Guest guest Posted August 9, 2005 Report Share Posted August 9, 2005 People need to learn about dangers of AS Marilyn Linton, Special to the Free Press 2005-08-08 01:34:03 For years Atkins not only suffered a disease that doctors misdiagnosed, it was also an illness hardly anybody could pronounce. The Guelph father of three is one of about 150,000 Canadians who lives with Ankylosing Spondylitis or AS. Pronounced ankle-low-zing-spon-dill-eye-tis, AS also affected television show host Ed Sullivan, baseball player Rico Brogna, and Motley Crue guitarist Mick Mars. Sullivan's classic stiff neck turn is the hallmark of AS. " Because of tenderness, pain and stiffness, people move like The Tin Man in the Wizard of Oz, " says St. Catharines rheumatologist Saeed Shaikh. AS is under the arthritis umbrella and is characterized by inflammation of the axial joints, the backbone and the sacroiliac. Atkins, 38, had his first symptom at the age of 16: His doctor thought the swelling on his knee was a sign of rheumatoid arthritis. Once the knee was drained, Atkins's discomfort eased off for a while. By the time he was 19, however, he was in so much pain, his roommate would have to help him in and out of bed. The next six years were spent in search of a proper diagnosis. Finally, in his 20s, a rheumatologist considered Atkins's symptoms -- stiffness and pain in the hips and neck in the mornings that would subside over the day -- and confirmed AS through a simple blood test. Early diagnosis is apparently key and AS begins most often between the ages of 20 and 40. Atkins was treated with anti-inflammatory drugs. One reason raising awareness is so important is that AS is a men's health issue that has been largely ignored and gone unnoticed. Three times as many men as women get AS and because men do not go to their family doctors as often as women, it goes undetected. Back pain, one of the early symptoms, is something most of us complain about at some time -- so AS easily gets missed, Shaikh says. " AS starts with stiffness and pain in the lower back and buttocks, " he explains. " But a lot of people with back pain don't even see their doctors. Instead, they go to a chiropractor, a massage therapist, or a physiotherapist. " Family doctors and chiropractors can pick it up when it's very advanced, when there are deformities. But you want to diagnose it early and treat it earlier rather than later. " Shaikh adds that in its progressive stage, AS is disfiguring. " If the spine sets in a bent-over position, it looks something like a question mark. You're bent over, you have almost like a dowager's hump on your back. The lower back flattens out and the upper back rounds over. " Lying down flat then becomes virtually impossible, he says. " You can't straighten out your back. " Treatment includes exercise, particularly in the early stages of AS. " Stretching, biking, and swimming -- it improves with movement, " Shaikh says. " I think of AS as rust, " Atkins adds. " The good thing about being a teacher, as opposed to an office worker, is that I can sit or stand and remain active. With my condition, where my spine is inflamed all the time, my vertebrae would fuse. If I were a bus driver, I would be in real trouble. " While the cause of AS is not totally known, experts say it's related to a gene HLA-B27, which is present in only eight per cent of the Canadian population, but 90 per cent of people with AS. Typically, patients with the disease are treated by prescription drugs. There's also a new category of drugs called alpha blockers, which bind to something called the tumour necrosis factor, which signals inflammation in the body. Atkins takes one of the newer drugs and though he has to take it intravenously every two months, he can see why doctors call it a quantum leap in treatment. Previously plagued by pain, always having to take pills, he was exhausted at the end of the day. " All my energy was spent dealing with the pain. Not having to pop pills on that roller coaster ride of pain is wonderful, " he says. The new medication made him feel so great, he and his wife decided to have another child. http://www.canoe.ca/NewsStand/LondonFreePress/Today/2005/08/08/1163646- sun.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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