Guest guest Posted June 15, 2004 Report Share Posted June 15, 2004 CHIEFTAIN PHOTO/CHRIS McLEAN ‘We're the forgotten disease. We're not AIDS, not cancer and everything else . . . A lot of it is because people don't know about it. They choose not to discuss it, choose to ignore it. I've even had people ask me if it's contagious.’ MEGAN QUINBY Lupus victim fights to stay ahead of disease By KAREN VIGIL THE PUEBLO CHIEFTAIN Lupus has taken away her kidneys. Instead, dialysis machines now do the job of separating water and wastes from Quinby's blood. Her kidneys failed in December 2002, when she was near death and hallucinated while in an intensive care unit as doctors worked to stabilize her. Today, the man-made machines buy the 24-year-old Pueblo woman life as she awaits a kidney transplant. In a sense, she's tied to the machines because of lupus, a widespread and chronic disease that causes the immune system to attack the body's own tissue and organs. Unless one happens to spot the catheter inserted under her skin near her right collarbone and asks Quinby about it, it would be hard to know that the attractive, always-in-motion server at DC's on B Street restaurant is anything but healthy and robust. Still, hers is a complex life. " It's really hard to give up three hours, " she said of her nighttime appointments with the dialysis machines. " There are days when I come home. I don't want to go back, because it's frustrating. I rely on people to take care of me and sometimes that's not always perfect, " she said. A family’s love If all goes well, Quinby will receive a transplanted kidney from her uncle, Doug Will of Loveland, in August. Her mother had hoped to give her a kidney, but a history of minor problems with her kidneys disqualified her as a donor. For now, Quinby's activities are centered around the thrice-weekly dialysis treatments and learning how she must limit stress, work and even leisure activities. She must not overburden her body that's already taxed with lupus and sometimes exhaustion from dialysis. She realizes that those with whom she surrounds herself also are key to her well-being. If they aren't positive influences, Quinby says, she's happy to let them walk away. " This is my life. This is who I am. I have had to accept that, " she said. Quinby's health problems began at age 14 with rheumatoid arthritis, which went into remission during her high school years. During her first semester in college, though, she started to have swollen ankles and was feeling badly. Initially, a doctor misdiagnosed her as having blood clots in her legs, but a second doctor figured out that she had lupus. She changed her career plans and attended a Denver culinary school with the aim of becoming a chef. Those aspirations were put aside, though, when Quinby realized that she would never be able to maintain 16-hour days on her feet. The physical stress as well as living away from home with a roommate she had just met and trying to manage her disease was just too much. She simply had placed too much stress on herself and had tried to leave her disease in Pueblo. " I've learned that when I take the next step in life, I do one thing at a time, " she now says. When Quinby returned to Pueblo and her parents' home, she said her lupus calmed down. She went back to college, continuing through last fall. A rocky road For a time, her lupus was in remission. Quinby says that good time was partly due to Dr. Constance Wehling, who briefly pulled her out of stage four of kidney disease - the stage before kidney failure. One thing that Quinby has had to deal with is the fact that lupus, with its vague symptoms, is difficult to diagnose under the best circumstances. In her case, Quinby says she has never had much of the usual joint pain, rashes or mouth ulcers. Instead, her ankles swell and she gets feverish and has a " feeling " or " intuition " that the lupus is flaring, which is verified through medical tests. Once during her illness, she even had to deal with a 40-pound weight gain. Quinby has some suspicion that her lupus and others on her mother's side of the family who have autoimmune diseases (resulting from the production of autoantibodies) represent a genetic link for the disease. She can't point to any research to back up her theory. But that's part of the problem with lupus. There hasn't been major research or drug breakthrough in 30 years, something the Lupus Foundation of America is hoping to change through a recent education/lobbying campaign. Quinby says she is frustrated that there haven't been any new advances in medication for lupus. She notes that a stem cell transplant might have been a last-ditch hope for her if a transplant donor wouldn't have been found, a reason why she supports the use of stem cells for transplants and research. To Quinby, people don't recognize or understand lupus, perhaps because it is not a disease that draws much attention or that is always evident in people's looks. " We're the forgotten disease. We're not AIDS, not cancer and everything else . . . A lot of it is because people don't know about it. They choose not to discuss it, choose to ignore it. " I've even had people ask me if it's contagious, " she said. Diagnosis is extremely difficult, too. According to the Lupus Foundation of America, there is no single test that can determine whether one has lupus and it may take months or years for doctors to piece together symptoms and accurately diagnose it. Hope for the future Quinby, though, doesn't have years to figure out where she goes from here. She knows her kidneys never will work again. Around her neck, she wears a butterfly charm, the symbol of hope for lupus victims. That's because hope, dreams and determination are something of which she has plenty. " I just want to get back to college, get my degree and get going with my career, " she said. Get your FREE personalized email signature at My Mail Signature! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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