The Story of Urban - The Boy Who Started It All
Written by Špela and Samo Miroševič, Urban’s parents
Urban was born on June 14, 2019, with a perfect Apgar score. He was a beautiful, healthy baby boy – ten tiny fingers, ten tiny toes, and an angelic smile, as if he somehow knew he would change our world forever.
As parents, we knew what milestones to expect. Babies usually hold their heads steady between 2–3 months, and start bringing toys to their mouths between 2–4 months. Urban wasn’t reaching these milestones.
At a routine check-up, his pediatrician noticed that his muscle tone was extremely low and that he showed signs of a movement disorder. We were referred to the Pediatric Neurology Department, where Urban underwent a series of examinations – EEG, MRI, genetic testing, and hospital observation.
On March 25, 2020, we received the diagnosis: CTNNB1 Syndrome.
At first, we didn’t know what it meant. We only knew that the word syndrome rarely came with good news. Then we read the medical description:
“CTNNB1 is a severe intellectual disability–progressive spastic diplegia syndrome. A rare genetic disorder characterized by intellectual disability, significant motor delay, severe speech impairment, early-onset truncal hypotonia with progressive distal hypertonia/spasticity, microcephaly, visual impairments (strabismus), facial dysmorphism, and behavioral anomalies (autistic features, aggression or self-injury, sleep disturbances).”
We were shocked. Until then, Urban’s doctors had only mentioned motor delays, and no one seemed concerned about his intellectual development. Accepting that Urban might never walk was one thing. But imagining that he might never speak, never understand us, never say “I love you, Mom” or “I love you, Dad” – that was something we couldn’t accept. In a single phone call, dreams of playing games together, watching movies, and sharing everyday family moments were taken away – all because of one tiny change in his DNA.
We believe that luck favors the brave. Even in moments of fear, doubt, and exhaustion, there is nothing more important than giving Urban the best life possible. We have the science. We have the team. And we have hope. Now, we just need a little luck to turn that hope into reality.