Christian Williams
Featured CBR Client Story
Girl's Own Cord Blood Used to Treat Her Brain Injury
"Stem cells certainly can rejuvenate tissue" said
Dr. Manny Alvarez,
FOX News medical correspondent and health editor, "this is a miracle."
View Story
Christian's Story
"There absolutely has to be better education going on about the advantages of saving your baby's cord blood." -- Kristi Williams, mother of Christian, treated for leukemia with a cord blood transplant.
Kristi and James Williams smile as they watch the boy in a blue tee shirt and jeans run across the school playground. Their six-year-old son Christian is finally able to do what other children his age take for granted. After a long battle with leukemia, Christian is strong, healthy, and ready to join his first grade class in Stephenville, Texas.
Christian's mother Kristi was five months pregnant with the couple's second child when he complained about soreness in his legs. Thinking it was growing pains; the couple was stunned when doctors diagnosed four-year-old Christian with a rare form of leukemia. They advised Kristi to save the new baby's cord blood and told her that a stem cell transplant would give Christian his best chance beating this life-threatening disease.
"I went to my OB/GYN and explained the situation," said Kristi. "I was shocked that cord blood could be used to treat so many diseases. One of the doctors even called it liquid gold."
Considered to be "high risk", Christian underwent intense chemotherapy. His immune system was so suppressed that the family barely left the hospital. Watching other kids his age outside playing, and knowing Christian couldn't be with them was rough. "It was really hard. Christian was sick and tired most of the time. I can't explain the pain of watching your child go through this experience," explained Kristi.
A family's prayers are answered
On the day baby Noah was born, the first phone call the family made was to Cord Blood Registry. A medical courier immediately came to pick up the infant's umbilical cord blood. A sample of Noah's cord blood was tested, and a few days later the Williams learned that the boys were a perfect match. Kristi and James were overjoyed. "I jumped up and down and danced around my kitchen," said Kristi. "It was the scenario we had been praying for."
The transplant is next
Christian began radiation two weeks prior to the transplant. He underwent more high-dose chemotherapy at Cook's Children's Hospital in Ft. Worth, Texas. Then on March 29, 2004, his brother's newborn stem cells were infused through a syringe into Christian's central line. The procedure only took ten minutes.
The family waited. It was Easter when the good news arrived. Noah's newborn stem cells had engrafted. Christian's new immune system was producing healthy blood cells. "About a week later, Christian was feeling good," said Kristi. "Easter is about new life, and that is what Christian received through the transplant of his brother's cord blood."
The road ahead
Today Christian is doing well and doctors are optimistic about his future. The entire family is thrilled to watch Christian live his life as a healthy, normal child. "If we ever have another baby, the first thing we'll do is arrange to save his or her stem cells," said Kristi. "I can't think of a better investment for your child or your family than banking cord blood."
To read other client stories click here

