Telethon Will Highlight
MDA’s ALS Research and Services
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Stuart and Lisa Nichols of Houston, with
Stanley Appel, chief of neurology and director of the MDA/ALS
Center, Methodist Hospital, Houston. Stu Nichols will be
profiled on this year's Telethon.
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by Christina Medvescek
The 40th annual MDA Jerry Lewis Telethon this Labor Day weekend
will draw the attention of some 45 million viewers across the country,
and another million around the world, to the fight against ALS.
Beginning at 9 p.m. EDT on Sunday, Sept. 4, the 21½-hour
broadcast will feature interviews and profiles of many individuals
with ALS, as well as information about promising ALS research and
MDA ALS services.
MDA’s ALS Division Co-chairpersons Christopher and Reda Rice
return for their third visit to the national Telethon, which originates
this year from The Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, Calif. Chris
Rice, 40, received an ALS diagnosis in 2001. He and his wife Reda,
of Houston, work throughout the year to raise awareness of ALS and
MDA’s efforts to find a cure. Both are frequent contributors
to the MDA/ALS Newsmagazine, writing about issues of coping and
caregiving. (See May the Telethon
Bring Awareness.)
Nationally recognized ALS authority Stan Appel, director of the
MDA/ALS Center at Methodist Hospital in Houston, and an MDA Board
Member, also will appear on the national broadcast, discussing ALS
research and the services available at the 35 MDA/ALS centers across
the country.
MDA Board Member and former Olympian Bart Conner will speak about
promising advances in ALS gene therapy. MDA-funded scientists have
delivered vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) as a gene or
protein to mice with ALS, which showed strength improvements. It’s
believed a lack of VEGF may contribute to the development of the
disease.
Stuart Nichols, 53, of Kingwood, Texas, will be profiled on the
national broadcast. A global financial accounting manager for Exxon-Mobil,
Nichols received an ALS diagnosis in 2004, and was featured in the
June issue of the MDA/ALS Newsmagazine (“Staying
in the Game”). His wife, Lisa, and two grown children,
Andrew and Whitney, will appear with him in the profile.
Of Local Importance
Many more individuals and families affected by ALS will be featured
during the local segments of the Telethon that occur each hour.
These appearances are an effective way to help the public realize
that ALS can strike anyone, including people within their own communities.
“ALS devastates not only the individuals who have it, but
their families as well,” said Jerry Lewis, MDA national chairman
and Telethon star. “We’ve lost far too many people to
this terrible disease. By taking their stories to the public, we
hope to generate the support necessary to help MDA stop ALS and
other neuromuscular diseases.”
Noting that Eleanor Gehrig (widow of baseball great Lou Gehrig)
was one of the founding forces of MDA in the early 1950s, Lewis
vowed, “We’re going to fight this battle until it’s
won.”

The Telethon
will be broadcast Sept. 4-5 on some 190 “Love Network”
stations around the country, as well as on cable in Canada
and worldwide via streaming video, at www.mda.org.
For local times and stations, call your local MDA office
or check TV listings.
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Jerry
Lewis to Receive Emmy
The Board of Governors of the Academy of Television Arts
& Sciences will honor Jerry Lewis this September with
the coveted Governors Award — an Emmy that honors “achievements
of current distinction, especially those that exemplify pro-social
or pro bono publico contributions.”
The Awards Committee stated that it “unanimously recommends
that the 2005 Governors Award be given to Jerry Lewis for
his work in connection with the Muscular Dystrophy Telethon
. . . Jerry Lewis is the host and guiding spirit of the telethon
and fundraising efforts of the Muscular Dystrophy Association,
and despite battling his own illnesses in recent years, has
never missed a telethon. . . Lewis has helped lead a battle
that has resulted in increased life expectancy and improved
quality of life for children and adults suffering from neuromuscular
diseases.”
The award will be presented on the Telethon and at the Primetime
Creative Arts Emmy Awards on Sept. 11.
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MDA
Opens 35th ALS Center
The MDA ALS Division announces the designation of the Oregon
Health & Science University in Portland as the site of
its 35th MDA/ALS center.
MDA/ALS centers focus on service and research, and offer
the latest therapies using a team approach for people with
ALS. The centers also help people learn to better cope with
the disease.
The director of the new center in Portland is Jau-Shin Lou,
associate professor of neurology and co-director of MDA’s
outpatient clinic at the university. Lou conducts extensive
research in the areas of ALS and Parkinson’s disease.
A complete list of MDA/ALS centers
and contact information is available
at www.als-mda.org/clinics/alsserv.html.
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ALS Research Roundup
by Margaret Wahl
Depression Doesn't Dominate in ALS
Only 15 (19 percent) of 80 people with late-stage ALS recently
surveyed met standard criteria for a diagnosis of depression, say
investigators at the Eleanor and Lou Gehrig MDA/ALS Research Center
at Columbia University in New York.
Of those 80, 61 were interviewed at monthly intervals at least
twice. In that group, 35 (57 percent) never met depression criteria,
while five (8 percent) were consistently depressed. The other 21
people (34 percent) were depressed only at some of the monthly assessments.
The investigators, who published their results in two articles
in the July 12 issue of Neurology, concluded that depression is
the exception, rather than the rule, in late-stage ALS; and that,
when it occurs, it’s often transitory.
They didn’t find that spiritual beliefs, the presence of
a spouse as a caregiver, depression in the caregiver, financial
status, or participation in a hospice program were an influence
on depression status.
The researchers also examined factors that may influence a person
with ALS’s decision to hasten death. Of the 80 people surveyed,
53 died during the study period. Of these, 23 (43 percent) had said
they thought about ending their lives; 10 (19 percent) had expressed
to others a wish to die; and three (6 percent) had actively hastened
their deaths.
Participants who expressed a wish to die didn’t differ from
others in disease severity, age, gender, race, education, support
from Medicaid or Social Security Income (SSI), hospice participation,
living at home or in a nursing home, or whether they had a spouse
as a caregiver.
The study did confirm greater hopelessness and interest
in suicide, as well as a lower importance attached to religion,
in those who expressed a wish to die.
The authors say that a desire to hasten dying when one has a terminal
disease may not be a feature of depression but may be part of a
broader phenomenon they call end-of-life despair.
Neurologists Richard Olney and Catherine Lomen-Hoerth of the University
of California at San Francisco, in an accompanying commentary, suggest
exploring whether depression treatments have an effect on the wish
to die.
They also consider why religion and spirituality, which apparently
help cancer patients, didn’t offer protection against a wish
to die in the ALS patients studied.
They suggest that a more sensitive measure of “comfort in
religion,” as well as more careful probing for subtle cognitive
changes, might shed light on this.
They conclude by saying, “Whether an ALS patient’s
wish to die is more strongly influenced by depression or end-of-life
despair remains to be determined. What is more remarkable is that
a majority of ALS patients have a more positive attitude toward
life even as the inevitability of death is imminent.”
Spastin Gene Implicated in Juvenile-Onset
ALS
A mutation in a chromosome 2 gene for a protein called spastin has been implicated as a potential cause of, or risk factor for,
a juvenile-onset (before age 25) form of ALS. The spastin protein
is involved in the functioning of nerve cell fibers.
In the July 12 issue of Neurology, Thomas Meyer at Charité
University Hospital in Berlin, and colleagues, describe a 73-year-old
man with ALS symptoms dating back to age 24 and no family history
of ALS.
The mutation they found in one of his spastin genes wasn’t
found in any of the 200 people in the comparison (control) group;
nor was it found in eight of his relatives whose genes were screened.
Other mutations in the spastin gene can cause the neurological
disorder spastic paraplegia.
Does Diaphragm Stimulation Work in ALS?
Rhythmic stimulation of the diaphragm through electrodes —
“pacing” the diaphragm — may improve air exchange
in ALS, says Raymond Onders, associate professor of surgery at Case
Western Reserve University in Cleveland.
Onders has implanted electrodes in the diaphragms of three people
with ALS, all of whom had lung capacities that were 53 percent of
normal or less. He says the electrodes send signals through what
remains of their phrenic (diaphragmatic) nerve fibers.
Two months after implantation, Onders reports, the rate of decline
in respiratory capacity has slowed, all patients are able to vocalize
the “ah” sound longer, and all report feeling better.
Onders says the system is safe but that long-term gains can’t
be assessed until more time has elapsed.
Other experts, however, voice concerns.
“This is not a good idea in my opinion, and the long-term
results may show more rapid progression,” says Greg Carter,
a physical medicine and rehabilitation specialist who co-directs
the MDA/ALS Center at the University of Washington in Seattle.
“Phrenic-nerve pacing requires healthy motor neurons, which
is not the case in ALS. It may work for a short time, but the effect
will be short-lived. There is a very real danger, in my mind, of
accelerating motor neuron death ... due to overtaxing the cells.”
Walter Bradley, a neurologist who directs the Kessenich Family
MDA/ALS Center at the University of Miami, says he’s “not
as worried about the potential damage in ALS as about the likelihood
that it will not work.”
Onders, who hopes to study 10 people with ALS, says he welcomes
inquiries from patients and professionals. He can be reached at (216) 844-5797 (Cleveland) or at raymond.onders@uhhs.com.
National ALS Database Proposal
Before Congress
by Chris Medvescek
An investment in knowledge always pays the best interest, observed
Benjamin Franklin. To that end, Congress is considering creation
of a national system to collect and store information on the prevalence
and incidence of ALS in the United States.
The ALS Registry Act (S. 1353), sponsored by Sens. Harry Reid (D-Nev.)
and John Warner (R-Va.), would establish a national ALS registry
under the auspices of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
A House version of the bill is expected to be introduced in early
September by Rep. Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.).
It’s hoped that investing in a national ALS database (a proposed
$25 million for the first year) will pay off in increased knowledge
about the disease, more research into possible genetic and environmental
factors, and enhanced efforts to find treatments and a cure.
Information to be compiled by the national registry would include:
the number of people in the United States living with ALS; environmental
and occupational factors that may be associated with the disease;
and the age, race or ethnicity, gender and family history of individuals
with ALS. Other information also may be gathered at the discretion
of an advisory committee to be made up of ALS organizations, researchers,
federal agencies, clinicians, and people with ALS and their families.
In addition, the ALS Registry Act would establish a secure system
for putting people with ALS in contact with scientists studying
the environmental and genetic causes of motor neuron disease or
conducting clinical trials on therapies.
The proposed national registry would coordinate with appropriate
existing state, local and federal registries, such as the Department
of Veterans Affairs ALS Registry, the DNA and Cell Line Repository
of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Human
Genetics Resource Center, and the Agency for Toxic Substances and
Disease Registry.
Vent Update
In “Safe Harbor”
(July), I stated that the cost of vent rental and supplies was $300
to $400 a month. That amount was based on my Medicare statements,
which said I “may be billed” that amount. However, after
not getting any bills for the last several months, I checked with
my equipment provider and was told I had no outstanding balance.
Unsure of what was happening, I asked for input from other vent
users. I received only four replies but all said they were not billed
for any amount Medicare didn’t pay.
Apparently it is common practice for equipment providers to write
off any amount not paid by Medicare and any supplemental insurance.
I cannot guarantee that everyone on Medicare will have the same
experience but I didn’t want anyone to worry about the cost
before checking with their local respiratory care company.
Diane Huberty
Fort Wayne, Ind.
May the Telethon
Bring Awareness
by Reda Rice
As the 2005 Telethon approaches, I realize more than ever that
ALS awareness is still needed.
My husband, Chris, reminds me of this each time we go to a restaurant.
He walks in with his cane, is able to eat his food on his own, but
at the end of the meal the waitress assumes he’s mentally
incapable of paying the bill, so she hands it my way. This is an
example of lack of awareness.
Webster’s dictionary defines awareness as: to be conscious,
cognizant, alert, informed, mindful and aware of danger; antonym:
oblivious.
What struck me most was the antonym, oblivious. That’s truly
the opposite of what we want … for people to be oblivious of the 30,000 Americans who live with ALS; for people to assume
there’s something mentally wrong with those in wheelchairs
or those who have speech problems.
I’m embarrassed to say that before my husband received his
diagnosis, when I was 35, I was oblivious myself. I was living in
my own world, one that didn’t include disease and disabilities.
Now that I’m no longer oblivious and in the dark, don’t
I have a duty to share my awareness with others? This is the question
I challenge you to ask yourself.
WHERE does awareness come from? It must come from
the source. Messages coming from people living with ALS and their
families can be powerful and educational. Awareness can be heartfelt
and hopeful. To be a source, we must be willing.
HOW can we give awareness? Through involvement.
It starts close to you, with your family, friends, work, church,
school and community. It evolves through activities that cause others
to notice. The Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon on Labor Day weekend is
one such event. We can volunteer to answer phones at the local TV
station where the Telethon is televised, or we can help raise money.
Each of our efforts, no matter how small, brings needed awareness.
WHEN do we give awareness? Well, the old saying
says, “There’s no time like the present.” When
we get involved, we’re fighting against people being oblivious
to ALS. Contact your local MDA office today. I promise it will bless
you more than you’ll ever know.
Chris and Reda Rice of Houston are co-chairs of MDA’s
ALS Division.
Luckiest Man: The Life and Death of Lou
Gehrig
by Kenneth Plax
Luckiest Man: The Life and Death of Lou Gehrig,
by Jonathan Eig, 420 pages, 2005, $26.00. Simon & Schuster, SimonSays.com.
Jonathan Eig’s fine account of the life of Lou Gehrig fractures
the man of marble. In his stead emerges a prodigiously talented
athlete but a diffident man whose clear-eyed stoicism in the face
of physical decline and death restore heartfelt tragedy to Gehrig’s
story.
Eig offers a convincing psychological depiction of Gehrig as a
man impelled by both a powerful work ethic and an equally powerful
respect for authority instilled in him by his mother, Christina,
who, haunted by the deaths of her other children, both doted upon
and overwhelmed her only surviving child. Gehrig, in turn, remained
devoted to Christina. Indeed, Eig implies it took Gehrig’s
relationship with his wife, Eleanor, to bring him to full maturity.
The work ethic combined with the respect for authority produced
a dutiful employee, a team player and a fierce competitor.
Eig economically recounts Gehrig’s career, extraordinary
even in an era of baseball giants; rightly, Eig calls Gehrig the
best first baseman ever to play the game. Gehrig’s famous
farewell, in Eig’s rendering, is moving. Striking an admirable
balance between game details (including an appendix with career
statistics) and context, Eig generates strong narrative force.
Of particular interest is the story of Gehrig’s battle with
ALS, illuminated by a cache of correspondence Eig discovered between
Gehrig and his doctor, Paul O’Leary, of the Mayo Clinic.
Although many of the issues surrounding treatment remain regrettably
as unresolved today as they were in 1939, the amount of information
the person with ALS now receives is substantially different from
that afforded to Gehrig.
At the strong urging of Eleanor Gehrig, O’Leary didn’t
inform Gehrig there was no cure for ALS or that his long-term prospects
were grim; indeed, he continually offered inadequate, baseless or
just plain wrong information calculated to inspire false hope. Throughout
his illness Gehrig remained upbeat and cooperated with prescribed
treatments; Eig suggests, however, that Gehrig was complicit in
the surrounding conspiracy of cheerfulness. As Tommy Henrich, one
of Gehrig’s former teammates expressed it, “He knew.”
The Lou Gehrig Jonathan Eig gives us is one who achieved physical
grace on the field and grace of character off it — heroism
with a human face.
Although Eig doesn’t detail events subsequent to Gehrig’s
death, it would be remiss not to acknowledge Eleanor’s response
to her husband’s tragedy — devotion to both the memory
of Gehrig and the fight against Lou Gehrig’s disease. In the
early days of the Muscular Dystrophy Association she worked very
closely with current President & CEO Robert Ross, serving as
the campaign chairperson, and was very active on MDA’s behalf.
Role Reversal
by Alyssa Quintero
Forty years ago, a 14-year-old boy followed his brother’s lead
and volunteered at Camp Rankin, an MDA summer camp in Lexington, Mich.
Today, Richard Rose, 55, is all too aware of MDA’s quest to
find cures for more than 40 diseases.
In 2004, Rose received a diagnosis of ALS: The MDA volunteer became
an MDA client.
Rose, who receives services at the MDA/ALS Center at the University
of Texas, Southwest Medical Center at Dallas, said, “The doctors
are superb, and they are doing all they can in terms of research.
I am sitting here hoping for a miracle cure.”
A New Perspective
In summer 1964, Rose learned the importance of MDA and its lifesaving
mission. He also recognized the importance of helping youngsters with
disabilities have a week of fun.
“It was a great feeling to be able to help another individual
have a good time and enjoy all of the activities,” he said.
“There’s this airline commercial that has an ostrich that
can’t fly. I like to think that for a week, I was someone who
helped another kid fly,” he explained.
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Richard Rose (back row in cap) is the team
leader of the Rose Parade MDA Stride & Ride Team.
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Rose recognizes the irony in the shift from helping provide MDA services
to receiving them.
“So many people come up to me and tell me that they are amazed
at my attitude about the whole thing,” he said. “But,
I realize that stuff like this happens all of the time. You just have
to go forward, and stop and think about the good things in life. Don’t
get me wrong. I definitely have those ‘I’m feeling sorry
for myself’ days, but those are few and far between.”
Coming Up Roses
Rose and his wife, Josie, who celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary
in January, are extremely active in their local MDA support group.
Rose is the team leader of the Rose Parade in the MDA Stride & Ride
program, in which participants walk or roll to raise funds.
Rose says he is fortunate. "I'm still walking around and working.
And, I have my voice. I also have a tremendous support group with
my wife and kids," he added.
Rose, who lives in Keller, Texas, works at BNSF Railway in Fort Worth
as a market manager. He and his wife have four children, twins Stephanie
and Joanna, 24, William, 22, and Jillian, 19.
Rose has learned the best advice he can give to others is "Don't
lose your sense of humor."
"One day, I was at the grocery store with my wife, and there was
a couple behind us discussing different old movies. When the woman
mentioned 'A Farewell to Arms,' I turned to her and said, 'Are you
making fun of me?' I had to explain to her about my situation, and
I really embarrassed my wife," Rose laughed.
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Equipment Corner —
Scooter Not Always Wise in ALS
by Alyssa Quintero
If the Segway (see “An ‘In-Between’
Mobility Aid,” August) is a pedestrian vehicle that offers
innovative mobility assistance to those who need it, a more recognizable
solution is the motorized scooter.
From television commercials to mail order to major retail stores, scooters
are everywhere.
Motorized scooters come in three- or four-wheeled designs for outings
or trips that require a lot of walking.
Scooters can cost as little as $500 and go up into the $2,000-$5,000
range, depending on the features and capabilities.
Several varieties are available, from models designed for indoor use,
outdoor use or both. Some heavy-duty models can handle rugged, outdoor
terrain, while others are especially lightweight, and can be folded
or easily disassembled for travel.
But, careful thinking should precede the decision to buy a scooter.
Scooters vs. Wheelchairs
For many, a scooter is an ideal step between being fully ambulatory
and needing a wheelchair. Unlike power wheelchairs, scooters don’t
require much adjustment for seating and positioning.
While a scooter is an early option for people with ALS, though, many
occupational therapists caution that you must be realistic about the
disease’s progression when choosing mobility equipment.
“No, I wouldn’t recommend a scooter because scooters can’t
handle progression,” said occupational therapist Jenny Lieberman
of the MDA/ALS Center at Mount Sinai Hospital and Medical Center in
New York.
“Since ALS is a progressive disease, scooters can’t be
adjusted or modified properly [as a power wheelchair can] for that progression
over time.”
Lieberman explained that most people with ALS go straight to a power
wheelchair with power seating because it’s better equipped to
handle the stages of progression.
Pam Glazener, an occupational therapist based at the Vicki Appel MDA/ALS
Center at Methodist Hospital in Houston, agrees that scooters aren’t
as practical as power wheelchairs.
“The scooters just don’t work as well for this population,”
Glazener said. “They have their place, just not for ALS.”
Practical Investment?
Paying for a scooter is also a consideration. Most insurance plans
lump motorized scooters into the same equipment category as the much
more expensive power wheelchairs. Most insurance carriers, including
Medicare, will pay for an item in that category about once every five
years.
Occupational therapists are consequently apprehensive about recommending
scooters to those with ALS.
“You always have to look at the long-term benefits. Is this going
to be beneficial for two months or six years? We have to look at what
will be the best use of their available funds in the long term,”
said Gail Miller, an occupational therapist at the MDA/ALS Center at
Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
“With the pricing on scooters, the vast majority are still paid
for as an out-of-pocket expense,” said Patrick Foy, sales director
for Bruno Independent Living Aids. “People will pay cash for them
because they are less than half the cost of a power wheelchair.”
MDA assists with the purchase of scooters and wheelchairs prescribed
by MDA clinic physicians.
Asking Important Questions
Miller, Glazener and Jodi Bales, an occupational therapist at the Forbes
Norris MDA/ALS Research Center at California Pacific Medical Center
in San Francisco, suggest that you look at a scooter’s long-term
benefits and ask yourself the following questions:
- Do you have trunk control and the ability to sit upright for an
extended period of time without extensive head, neck and shoulder
support?
- Are your arms and hands strong enough to manipulate the scooter’s
hand controls?
- If you answered yes to both questions, will you still be able to
do so in five years?
Bales doesn’t recommend scooters because “scooters highlight
what someone with ALS can no longer do.”
Glazener added, “For those who are progressing quickly, we look
at a chair for the duration of the disease. If they lose arm/hand function,
head function or trunk control, a scooter simply won’t work.”
Several occupational therapists advise that you actually go to a medical
equipment store and try out a scooter.
“You should be prepared to evaluate your muscle loss and how
realistic it will be to use a scooter,” Bales added.
Bottom line: Always consult your physician, physical therapist and
occupational therapist before purchasing a scooter, or other mobility
aid.
If you and your health care team think a scooter might be of some benefit,
it’s a good idea to obtain one from a source they recommend. To
save costs, scooters often can be borrowed from an MDA loan closet or
rented.
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