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Unusual illness might be Lyme disease- PA

2004-04-20 05:52:21 PM
www.cumberlink.com/articles/2004/04/15/shippensburg/news/news02.txt
tinyurl.com/35836
Unusual illness might be Lyme disease
By Dale Heberlig, April 14, 2004
[ dheberlig@cumberlink.com ]
Ken Goshorn spent nearly four years in a battle against the crippling
effects of a mysterious illness - sometimes crawling on his hands and knees
to get around his home - before he began to suspect his problems might be
stemming from chronic Lyme disease.
Felled in the fall of 1999 by a general physical weakening and failing
muscle coordination, Goshorn, 57, first sought treatment from a
chiropractor, then his family doctor and, finally, specialists at Johns
Hopkins Hospital where he was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
(ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig's disease.
He says he was told there was no hope for improvement.
Mild signs of recovery
Now, eight months after visiting a western Pennsylvania doctor and embarking
on a treatment of large doses of antibiotics, Goshorn says he sees mild
signs of recovery he was told never to expect.
Goshorn, a former supervisor in Southampton Township, Cumberland County,
says doctors at Johns Hopkins told him there was no hope of improvement from
symptoms of ALS. However, he and his physical therapist at Shippensburg
Health Services, a Summit Health facility, say he has made some modest
strides in recent weeks.
Goshorn says he took a "kill me or cure me approach" after his new doctor
gave him the go-ahead for physical rehabilitation therapy. He says stressful
exercise aggravates the symptoms of ALS patients.
Therapist Mark Maynard says in two months of treating Goshorn's symptoms, he
has seen improvements that are "atypical" of ALS expectations.
"With ALS, patients go downhill with overwork, but Ken's stronger, his gait
is improved," Maynard says. "He was walking on his toes (to maintain his
balance), now he's back on the balls of his feet."
Mission from God
A reverent man with strong religious convictions, Goshorn believes he's been
given a mission by God to do everything he can to educate others who suffer
from similar symptoms.
Dr. Joseph Joseph, Goshorn's physician in Hermitage, Mercer County, is
unwilling to talk about Goshorn's specific circumstances or the particulars
of Lyme disease, but Goshorn has no such reservations.
"I've met so many people in this area with symptoms like mine, maybe a dozen
people I've run into," Goshorn says. "The more I learn about it, the scarier
it gets, but I try to make some fun out of all this, because God told me
this is a challenge to life. If I die, that's OK, but if I wake up in the
morning and see the sun shining, it means God has someone else for me to
talk to."
Word of mouth
Goshorn learned of his Mercer County doctor through word of mouth, from a
friend he calls Cindy.
He says the treatment regimen prescribed by Dr. Joseph calls for heavy doses
of antibiotics for an extended period - much longer than 3-4 weeks described
on the website of the Center for Disease Control.
According to Goshorn, Cindy has been on the antibiotic regimen for two
years. "It's a long, slow process," he says. "She's getting better."
His friend's success motivated him.
"I wouldn't have gone out there if just anyone told me, but I saw the
results Cindy got," Goshorn says of his friend.
He says Cindy was also diagnosed with ALS and was on a pronounced downward
track before embarking on the heavy antibiotic treatment recommended as an
alternative treatment by some doctors for the treatment of Lyme disease.
Goshorn worries that people won't find out about alternative treatments for
what is diagnosed as ALS.
"Many doctors are so busy with their regular work that they just don't know
about the alternatives," he says. "People have to find out for themselves
and insist on other options."
Often mistaken for ALS
Goshorn says Internet research he's done recently indicates Lyme disease is
often mistaken for ALS or other afflictions. The disease is difficult to
diagnose, he says, because spirochetes, the slender spiral bacteria of Lyme
disease, migrate to organs from the bloodstream and can't always be detected
by a blood test.
He was diagnosed with Lyme disease on the basis of a Western Blot test that
indicates the presence of the bacteria associated with the ailment. Goshorn
says even the Western blot test is only about 60 percent accurate.
Goshorn's symptoms became obvious to him in October 1999, although in
hindsight he thinks the signs were there much earlier.
"I've pulled hundreds of ticks off my body in the years I worked in the
woods and fields as an excavator," he recounts. "And, when I think back on
it, I remember tripping or stumbling many times. Those could have been early
signs of muscle control problems."
Lyme disease is transmitted by deer ticks infected by the blood of mammals
the ticks have fed upon. As many as 23,000 cases were reported in the United
States in 2002.
Disease underreported
According to the CDC, the disease is grossly underreported. Twelve states
account for 90 percent of the reported cases, with the 3,959 Pennsylvania
cases ranking behind only Connecticut - where the disease was first
identified in the town of Lyme - and New York.
The onset of Lyme disease is usually marked by the appearance of a red
"bull's eye" rash at the site of the tick bite within 7-14 days. According
to the CDC, the disease can manifest later as chronic symptoms without the
appearance of the bull's eye.
The best prevention is to avoid ticks. Proper outdoor clothing and the use
an insect repellent containing DEET is recommended.
2004 The Sentinel, Carlisle, Pa.
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Re:Unusual illness might be Lyme disease- PA

.The onset of Lyme disease is usually marked by the appearance of a red
Quote
"bull's eye" rash at the site of the tick bite within 7-14 days.
Another tribute to the criminal negligence of the great Dr. Steere.
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Re:Unusual illness might be Lyme disease- PA

On 20 Apr 2004 09:52:21 GMT, sinaj101@aol.com (Sinaj101) wrote:
Quote
Ken Goshorn spent nearly four years in a battle against the crippling
effects of a mysterious illness - sometimes crawling on his hands and knees
to get around his home - before he began to suspect his problems might be
stemming from chronic Lyme disease.
Who cares what bacteria it is. If you find it great if not TREAT. If
not lyme it's some other pathogen.My ID Dr is treating ALS as we
speak.
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med diseases lyme
Lyme Disease: patient support, research & information