Life Turned Upside Down: Majorie’s Journey with Her Husband’s CADASIL Diagnosis and the Impact on Their Family

by time news

2023-12-24 09:01:59
Life turned upside down: Majorie’s husband could die at any time due to CADASIL

In our new section Life turned upside down we will talk to people who have experienced something that drastically changed the course of their lives. A tragic accident, kicking an addiction or the loss of a child. This week: Majorie (43), whose husband has the hereditary disease CADASIL, which means he can die ‘at any time’.

Name: Majority
Age: 43
Event: her husband has CADASIL, a hereditary disease, which means he could die ‘at any time’
Life motto: make every day a party

Majorie (43) and her husband Marcel (50) have not been together very long when she notices that there is ‘a black spot’ that she cannot reach. When a conversation starts about his mother, she says she can never ask questions. Afterwards it turns out that this is because there is a hereditary disease in the family, which Marcel’s mother also had. It concerns CADASIL, a relatively unknown disease with an enormous impact.

Now, years later, it turns out that Marcel also has the disease and it has already manifested itself. Majorie changes from partner to informal caregiver and now sees her husband as someone ‘with increasingly childish behavior’. “For example, walking alone to sports is possible, but you have to check his bag,” she describes it. “The other day he accidentally took an ugly shirt from me and once he didn’t bring any sneakers.”

Back to the beginning of their relationship, a few months before they got married. A friend of Marcel makes a comment about what Majorie actually thinks about the fact that there is a hereditary disease in the family. Majorie: “Marcel had already hidden it so deeply away at that moment that he actually didn’t think about it anymore. I didn’t know anything yet. It was always the unspoken word.”

“At first he said, ‘How would you feel if you later walked alone behind a stroller?’” says Majorie. Eventually the monkey gets out of hand and it turns out that it is a relatively unknown disease, CADASIL, which Marcel himself could also have. At that moment Marcel does not want to know whether that is indeed the case or not. “Marcel said: ‘You can still leave me now, so do that. I actually wish I had never gotten to know you, because then we wouldn’t have had to make that choice and I wouldn’t have hurt you so much,” Majorie remembers well of that conversation. “But hey, if you have real love, it conquers everything, the storybooks sometimes say. Little was known about the disease, neither of us knew what it was exactly.”

CADASIL stands for Cerebral Autosomal Dominant Arteriopathy with Subcortical Infarctions and Leukoencephalopathy. It has an impact on the brain, which can manifest itself in migraines, dementia, Parkinson’s and general difficulty with thinking and motor skills.

Ultimately, they take the chance, bearing in mind that becoming pregnant might not work out at all, but Majorie quickly turns out to be pregnant. There is a test available to see whether an unborn child has CADASIL or not. But because Marcel did not want to know whether he had the disease, that was difficult. Ultimately, he gets tested, after which it turns out that he, but also their unborn daughter, have the disease. They decide to terminate the pregnancy.

“It all happened in silence. Marcel never wanted anyone to know about the disease, and I voluntarily went along with that. But that also means that people didn’t know that I had terminated a pregnancy in the first place, let alone why. We were able to transfer her to science, which was very special. This also freed up new subsidies for research.” Ultimately, Majorie and Marcel become parents of two healthy boys, who are now 18 and 14.

CADASIL manifested itself in Marcel a few years ago, but at first it seemed like a burnout or symptoms of being overworked. “It was during Covid times and he was extremely busy,” Majorie remembers. “We actually thought it was some kind of overworked stress attack. He had difficulty talking and was suddenly very tired. He didn’t really want to know anything about it, because he worked day and night.” When Marcel’s face becomes half paralyzed at some point, they call the doctor. “He said it is a form of CADASIL. We were very down-to-earth about it. It will happen at some point, we thought, so we will notice that.”

One of the most difficult things about CADASIL is that someone is no longer who he or she was. The disease also includes vascular dementia. “Marcel was always very positive. He has become very negative, he has vascular dementia, seizures, Parkinson’s may be lurking. You see an ordinary person, but behind it a lot is happening.” However, this is not always as clear to the outside world as it is to his family. “It was our son’s birthday last weekend, and we celebrated it small, because Marcel doesn’t like it too big. Then he’s talking to someone and he comes up to me and says, ‘Wow, Marc is doing really well.’ And then I think yes, you don’t want to know. I constantly have to explain what happens behind the front door. Every day is a struggle.” Majorie does mention that antidepressants helped reduce Marcel’s negative expressions.

“You notice the disease in everything every day. Marcel was very well-groomed, he wore a suit and tie, had well-groomed hands and nails, went to the hairdresser once every three weeks, that kind of person. For example, now we are eating and I see that he is wearing a sweater that he has been wearing for two weeks. You can see for yourself that you are wearing a dirty sweater, right? But he doesn’t see that. And if you look at his nails, he just has mournful edges. Not only has he become a different person internally, but so has what you look at. So you are already saying goodbye to what was there. Love does not become less, but it is different.”

“We make jokes and try to keep it positive, but we don’t know when Marcel will die. I may come downstairs after this phone call and he’ll be dead in the chair.”

The couple has also written a book, precisely to make CADASIL better known and to help fellow sufferers. “The book started with farewell letters that Marcel wrote for the boys when he was traveling for work, because we didn’t know when he would die,” says Majorie. “There were so many that we thought ‘we should make a book out of this’. Because I couldn’t share anything of what I was experiencing, even at the age of 25/26, and that it was so drastic, I started writing. We still have all that, so at some point we decided to release that. I don’t wish what I had to experience with anyone, that it was so unknown and I didn’t know where to go, I couldn’t talk to anyone.”

“I thought: if there is just one person, and that also helped me in the difficult writing process, who can benefit from it, I think it is enough. We received so many messages from people who indeed said ‘wow, how great, I thought we were on our own, it strengthens me’. There was a lady who emailed us and said ‘I’m not going to read the book, because I think it’s too intense, but it’s on my shelf. When I wake up I see the book, it gives me the strength to get up.’ Many more people need to know the name CADASIL,” concludes Majorie.]
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