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    Home> Publications > MDA/ALS Newsmagazine July 2005 v10 n6
Your Source for the Latest Information About ALS Vol. 10, No. 6  July 2005

Index to this Issue:

MDA/ALS Newsmagazine - Volume 10, Number 6, July 2005

On the Cover:

Erin Brady Worsham’s digitally designed self-portrait "Breathtaking Metamorphosis,” of 2001, depicts her life with a ventilator. The work is in the MDA Art Collection. Worsham, 46, lives in Nashville, Tenn., and is affected by ALS.

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Safe Harbor—

Rediscovering Life on a Vent

by Diane Huberty

This month marks my first anniversary of life on a vent — a tracheostomy tube and mechanical ventilator. As I look back over this year and try to sum up my feelings, the words that come to my mind are “safe harbor.” I have found a shelter, a place where I can literally and figuratively catch my breath, get my bearings, and even make some repairs to my storm-battered body.

The Huberty family  

A four-generation portrait that includes Diane Huberty’s mother, Helen; Diane; Diane’s daughter Kerry (left) and her daughter Taya; and Diane’s daughter Kelly with her daughter Diana.

The effects of the vent on my health — oxygen levels that prevent headaches and give me energy, stamina, appetite, and pink cheeks — are equaled by improvements in my quality of life. My days are no longer dominated by shortness of breath, tiredness, and fear of the next episode of lung congestion.

My world has re-expanded along with my lungs. BiPAP (bi-level positive airway pressure, a noninvasive form of ventilation) was fine for relieving nighttime breathing problems, but as my daytime use of it increased, my world shrank.

Even if the BiPAP machine had fit on my wheelchair, the mask and headgear were too bizarre-looking for me to want to go out. As a result I seldom went outside, much less left home.

Simply talking left me breathless, dizzy and worn out, making socializing too much work. I needed 10 or 12 hours of sleep a night and still was exhausted by bedtime.

People talk about the horror of being “tied to a machine” when they talk about vents, but they’ve got it all wrong. I already was tied to another machine, my wheelchair, and like the wheelchair, the vent has only increased my freedom, not tied me down.

Now with the vent I’m out for hours shopping, sitting outside chatting with neighbors, supervising outdoor projects, even accompanying my husband to his part-time job and staying up too late! The vent doesn’t draw stares like the BiPAP.

I actually feel rather proud to be seen out and about doing normal things. I feel I’m representing the physically disabled and showing able people that, vent and all, we’re still more like them than different.

Feeling Secure

Of all of the improvements the vent has made, the greatest is the feeling of safety it has given me. It sounds strange to say I feel safer with my life dependent on a hunk of — egad! — computer-run hardware and some batteries, but I do. It’s far more dependable than my own body was and, unlike my body, comes with a backup unit.

Diane Huberty visiting her daughter and grandaugher in the hospital after the baby was born.  

The vent alarms, something very few BiPAP machines have, also contribute to safety. There are no more horrible episodes of not being able to reach my call button when I can’t breathe because of congestion or disconnected tubing. The vent alerts my family for me.

Life-threatening congestion is also a thing of the past. Relief is just a suction tube away! That little rattle in my chest that once heralded the onset of an exhausting and frightening hour of trying to cough out congestion is now just a signal that I need suctioning.

Suctioning seemed like a big deal at first but quickly became fast and easy for my caregivers — a mere annoyance, not a medical event! Suctioning makes me cough hard so it probably looks like a miserable experience, but it isn’t at all. It’s no more uncomfortable than any ordinary coughing spell and it leaves me rattle free. It’s an incredible improvement over swigging expectorant cough medicine and then trying to hack up congestion using a cough-assist device or a series of Heimlichlike belly bruisers!

How does it feel to be on a vent? It doesn’t! I’m as unaware of my breathing as anyone else. No feeling of air being forced on me, no arguments with the vent over the rate and depth of my breathing. I just breathe!

I expected a general ache or sore-throat feeling from the presence of the trach tube, but I’m aware of it only if it gets tugged sideways or needs repositioning. At times the skin around the opening may get irritated, causing the only discomfort.

The Costs of a Vent

What does it cost to be on a vent? Thanks to Medicare Part B, the cost is manageable. My vent costs include vent, nebulizer (to deliver medicine) and suction machine rental, disposable supplies (hoses, filters, suction catheters and gloves, trach dressings) and monthly trach insert changes. The cost of those supplies has gone down as we became more comfortable with less frequent hose, filter and trach changes, and switched to plain old soap and water for trach care. As far as we can figure from the slow Medicare process, we now pay about $300 to $400 a month.

What about the burden my care puts on my husband and friends? The only daily additions to my care are trach dressing changes and suctioning. Trach care takes about three minutes once a day. (I have a Bivona brand trach with no inner cannula [a tube within the trach tube] to change.) Suctioning takes about three minutes also, and the number of times a day I need suctioning varies from a few to a dozen.

There are about two hours a week of equipment maintenance and an occasional nebulizer treatment to be done.

All that doesn’t add up to a lot of extra time, but when added to the hours of care I already require it does count. On the positive side, it is easier, faster, and much less frightening and frustrating to suction me than to assist me through a bad coughing spell.

As any caregiver knows, the burden of care can’t simply be measured in hours. The stress and emotional toll can be much worse. For example, I can never be left home alone. Actually, it was probably every bit as dangerous for me to be alone for the last several years, but it’s “officially” dangerous now!

Thanks to having a live-in helper who, although she has a full-time job, allows my husband to get away in the evenings and on weekends, being available is now only annoyingly restrictive to him. And with two wonderful friends and my daughters, who were also trained in the basics of vent care, he gets time to run errands on weekdays and even take a full day off once in a while.

Being on the vent has made many things easier, however. Even though we have to pack a laundry basket of “just in case” equipment to leave home, I’m a lot more portable than before simply because I feel good again. For him, the good news is that I can accompany him most places. The bad news is that I can accompany him most places!

Clear Sailing

I’m no Pollyanna. I’m well aware that my safe harbor is a temporary shelter. My ALS will continue to progress, taking the wind out of my sails and warping my timbers. There will come a day when I’ll need to decide if it’s time to abandon ship, but that could be years from now.

The Huberty family  

Diane Huberty with her husband, John, and her friend and caregiver, Kathy Lee.

In the meantime I can and do enjoy my life. It’s so much easier to focus on the positives when breathing isn’t a moment-to-moment battle!

Thanks to the vent, today I’m enjoying holding our newborn granddaughter, scanning the pages of children’s books so I’ll be able to read to our 14-month-old granddaughter, working on Web sites. For years I was slowly disengaging from life, withdrawing, preparing to leave. Now I’m re-engaging, rebuilding, and truly enjoying life.

It’s a beautiful spring day and the breeze is gentle. I’m going to weigh anchor, raise the mizzen mast and go for a little sail around the yard to make plans for this summer’s gardens ... and I’ll be planting perennials, not annuals. Life is very good here in Safe Harbor!

Diane Huberty, 56, of Fort Wayne, Ind., received a diagnosis of ALS in 1985. She retired from her position as Neuroscience Clinical Educator at Parkview Hospital in 1995 and has since become involved in computer work including Web site design. She maintains two Web sites devoted to ALS at http://home.att.net/~liveletdie5/ALS/home.html and http://living-with-als.org.

What Can (and Can’t) We Learn From the SOD1 Mouse?

by Margaret Wahl

The first real break in solving the mystery of ALS causation came in 1993, when MDA-supported investigators linked one form of familial (genetic) ALS to a gene on chromosome 21 that gives rise to a protein called superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1), identifying 11 disease-causing mutations in the SOD1 gene in 13 affected families. (Today, some 100 different SOD1 mutations are known to cause ALS in humans.)

Shortly after these findings, MDA grantee Mark Gurney, a biologist at Northwestern University, in Evanston, Ill., led a team that developed mice with an SOD1 mutation at position 93. The mutation, which changes the amino acid glycine to one called alanine in the SOD1 protein, caused a disease in the mice that closely resembled ALS. The mice lost muscle-controlling nerve cells (motor neurons), became paralyzed, and died by 5 to 6 months of age, far short of the usual mouse lifeof two to three years.

These G93A mutant SOD1 mice quickly became the standard model in which to test new ALS treatments and study ALS pathology, although there are mice available with a few other SOD1 mutations.

“We were lucky that the SOD1 mutant mouse disease looked a lot like human ALS,” says Denise Figlewicz, a neuroscientist and MDA research grantee at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. “We decided to make the most of it.” Figlewicz and many other ALS experts believe that, after the initial disease-causing event, whether a genetic mutation or something else, a similar cascade of biochemical changes leads to the death of motor neurons.

But some researchers think studying the G93A mouse as a model for sporadic ALS is like looking for your keys where the light is better instead of where you dropped them.

'Discordant' Results

Since the mid-1990s, several drugs that helped the G93A mice by delaying disease onset or prolonging life failed to help patients in trials. Among the drugs that showed these “discordant” results are celecoxib (Celebrex), creatine and gabapentin (Neurontin).

A lab attendant holding a mouse.  

Even Gregory Cox, an associate staff scientist at the Jackson Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine, a nonprofit facility that conducts research and supplies the G93A mouse to dozens of labs, has reservations about the scope of its applicability. The mouse, he says, develops an “incredibly reproducible motor neuron disease. It’s a great model for human SOD1 mutations, but it’s not clear how applicable what we learn is to all sporadic cases.”

Tighter Testing

One approach to increasing the usefulness of the SOD1 mutant mouse model is to apply more rigorous testing procedures.

Gwendolyn Wong, director of in vivo pharmacology at the Research Center of the ALS Therapy Development Foundation (TDF) in Cambridge, Mass., says that tighter controls would have predicted the failed clinical trial of Celebrex.

Wong thinks the SOD1 mouse is “a fabulous model of the clinical disease.” But she also believes that you have to minimize every possible cause of variability in the mouse experiments other than the test drug’s effects if you’re going to get results worth your attention.

“I firmly believe that of all the animal models out there, this is the best one to use for drug discovery in ALS,” she says.

The TDF carries out experiments using SOD1 mutant mice only after matching the treatment and nontreatment groups for litter of origin, body weight, gender, and number of copies of the mutated SOD1 gene.

When all these sources of variation were minimized, Wong says, a test of Celebrex in SOD1 mutant mice didn’t show any benefit — just as it didn’t in the patients. In Wong’s experience, “failed mouse experiments lead to failed clinical trials.” And, one hopes, with tighter controls, successes in mouse trials will predict successes in humans.

Mimicking Human Variation

Denise Figlewicz has a somewhat different take on why the SOD1 mouse results have often not predicted human results. She’s suggested that if the G93A mutation in SOD1 were bred into several different strains of mice, each with its own genetic background in other respects, the resulting mix of mice would be closer to mimicking human variation. Experimental drugs that show benefit in more than one strain would be promising. She’s now breeding such mice, with MDA support.

“The problem,” she says, “is that most of us are using the same G93A mice, which are genetically identical. It’s as if somebody cloned you and tested a drug on you and the clones and said, ‘It works!’ But there would be people unrelated to you for whom it wouldn’t work.” In a genetically diverse population, she says, any possible benefits of an experimental ALS drug to a small percentage of people with a certain genetic background are likely to be masked by the drug’s lack of effect on others with different backgrounds.

The ultimate answer probably lies in a combination of both approaches: Compounds that look very good in a rigorously controlled set of experiments would be even stronger candidates if they subsequently proved beneficial in SOD1 mutant mice from several different genetic backgrounds.

It’s unclear how applicable any results will be to non-SOD1 ALS. But Cox, for one, is encouraged by the fact that you can’t tell the difference between patients who have SOD1-caused ALS and other ALS patients without doing genetic testing, which suggests there’s considerable overlap. “We’ve got that going for us,” he says.

HELPFUL RESOURCES

MDA offers four publications for people with ALS, as well as family members and caregivers. Contact your local office for information.

Everyday Life With ALS: A Practical Guide, released in May, is a revision and expansion of MDA’s ALS: Maintaining Mobility. The updated guide is designed to help readers manage their daily experiences with ALS. A free copy of the book will be provided to any person with ALS who’s registered with MDA. The book is available on CD for a fee.

Facts About ALS discusses the history, description and causes of ALS.

When a Loved One Has ALS: A Caregiver's Guide is a comprehensive manual of practical advice for meeting the medical, emotional, financial and everyday challenges faced by primary caregivers of people with ALS. The primary caregiver of anyone with a diagnosis of ALS who is registered with MDA can receive a free copy.

Meals for Easy Swallowing is no longer in print but is available on the MDA Web site at www.als-mda.org/publications/meals. The online version, which contains all of the original text, comprises a collection of recipes for people who have swallowing difficulties because of neuromuscular diseases such as ALS.

ALS RESEARCH ROUNDUP

Long-Ago Residence on Guam Is Likely ALS Risk Factor

In a study that included 140 people with ALS and another 140 without the disease, those with ALS were found to be eight times more likely to have lived on Guam, even for a few months, than were those who didn’t have ALS.

Only one person from the non-ALS (control) group had ever lived on Guam, while nine of the ALS-affected subjects had lived on this island in the Pacific for between one and 15 months. The nine hadn’t lived there for an average of 43 years when they learned they had ALS. (The time between living on Guam and an ALS diagnosis ranged from 27 to 57 years.)

The findings, published in the May 24 issue of Neurology, and reported by Lewis Rowland of the MDA ALS Center at Columbia University in New York; Ruth Ottman, also at Columbia; and investigators at Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, shed new light on the ALS-Guam connection, a subject that has been under scrutiny for decades.

In 2002, researchers proposed that the unusually high incidence of ALS on Guam seen between 1940 and 1965 probably had to do with the islanders’ tradition of eating fruit bats (see “Bats and Nuts,” May 2002). These bats eat cycad nuts that contain a known toxin and then concentrate the toxin in their tissues.

The investigators on the new study say their findings “could indicate that one of the key characteristics of the exposure occurring during the period of endemic ALS on Guam is the long delay in clinical expression [outward signs of disease].” They say their data “support the vision that exposure to slow-acting toxic agents is important in the pathogenesis of ALS, most likely in combination with a genetic predisposition.”

Studies Examine Genetic and Environmental Factors

Mother and daughter  

Genetic background and exposures to toxins in the natural and industrial worlds probably combine to produce ALS.

Several studies are now probing genetic and environmental factors that contribute to ALS.

One, open to people who either have ALS, are a sibling or parent of someone with ALS, or have neither ALS nor a family history of the disease, is being conducted at Northwestern University in Chicago and Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. No travel is necessary. You can contact Nailah Siddique in Chicago at (312) 503-2712 or nsiddique@northwestern.edu. Or contact Diana McKenna-Yasek in Boston at (617) 726-5750 or dmckennayasek@partners.org.

The Massachusetts General Hospital group is also conducting a study to identify more genes that directly cause ALS. The investigators are seeking participants whose family contains at least two people, living or deceased, who have or had ALS.

In New York, an MDA-funded study of environmental and genetic factors in ALS is under way at Columbia University Medical Center. This study, which prefers to accept participants from the New York area, seeks people whose ALS has been diagnosed within the past year, parents and siblings of those with ALS, and married-in family members.

Contact Ani Sara Thankachan in New York at (212) 305-4746.

Four with ALS Use Thought to Control Computer Cursor

Using brain waves, signals from brain cells that resemble electrical discharges, to control a computer cursor or other electronic device has long been a dream of people who can’t use their voluntary muscles. But until now, the relevance to ALS of this approach has been far from certain, since the motor cortex, the part of the brain from which movement signals originate, is damaged in this disease. (The cortex is usually intact in people paralyzed by spinal cord injuries.)

Now, researchers at the State University of New York at Albany, the New York State Department of Health, and centers in Italy and Germany, describe four people severely disabled by ALS who learned to direct a cursor to a target with greater than 75 percent accuracy, using a brain-computer interface (BCI) method. With training, they learned to use thought alone to move the cursor, and electrodes placed over the cortex showed that thinking changed their brain waves.

The findings of this pilot study, published in the May 24 issue of Neurology, show that people with ALS can use thoughts to control electronic devices, although the researchers say increasing users’ speed and accuracy is necessary for the application to be practical. They also caution that control may wane as ALS progresses.

ADDRESS CHANGE?

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If you’re a person with ALS who’s registered with MDA, and you aren’t receiving the newsmagazine by mail, please contact your local MDA office and be sure its list has your correct, current address.

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To find out which MDA office serves you, go to www.mda.org and enter your zip code under “Find Your Local MDA.” Or call (800) 572-1717 and your call will be forwarded to your local office.

 

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ALS Caregiver Suggestions: My Perspective

by Alison Teichgraeber

We’re not alone on this journey through ALS. My husband, Patrick, had ALS and I cared for him throughout his illness.

As caregivers, we have the potential to burn out both emotionally and physically. My biggest piece of advice is don’t! I wore myself out, and that caused my husband more anguish.

Take Care of Yourself

  • Get enough sleep. Figure ways to help the person you care for sleep through the night so you can too. Loss of sleep can affect both your physical stamina and your cognitive abilities. I became so tired I had trouble with third-grade math!
  • Exercise. Doing something for yourself feels decadent, but a 20-minute walk around the block can release stress and refresh your soul.
  • Talk. Talk therapy saved my life. Talking with someone like a counselor or a minister will help you process all the changes that affect you. Denying stress only exacerbates it and causes more problems.

Educate Yourself

It’s important to be familiar with all the changes happening to you and the person you care for. By educating yourself about ALS, medical supplies, insurance coverage and finances, for example, you’ll become an informed consumer. This will help you prepare for necessary adjustments and unexpected events. By becoming an educated consumer, I was able to be a levelheaded advocate for my husband.

Ask for Help

Teichgraeber family  

Patrick and Alison Teichgraeber with their sons, Matthew, now 10, and Justin, now 7.

Get help early. As a caregiver, you can overextend yourself.

There are ways to avoid this. Many people offered me help, and I was too proud to accept it. Finally, a friend told me, “Take the food!” I did, and twice a week neighbors and church members brought a special dinner for my kids and me. These meals would often be enough to feed a small army; the leftovers lasted all week. So say yes!

For example:

  • Ask four people to mow the grass: Your friends mow only once a month and your lawn looks manicured year-round.
  • Ask friends to drop off and pick up your dry cleaning when they go to the dry cleaners; that way, they aren‘t even making extra trips.
  • Ask friends to pick up a few items at the grocery store when they go; you save a trip and they have the satisfaction of helping.
  • Ask friends to bring photos or other “props” over to share with the person you care for. He or she can have company, and you can have a moment to yourself. I loved props; they made everyone feel more comfortable.

Stay Ahead of ALS

ALS is relentless. By staying ahead of it, you have a greater chance of being prepared for the unexpected twists and turns of the disease.

  • Have the person you care for use a walker before one is needed. There’s nothing worse for him or her than falling and getting stuck. My husband was once stuck on the floor for 30 minutes before I came home from work. My kids found him on the floor and they all had a good (albeit embarrassing) laugh.
  • Order the wheelchair before your person with ALS needs it. It can take months to receive the chair and only one fall or the flu to suddenly need one.
  • Allow time for the person you care for to adjust to the BiPAP. My husband hated it. By “practicing,” he slowly got used to his “space mask.”

ALS Isn't Your Whole Life

An ALS caregiver experiences the same challenges as the person with ALS. Each step along the ALS path can be debilitating, exhausting and overwhelming. But, it’s only part of the picture.

Patrick and Alison Teichgraeber  

There’s much more to life than ALS. It’s important to pay attention to the other aspects of your life such as your children, education, and friends.

We all know life sometimes gives us lemons. By enlisting friends and family, you and the person you care for can make lemonade. One of the most challenging tasks of a caregiver is making life feel “normal.” People who aren’t used to the changes ALS produces feel uncomfortable about them, and it’s up to the caregiver to help ease this discomfort.

For visitors who feel squirmy, I suggest keeping a “chat list” list like this one:

Ways to Feel Less Uncomfortable Visiting Someone With ALS

  • Talk about the weather
  • Talk about your kids
  • Talk about sports!
  • Talk about your work
  • Talk about the person with ALS
  • Don’t talk, just enjoy the game/movie/etc.
  • Bring a friend/spouse/child

Sometimes, a visit with few words spoken is the best visit of all.

ALS can be isolating. It’s up to you to reach out to others, not only for the person you care for, but also for yourself. Although spending a third of your time on yourself, a third of your time on your family, and a third of your time on your career is probably impossible, it should be a goal. Balance is optimal.

By taking care of yourself, educating yourself, asking for help, staying ahead of ALS and not allowing ALS to be your whole life, you can be the best caregiver possible.

Alison Teichgraeber, of Houston, is a writer, advocate for the severely disabled and mother of Matthew, 10, and Justin, 7. Her husband, Patrick Teichgraeber, was a major in the Marine Corps when he received a diagnosis of ALS in 2001. He died in September 2004, at age 40.

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Best-Case Scenario

by Alyssa Quintero

In January 2003, John Baird received a diagnosis of ALS. An avid golfer, Baird wasn’t prepared when he found himself in this “sand trap.”

Today, when he’s asked what it’s like to have ALS, Baird responds, “It’s not really too bad,” but “I really miss Mexican food.”

Baird, 60, no longer can speak, and he has a feeding tube and breathes through a hole in his throat. But, he can still get around on his own and plays golf whenever possible.

Baird is gradually losing the use of his fingers on his left hand — a problem especially because he is left-handed.

But, he says, it could be worse. Regardless of what ALS has done to his body, Baird is the self-proclaimed “best-case scenario of ALS.”

“I would much rather be able to get around, take care of myself, and use a computer and type than be able to talk,” Baird said.

Baird, who took up golf four years ago, remains competitive with other 60-year-olds.

“I can no longer hit the ball very far, and I am losing some accuracy, so I have implemented some new rules of golf. I play the par threes, but on the par fours and fives, I take a drop about 100 yards out and assume I got there in one or two strokes.

“The other thing I have learned is to quit betting,” he said.

The Communicator

Baird uses a speech communication device and explains, “It has been a real life-saver. It slows conversations considerably, but it permits me to stay a part of the world.”

John Baird  

John Baird

Until recently, with his wife Annabel’s help, Baird owned, published and edited a community newspaper in Highland Village, Texas.

Although he’d worked in software development and had owned a number of other businesses, Baird opened The News Connection in 2002.

The biweekly’s original circulation of all 4,000 homes in Highland Village expanded in the fall of 2003 to 35,000 homes and more than 100,000 people.

Despite the ALS diagnosis, Baird never failed to meet his publishing responsibilities.

“Perhaps the biggest pleasure came from the feeling that I was part of the process of defining what was important. I enjoyed bringing information to other residents and having a voice to express my views and opinions.”

In the summer of 2004, Annabel’s stress-related health problems forced the couple to sell the paper.

“I hated to see it go,” he said. “It began to seriously affect my wife’s health, and it is not her time to develop a serious illness.”

Today, Baird works mostly from his home as a software development consultant. The Bairds have two children, Brian, 32, and Brittany, 29, and a granddaughter, Nikki, 8.

“I have had a very good life,” he said.

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