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- <text id=91TT1269>
- <title>
- June 10, 1991: Who Done It At The White House
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- June 10, 1991 Evil
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEDICINE, Page 54
- Stalking Who Done It At the White House
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Did Millie or faulty faucets really lead the President and First
- Lady to develop the same disease? Nonsense. But autoimmune
- disorders can be strange.
- </p>
- <p>By CHRISTINE GORMAN--With reporting by Barbara Dolan/Chicago
- and Andrew Purvis/New York
- </p>
- <p> Call it a case of plumbing panic. Within two years, the
- President and Barbara Bush develop the same overactive thyroid
- disorder, and best-selling pooch Millie suffers from a bout of
- doggie lupus. Heightening the drama, doctors reveal that both
- of these diseases hail from the mysterious realm of autoimmune
- disorders, which occur when the body unaccountably begins
- attacking itself. Pundits confidently calculate the odds of such
- a coincidence at 1 in 3 million. Latter-day Clouseaus begin
- looking everywhere for a culprit. Dan Quayle raises questions
- about the ancient plumbing at the Naval Observatory--the
- official 100-year-old vice-presidential residence, which the
- Bushes occupied for eight years. Suspicion spreads to other
- sources of presidential water, which are tested for the presence
- of toxic levels of iodine or lithium.
- </p>
- <p> While federal scientists raced to analyze their samples
- last week, Americans flooded the White House switchboard with
- a few theories of their own about whatdidit--everything from
- chemicals in the carpets to infectious pets. One citizen
- counseled the President to slather lemon juice over his throat
- and chest to soothe his hyperactive thyroid. Others admonished
- him to eat his hated broccoli since it contains small amounts
- of a naturally occurring substance that restrains the organ.
- </p>
- <p> Well-meaning advice to be sure, but utter nonsense.
- "They're not going to find anything in the water," says Dr.
- Lewis Braverman, chief of endocrinology at the University of
- Massachusetts Medical Center. Lithium decreases the thyroid's
- output instead of increasing it. As for iodine, a person would
- have to consume at least 10 to 50 times the normal daily dosage
- in order to trigger hyperthyroidism. "It's sort of a feeding
- frenzy," says Dr. Charles Christian, physician in chief at the
- Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City. "All the
- attention is pressuring the people taking care of the President
- to prove that something hasn't been missed."
- </p>
- <p> The fact that both Bushes developed the same rare disorder
- may seem surprising, but it is not inexplicable. Just as
- somebody always wins a lottery in which the odds are 3 million
- to 1, so some couples are bound to suffer identical fates. "No
- one made such a fuss over us when my husband and I both
- developed Graves' within three years of each other," says Denise
- Ploetz, an adult-education teacher from Newark, Ohio, whose
- condition was diagnosed in 1976. "Our doctor just said it was
- a coincidence."
- </p>
- <p> Although we may never know precisely what triggered the
- Bushes' conditions, scientists have made extraordinary advances
- in just the past decade in understanding what goes wrong in
- autoimmune disorders such as Graves' disease. Their discoveries,
- driven in part by the intensive study of the AIDS epidemic,
- reveal that the immune system is not a single straightforward
- defense system but many elaborate systems whose cellular members
- constantly patrol the body looking for friends and challenging
- foes. "The immune system is very like the brain--it has to
- recognize everything," says Dr. Howard Weiner, associate
- professor of neurology at the Harvard Medical School. "Every
- virus, every piece of dust, your body has to recognize as
- foreign."
- </p>
- <p> Autoimmune disorders occur when the body engages in
- "friendly fire" against its own tissues. This mistaken course
- of action can either overstimulate an organ, as in Graves'
- disease, or destroy tissue, as in multiple sclerosis, in which
- the myelin sheath surrounding nerves in the spinal cord and
- brain is attacked. Some immune diseases, like systemic lupus
- erythematosus, whose signs include skin lesions and arthritis,
- strike more women than men. Others, like ankylosing spondylitis,
- which can fuse the spine into a bent-over position, predominate
- in men. In all, 40 different maladies, affecting about 6% of the
- U.S. population, are thought to be autoimmune in nature. Among
- the most common: rheumatoid arthritis, in which the collagen
- fibers of the joints come under assault, and Type I diabetes,
- in which the immune system targets the insulin-producing cells
- in the pancreas.
- </p>
- <p> One of the difficulties with sleuthing the causes of these
- disorders is that so many factors are involved. Inheritance can
- play a role: several genetic types have been found that confer
- an increased risk of autoimmune disease. Dr. Christian, who has
- been called in on the Bushes' case, plans to test the President
- and his wife to see if they share the same markers for genetic
- susceptibility as most people who have Graves'. However,
- heredity is by no means the whole story. For example, if one of
- two identical twins develops an autoimmune disease, the other
- twin will get the same disease less than half the time.
- </p>
- <p> Clearly environment, life-style and medical history play
- some kind of role. For years doctors have recognized that many
- children who develop rheumatoid arthritis--sometimes almost
- overnight--show signs of viral or bacterial infection just
- before the onset of the disease. Some patients with rheumatoid
- arthritis swear they can affect their disease through exercise
- and diet.
- </p>
- <p> A growing body of evidence suggests that such ubiquitous
- viruses as herpes, Epstein-Barr and cytomegalovirus may be
- enough to push the immune systems of genetically susceptible
- people into overdrive. The fact that George and Barbara
- developed Graves' within two years of each other may point to
- a common infectious trigger--perhaps a cold they shared in
- Helsinki or Kennebunkport.
- </p>
- <p> For some autoimmune conditions, researchers have begun to
- decipher the intricate interplay between genetics and
- environment that leads to disease. Much to the surprise of many
- scientists, immunologists have discovered that in the process
- of manufacturing millions of T cells--the blood-borne infantry
- of the immune system--the body sometimes produces a few
- treacherous double agents. Early in life the thymus gland,
- located over the heart, acts as a checkpoint to weed out the
- potential traitors. Sometimes, however, a few of these renegade
- T cells get through to circulate in the body. Then it becomes
- a game of chance. Invading viruses or bacteria may inadvertently
- activate the errant T cells. That leads to the identification
- of good healthy organs as targets for destruction.
- </p>
- <p> One of the greatest mysteries in immunology is why more
- people do not succumb to autoimmune diseases. For example,
- researchers now realize that nearly everyone harbors T cells
- that will react against their own nerve tissue. Yet less than
- 1 person in 1,000 develops multiple sclerosis. What else is the
- body doing to police its overly zealous defenders? Scientists
- do not expect the uncertainties to persist much longer. "We're
- at a point where we know when a child would be at a 50 to 100
- times greater risk of getting a long list of autoimmune
- diseases," says Stanford neurologist Lawrence Steinman. "For
- several diseases we know the bacteria or viruses that can
- trigger the illness in people with an underlying genetic
- susceptibility." Improved treatments, reflecting this new
- knowledge, are beginning to emerge from the lab.
- </p>
- <p> Fortunately for the Bushes, Graves' disease is relatively
- easy to manage. But there is no sure way yet to stop the
- progression of multiple sclerosis and numerous other autoimmune
- disorders. Using an approach pioneered by Dr. Irun Cohen at the
- Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, researchers
- are working on vaccines that help tone down overactive immune
- systems by targeting rebel T cells. So far, American and Dutch
- researchers have injected these experimental vaccines into a
- handful of patients with rheumatoid arthritis and multiple
- sclerosis. Because the diseases are long-term disorders that are
- subject to spontaneous remissions, however, it is too soon to
- tell how effective this approach could be. One potential
- drawback: scientists may have to customize the vaccine for each
- individual patient.
- </p>
- <p> Alternatively, researchers may be able to coax the body
- into becoming a little more forgiving. Eating, for example, is
- possible in part because the immune system does not mount an
- attack on something that has passed through the gut. So
- Harvard's Weiner has begun feeding small doses of myelin to some
- multiple sclerosis patients in the hopes of increasing their
- tolerance for the protein. Scientists are also supplementing the
- diets of people who suffer from rheumatoid arthritis with tiny
- doses of specially prepared collagen.
- </p>
- <p> The great White House plumbing puzzle of 1991 will
- probably prove to be a wild-goose chase, but possibly it will
- bring some benefits. Researchers in immunology hope all the
- attention will heighten interest in their field and maybe even
- produce more research funds. At the very least, it has raised
- awareness of a category of diseases that, while commonplace,
- have been only dimly understood.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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