it...now watch it spread like wild
06:39 PM on 09/09/2011
I feel for you, sweetie! God has a better plan for us both! Just hang in there! We'll both achieve our dreams one day really soon! God Bless us both! Much Love! (:
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
04:35 PM on 09/09/2011
She sounds like a true beauty!
02:45 PM on 09/09/2011
The Sunshine Foundation brought Progeria (Hutchinson Guilford Syndrome) to the attention of the United States and the world back in 1981. During 27 Sunshine Foundation Annual Progeria Reunions, we had Peetie join us, he was African American and from the United States and also Nigel who was black and lived in the Netherlands. This information is not correct! They should have consulted Bill Sample! Bill Sample, at the time President of Sunshine Foundation, the first wish granting organization, was moved by the story of Francy, a child in South Africa who wanted to visit Pinnocchio. The Sunshine Foundation flew Francy and his family to Disneyland in 1981 to have his dream come true. Other families contacted the Sunshine Foundation with interest because their child had the same physical characteristics as Francie. Bill and the Sunshine Foundation in 1982 brought together all known Progeria children annually for a chance to feel normal and be with other children as themselves! Would like to see the Huffington Post print the correct story. Sadly we lost Peetie and Nigel a number of years ago but their sweet and glorious smiles still live in the hearts of all of those who were honored to have been a part of their short lives that left a tremendous impact on those who were grateful enought to have known them. Love to all of the past and present children living with Hutchinson Guilford Syndrome/Progeria.
03:50 PM on 09/09/2011
Love for Ontlametse and all of the many special sweet children who live with and have lived with the symptoms of Progeria (Hutchinson Guilford Syndrome).
12:02 PM on 09/09/2011
let's bring her to America and give her free medical......but the hell with American kids who need medical and can't get it.
First black? Is this an honor to bestowed on them? How about the first job?
01:39 PM on 10/27/2011
Don't be stu.upid, she comes to America to be part of a research/trial for cure. She is the guinea pig trying to help find some type of cure.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Suemoni
Trying To "Write" All The Wrongs Of The World.
10:59 AM on 11/07/2011
Well said and thank you.
11:54 AM on 09/09/2011
Some of the comments noted on this post are just plain stupid. A genetic disorder as severe as this one is devastating for the this child's loving family. There is nothing hilarious about suffering. It's unfortunate that many articles in the HuffPo will get thousands of comments, but real tragedy gets only a few hundred responses. If you pray, please pray. If you don't pray, do it anyhow.
03:35 PM on 09/09/2011
GOOD FOR YOU!!!! (:
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
11:40 AM on 09/09/2011
Love how she calls herself the first lady... I appreciate her positive attitude... :)

http://youtu.be/Y7m56YH-lHw
10:41 AM on 09/09/2011
I'm more than positive that she is not the first of her race. How many thousands of years went by without diagnostics? We may understand better what is going on for many types of conditions people are suffering through, but they suffered long before we knew. You don't have to be in a 3rd world country to see suffering or find someone that goes undiagnosed.
11:39 AM on 09/09/2011
They said first black child diagnosed! Not the first to have it.
11:41 AM on 09/09/2011
Amen.. Love your comment!!!
10:18 AM on 09/09/2011
Sad. That's not something you want to be first in. And of course race, gender, etc. is relevant whenever someone is the "first" in anything. Maybe some good will come out of it in that it might stir up some additional research, which will benefit all children with this horrible disease.
10:13 AM on 09/09/2011
I was not aware that only white kids had been getting this horrible disease. Fight on, girl.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
jacmed
71, female - whatever happened to common sense?
09:44 AM on 09/09/2011
This is a devastating disease. A fairly fictionalized version of it is depicted in the Robin Williams movie, "Jack." But in the movie he lives to adulthood. This poor child and other victims of the disease do not.
01:11 PM on 09/09/2011
A rare few get to early adulthood. Progeria is actually many disorders. One well known is caused by a point mutation on a certain gene. Other progeria disorders are inherited and passed down through families as a recessive genetic trait. Hence why the carriers don't have it nor know they are a carrier.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TarzanaGirl
08:53 AM on 09/09/2011
Back in 1984 there was a movie called "The Three Wishes of Billy Grier" - this was the first time I had ever heard of 'progeria.' It was a difficult movie to watch, but I would recommend it to anyone who is interested in learning more about this rare disease. Here is a helpful link as well:

http://www.progeriaresearch.org/