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- <text id=94TT0549>
- <title>
- Mar. 28, 1994: Reliving Polio
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Mar. 28, 1994 Doomed:The Regal Tiger and Extinction
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH, Page 54
- Reliving Polio
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Forty years after the great postwar epidemic, the disease is
- coming back to haunt its survivors
- </p>
- <p>By Philip Elmer-Dewitt--Reported by Alice Park/New York
- </p>
- <p> Roberta Simon was eight years old when poliomyelitis paralyzed
- her from the neck down. She spent three months on her back in
- a Washington hospital and then began a long series of treatments
- and exercises that slowly, painfully restored full mobility
- to her limbs. Like many brave polio victims, she pushed herself
- hard. She was a majorette in junior high school, went to college
- and eventually became a surgical nurse in a Chicago-area hospital,
- working long hours on her feet in the operating room. "I was
- out there doing my thing," she says. "I thought I was over polio."
- </p>
- <p> She was wrong. One day 36 years after the disease disrupted
- her childhood, she felt some familiar symptoms. They started
- as muscle fatigue, weakness and pain. Then her legs collapsed
- under her, and she had to lean against walls to stand up straight.
- She went to specialists and took test after test. "They all
- came back negative," says Simon. "One doctor thought I was mentally
- ill and sent me to a psychotherapist." Finally, four years later,
- Simon was correctly diagnosed. She had polio. Again.
- </p>
- <p> Forty years after the great polio epidemic of the 1940s and
- '50s swept through the U.S., infecting millions and leaving
- some 640,000 (mostly children) with varying degrees of paralysis,
- survivors are being revisited by a degenerative muscle condition
- that has precisely the same symptoms as a mild case of polio.
- The ailment is known as acute paralytic poliomyelitis sequelae,
- or postpolio syndrome. Doctors aren't certain what causes it
- or how best to treat it (for many years physicians prescribed
- exercises that exacerbated the condition), but they believe
- the problem will get worse before it gets better. Before the
- end of the decade, by one estimate, postpolio syndrome will
- strike 40% to 50% of the polio survivors, forcing many in their
- 50s, 60s and 70s to relive the childhood pain and suffering
- they thought was behind them.
- </p>
- <p> The symptoms of postpolio mimic those of the original disease,
- albeit in a less virulent form. They include fatigue and exhaustion,
- muscle weakness, painful joints and, sometimes, difficult breathing.
- The discomfort usually begins in the muscles affected by the
- original infection but can spread. Patients who got polio before
- age 10 and suffered particularly severe cases seem to be the
- most susceptible to the aftereffects.
- </p>
- <p> What triggers postpolio syndrome? One possibility is that the
- polio virus becomes active again after decades of lying dormant
- in victims' cells. This notion gained support in 1991, when
- British scientists reported that 58% of the postpolio patients
- they tested had high concentrations of polio-type antibodies
- not only in their blood, which is to be expected, but also in
- their spinal fluid, which suggests a current infection. That
- does not explain, however, why the disease resurfaces so long
- after the original infection, and attempts to replicate the
- British findings have been unsuccessful. Since it's possible
- that the dormant virus could mutate into active new forms, scientists
- are searching for such culprits.
- </p>
- <p> But most postpolio experts favor a competing theory that says
- wear and tear on the nerves is to blame. Polio initially attacks
- the nerves by invading the body through the mouth or nose, traveling
- through the bloodstream to the spinal cord and lodging in the
- nerve cells that control muscle activity. As the disease progresses,
- nerve cells in the spinal cord are damaged or killed, paralyzing
- muscles that lead to the arms, legs, stomach and chest.
- </p>
- <p> Fortunately, neighboring nerve cells that were not killed by
- the infection are often able to regenerate axons -- the finger-like
- connections that link nerves to muscle fiber. That's why the
- standard rehabilitative therapy for polio victims has been to
- stimulate nerve activity through heat and rigorous exercise,
- encouraging the healthy nerves to grow into the spaces left
- by their infected and damaged kin. "Use it or lose it" was the
- refrain with which therapists urged on a generation of polio
- kids.
- </p>
- <p> The problem is that these nerve cells have had to work a lot
- harder to get the muscles moving -- like an eight-cylinder car
- running on four cylinders -- and after 30 or 40 years, that
- can take its toll. "Everything has a finite life-span, from
- a car engine to the human heart," says Dr. Lauro Halstead, director
- of the postpolio program at the National Rehabilitation Hospital
- and a polio survivor. "A motor neuron is no different. Neurons
- that normally drive 20 muscle cells in the polio patient may
- now have to supply up to 2,000 muscle cells. Basically, this
- is a demand that the motor nerves are not designed to sustain."
- </p>
- <p> Although there is no direct evidence to support the wear-and-tear
- theory, it does make a lot of sense. It would explain, for example,
- why so many people are coming down with postpolio syndrome now.
- The great postwar epidemic peaked in the U.S. in 1952, when
- more than 20,000 children were paralyzed by polio, and it tapered
- off in the early '60s, after the Salk vaccine and then the Sabin
- oral version were introduced. The first wave of postpolio symptoms
- appeared in the early 1980s, 30 years after the epidemic's peak,
- and if researchers are correct, the last wave should subside
- by 1997.
- </p>
- <p> What can be done to help the postpolio sufferers? Not much,
- unfortunately. There are only experimental treatments. A steroid
- called prednisone, usually used to treat immune-system diseases
- like multiple sclerosis, seems to help in postpolio as well,
- reducing fatigue and increasing endurance. And Dr. Marinos Dalakas
- at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
- is experimenting with nerve growth factor, a protein that spurs
- the proliferation of nerve axons.
- </p>
- <p> But the most effective therapy seems to be no therapy at all.
- Postpolio sufferers are simply advised to take it easy -- to
- pace themselves, listen to their body and avoid activities that
- cause them pain. Dr. Halstead, who uses a motorized scooter
- instead of walking long distances, calls this "babying the motor
- neurons." His clinic uses sophisticated electromyography equipment
- that charts the activity of muscle and nerve cells in order
- to design exercise regimens tailored to each patient's particular
- weaknesses. The approach is almost the exact opposite of "use
- it or lose it." Says Dr. Jacquelin Perry, director of the pathokinesiology
- center at the Rancho Los Amigos Medical Center in California:
- "By decreasing the demand on these overworked neurons, we can
- extend their life."
- </p>
- <p> For many patients, postpolio means having to take up the braces
- and wheelchairs they worked so hard to escape. Stanley Lipshultz,
- a Washington trial lawyer, is just starting to use the crutches
- his doctor prescribed. "I had a handicapped license plate on
- my car for two years before I actually used a handicapped parking
- space," he confesses. "The hardest part is you feel you're falling
- apart," says Rena Shnaider, a retired rehabilitative counselor
- from Oakland, California, who has spent her life in a wheelchair
- but who drove a car, went to college and had enough control
- over her body to lift herself up when needed. "I know I can't
- do half the things I used to, and it makes me sad to have to
- accept it."
- </p>
- <p> If there is a bright side to postpolio syndrome, it is that
- the illness gives many patients an opportunity to come to terms
- with feelings they repressed for decades. For many, seeing those
- braces again stirs memories from the '50s, when they were pulled
- out of school, sent away for treatment and then brought home
- to face insensitive peers. "You remember that while everyone
- else was out playing football, you were watching and wishing
- you could be with them," says Lipshultz. Through support groups
- and counseling, many polio survivors are for the first time
- putting those unpleasant memories behind them. "Many of us never
- got a chance to mourn our losses," says Shnaider. "It's important
- for people with postpolio to face their experience and allow
- themselves to feel sad."
- </p>
-
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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