Guest guest Posted May 29, 2006 Report Share Posted May 29, 2006 Young people living with old people's pain: Juvenile arthritis physically painful but it can be hard on psyches of little ones as well (May 27, 2006) http://www.guelphmercury.com/ Olivia Bennings is a seven-year-old who can't run as fast as her classmates can. Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis has swollen her left knee to twice its normal size, turning her run from the quick and eager sprint of other children her age to an awkward gallop. When asked how she feels compared to her classmates, the shy Grade 1 student says, " I feel different. A little bit. " Olivia's mother, Bennings, says people, especially other kids, don't associate her daughter's disability with arthritis, a disease normally associated with older people. " I don't think any kid in her age group believes it. Arthritis is something old people get; it's not something young people get. " But according to the Canadian Arthritis Society, juvenile rheumatoid arthritis affects one in every 1,000 children under the age of 16. , who has the same striking red hair that her daughter has, says Olivia " never complains " about the arthritis that restricts the way she lives her life. " I take medicine and I need to do a lot of exercises, and that's pretty much it, " says Olivia, who was diagnosed at age two. The Guelph girl has pauciarticular arthritis, which is the " best-case scenario, " in which only four or fewer joints are affected. Straightening Olivia's leg in the morning can be an ordeal and she sometimes wears a brace at night to straighten it. Simple kid tasks such as drawing with chalk can be challenging, yet the sidewalk in front of the family's house is covered with Olivia's drawings of butterflies. " Just the way she has to have that leg extended all the time is a disability; it really is, " says. " But it could be so much worse. " In addition to the many doctors and physiotherapists she sees, Olivia visits an ophthalmologist every few months because the disease could also affect her eyes. " I don't care if you're old or young; this is not a great disease to have at any age, " says. Children not only have to deal with pain, but also with some of the psychological consequences of arthritis, says Dr. Dent, a pediatric rheumatologist and head of the division of rheumatology and immunology at McMaster Children's Hospital in Hamilton. " If they're really sick . . . they're in a lot of pain. They can't participate in sports the way they did before they got sick. They can't do things with their peers and they can't even go to school, " he says. Dent says little is known about what causes the disease and theories range from genetic to environmental factors. Researchers are pursuing a cure, but Dent is guarded in his optimism. " I don't think there's anything that's going to break tomorrow, " he says. The good news is children are much more likely to go into permanent remission than adults are. About 50 per cent of kids grow out of the disease, he says. " The biggest burden for adolescents is when they seem different from their peers. " Little kids are better " copers. " They don't appreciate they're different from other children, Dent says. " Being different is what really hurts. " Kubinec knows all about being different. He's a 21-year-old trapped in the body of an adolescent. He's been living with arthritis since age 11 and the drugs he takes to combat the illness have stunted his growth. Socially, it's frustrating, Kubinec says. His body can't handle alcohol and he isn't going on dates like the rest of his friends are. " That bothers me. It's sort of frustrating to see everybody else having girlfriends and going out on dates and still knowing that you are biologically 14. " As he talks, he pushes down on his knuckles on the table to try to straighten out his fingers. It's a nervous fidget, he says. " I know I'm not emotionally mature because the changes in the brain that go on during puberty just haven't happened yet. " The third-year University of Guelph biochemistry student, who lives at home in Everton, says he has " arthritis in every joint you can count. " Kubinec has polyarticular juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, which means more than four joints are affected. He says he often gets strange looks when he explains he has arthritis. He also has osteoporosis, another disease associated with aging, caused by the side-effects of his arthritis drugs. Kubinec says he's hopeful he will grow out of it, but he's prepared for life if he doesn't. " I've been handling the pain for so long that I would have difficulty imagining it otherwise, " he says. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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