Charlie Gard: Parents to appeal withdrawal of life support Published duration 2 May 2017

image copyright PA image caption Charlie's rare disease has left him unable to cry and made him deaf

Parents of a baby with a rare condition are appealing against a High Court decision to withdraw life support.

Specialists at Great Ormond Street say eight-month-old Charlie Gard is unable to move and has significant irreversible brain damage.

In April doctors were told they could move Charlie into palliative care

His parents said they were "devastated by the result" and will apply to the Appeal Court to re-examine the decision on Tuesday.

image copyright PA image caption Connie Yates and Chris Gard with their son Charlie, who was born healthy in August last year

Chris Gard and Connie Yates, of Bedfont, west London, have raised £1.3m to take their son to the United States for pioneering treatment.

Charlie, who was born on 4 August 2016, has a disorder called mitochondrial depletion syndrome, which affects the genetic building blocks that give energy to cells.

It causes progressive muscle weakness and brain damage.

He is thought to only be the 16th person in the world diagnosed with the condition.

Doctors had argued that continuing life-support treatment would not benefit Charlie but "prolong the process of dying".

A lawyer representing Great Ormond Street Hospital said: "This is not pioneering or life-sustaining treatment, but a purely experimental process with no real prospect of improving Charlie's condition or quality of life."

image copyright PA image caption Specialists at Great Ormond Street say there is no accepted cure for Charlie's rare disease

Miss Yates, 31, said: "We were devastated by the result of the last hearing.

"Charlie is still strong and stable. He is growing more beautiful by the day and we knew we couldn't just give up on him."