Guest guest Posted February 3, 2005 Report Share Posted February 3, 2005 http://health./ency/adam/000076/0 Just read any interesting article about Sarcoidosis. They believe that is what killed Reggie White. One of the symptoms is joint pain. Looks like a disease that is not diagnoised but rather ignored for something else. Just thought I share......Carol Here is the article: Understanding Reggie [football player/minister] White's Disease By Reynalds 2 February, 2005 NFL great Reggie White, a committed Christian and ordained minister may have died because of a rare respiratory disease possibly combined with other health problems, according to a preliminary autopsy report issued Dec. 27. White had the disease, known as sarcoidosis, for several years, NFL.com reported family spokesman said. He described it as a respiratory ailment that affected his sleep. White's (most likely) condition affected the amount of air his lungs could hold, resulting in " fatal cardiac arrhythmia, " said Dr. Mike Sullivan, the medical examiner for Mecklenburg County, N.C. and a forensic pathologist, according to NFL.com (www.nfl.com/partners/aol?http://nfl.com/news/story/8040641). White died Dec. 26 at Presbyterian Hospital in Huntersville N.C. after being taken there from his home in nearby Cornelius N.C. (www.cornelius.org). According to Trevor Marshall, chairman of the Autoimmunity Research Foundation (www.autoimmunityresearch.org/about.htm), the first hint of trouble, especially in males, comes during autopsy after a heart attack. This happened, he said, with the death of Chicago sports anchor Darrian Chapman (www.nbc5.com/health/1933594/detail.html), and almost certainly in Reggie White's death. Marshall said that while White's final autopsy report has yet to be issued, the medical examiner has indicated that everything " 'fits' with a sarcoidosis cardiac-event. " WHAT IS SARCOIDOSIS? But what is sarcoidosis? It's usually caused by an ongoing accumulation of bacteria, Marshall said. He added, " The symptoms and disabilities gradually creep up on people, and they adapt to the illness as if it were 'normal.' Usually there is a precipitating event, perhaps following an acute infection or a tick bite, which causes the suffering to become unbearable, and that is the point at which patients recognize they have a disease. " Marshall explained how the disease progresses. " The bacteria gradually spread through every organ in the body, from the brain, to the eyes, to the chest, to the feet, weakening them and causing them to fail. " Even though there's a consistent cause, Marshall said, the symptoms still act slightly differently in each patient. Asked why people should be concerned about what many people say is a rare disease, Marshall said because the diagnosis is usually missed by doctors. Meg Mangin, director of the Autoimmunity Research Foundation, said in a commentary e-mailed by Marshall, that while sarcoidosis is typically described as being rare, that is not necessarily true. She said that many people report having had symptoms for years before finally being diagnosed with the disease. " Death due to sarcoidosis is also likely under-reported, " Mangin said, " because many doctors do not recognize the systemic nature of the disease and attribute death to other causes. " TREATING SARCOIDOSIS Mangin said the standard treatment for the condition has not changed in a half century. " Patients are allowed to deteriorate without any treatment until they have enough major organ damage to warrant the use of high-dose, long-term, toxic and ineffective prednisone " (www.nlm.nih.gov /medlineplus/druginfo/medmaster/a601102.html), Mangin said. " Because the symptoms of systemic sarcoidosis are so poorly recognized, patients suffer from debilitating pain, muscle weakness, fatigue and many other symptoms that have a huge negative impact on the quality of their lives. Death usually occurs in 10-20 years with or without treatment. Many doctors believe the myth that sarcoidosis will go away without treatment, which is contrary to the findings of the recent 5 million dollar taxpayer-funded study of sarcoidosis called ACCESS. This largest-ever study revealed that sarcoidosis does not resolve with or without prednisone. " Mangin added, " The sad tragedy of this disease is that the sarcoidosis experts have been ignoring decades-old studies by the Center for Disease Control and other reputable scientists, that the cause of the disease is likely due to a strain of bacteria that can live within the cells of the immune system. The business of medicine has pointed their research efforts in other, more lucrative directions. " However, according to Mangin, patient advocates led by Marshall are not just sitting by waiting to die. Calling what they're doing a possible " medical breakthrough of the century, " Mangin said patient advocates are " following a safe, novel, inexpensive treatment plan which is proving to lead to remission of this deadly disease. " She said that the discovery, " which involves medications already approved by the FDA, but used in a novel way, " is also being used to treat other autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, chronic lyme disease, chronic fatigue syndrome, scleroderma, lupus and fibromyalgia. " Mangin said, " It takes a long time for the medical establishment to recognize a new medical theory, especially when it comes from someone who is no longer part of that establishment. Many physicians are using this Marshall Protocol (www.marshallprotocol.com) with success but many 'experts' refuse to acknowledge its potential. The Autoimmunity Research Foundation was created to help promote this lifesaving treatment by reaching key doctors in the research community. " EDUCATING THE MEDICAL PROFESSION ABOUT SARCOIDOSIS That's not the only thing the Foundation is doing. Marshall said, " We are working with the National Institutes of Health on a more informative .... booklet for physicians and have just reviewed the draft. So hopefully, in a few years, more physicians will understand that this is a killer disease, not ' " one that goes away on its own.' " Marshall has himself experienced the disease. He was diagnosed in 1978 while an academic at Curtin University in Western Australia. He said he has x rays showing that the disease was active in his body as early as 1967, but its diagnosis was then missed by doctors. Marshall admitted that his case is far from usual. " When I was diagnosed I immediately started a postgraduate course in BioMedicine, " he said, " and had some of the greatest medical minds of that time to help me understand and manage the disease process. Which is why I was eventually able to fully recover, after 35 years, from a disease that normally kills in 10-20 years. " The best way for people to get involved is to educate their doctor about " undiagnosed chronic disease, " Marshall said. " Especially the chronic fatigue and fibromyalgia, and understand that people suffering from these diseases are not malingering, that these diseases are real, even though they are so hard for a individual doc to spot, and that they kill if left untreated. They should also understand the common features of these chronic diseases, which, even though they bear different names, are actually very similar and the predisposition runs in families. " In addition, Marshall said, people should also make sufferers aware that these diseases are being researched and conquered, and that there is a network of concerned people willing to help who can be contacted on the Internet. Additional information, Marshall said, will also be available at the group's upcoming conference of recovering/recovered patients in Chicago March 12-13. Details of that conference are at www.autoimmunityresearch.org/chicago2005.htm For information on line go to www.autoimmunityresearch.org, www.sarcinfo.com, or www.marshallprotocol.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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