At age 2, Wendell Sherman-Strand still can't sit up, walk or talk. The curly-haired Minneapolis boy doesn't have the muscle control to grab a rattle or stand on his own.
And nobody knows exactly why.
So far, every test his doctors have run to find a diagnosis has come up empty. Now, his specialists at the University of Minnesota want to comb through his DNA for an answer.
They're sending a teaspoon of his blood to a lab in Texas to sequence his genetic makeup.
Wendell is one of the first patients at the university to undergo the newest generation of genetic testing, known as "whole exome sequencing."
In effect, it allows scientists to go on a fishing expedition through the human genome in search of troublesome mutations.
"Instead of testing one gene at a time, we're testing really all known genes simultaneously," said Dr. Christine Eng, senior director of the Medical Genetics lab at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, where the test is being conducted.
The test is still a rarity — it's only been widely available for about 18 months. And the state of the art is still so primitive, relatively speaking, that there's no guarantee it will find a definitive answer.