Fundraiser set for Caleb Colyott

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Caleb Colyott of Gainesville, Fla., who will turn 5 next week, is shown prior to his surgery to remove a blood clot on his brain, resulting in a massive stroke. The blood vessels in Caleb's brain were fragile due to his treatment for a brain tumor. A benefit is being held for the family in Princeton Saturday. (Photo contributed)
Caleb Colyott of Gainesville, Fla., who will turn 5 next week, is shown prior to his surgery to remove a blood clot on his brain, resulting in a massive stroke. The blood vessels in Caleb's brain were fragile due to his treatment for a brain tumor. A benefit is being held for the family in Princeton Saturday. (Photo contributed)
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GAINESVILLE, Fla./PRINCETON – Caleb Colyott loves a lot of things — John Deere tractors, his sister, Alexis, and the Florida Gators.

 For a child with so much love, so much heart, it’s hard to believe so much could be taken from him.

Caleb Colyott, 5, of Gainesville, Fla., whose family is formerly of Princeton, has traveled a very long, sometimes scary path filled with several life-saving surgeries.

He was diagnosed with Ependymoma, a brain tumor, in April 2004, when he was 16 months old. Since then, he has had a ventriculoperitoneal shunt placed in his head, with tubes to his abdomen allowing his spinal fluid to drain.

After doctors removed a portion of the tumor at Wolfson Children’s Hospital in Jacksonville, Fla., Caleb lost the ability to protect his own airway, so doctors put in a tracheotomy to allow him to breathe. A gastrostomy tube was also put in his stomach for food and medicine.

He underwent two cycles of chemotherapy and 33 conformal radiation treatments to his brain, after which he was in remission. When Caleb was 18 months out from the end of his treatments, an MRI showed more tumor growth, which was again removed by doctors. Caleb then went through another 30 rounds of radiation.

Amazingly, Caleb, who had been a part of a research trial with St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn., was only the 10th child of 27 children tested to survive to reach a second round of radiation.

Caleb was brought home again in July 2006 and was so excited to be able to play with his sister, Alexis, 7, and his John Deere tractors.

“Caleb also loved to play with marbles,” Sue Colyott said. “Some days he would choose a marble and keep it in his hand all day. There were many a night I would put to bed my sleeping boy and find the marble still clenched in his cute, little hand.”

Those moments came to an end suddenly this past summer while Caleb and Alexis were playing in the house, and he fell backwards and hit his head on the carpet.

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