New Battle Against 1)Post-Polio Sequelae(在线收听) |
Broadcast: Mar 16, 2003 It takes three months to get an appointment at the Post Polio Institute in Englewood, New Jersey, where patients are evaluated and treated for Post-Polio Sequelae. These polio survivors experience overwhelming fatigue, muscle weakness, muscle and joint pain, and heightened sensitivity to 2)anesthesia, and to cold. They also report problems swallowing and breathing. Institute Director Richard Bruno says the delayed symptoms, 35 to 40 years after a polio attack, are easy to explain, although the condition, he says, has escaped proper 3)diagnosis by patients and doctors. Post Polio Institute surveys reveal the facts. A typical polio infection kills half of the motor neurons in the body, those nerve cells that make the muscles work. "After polio, those remaining damaged neurons [do] on average sixteen times more work than they did originally. And what [that] did was to set these polio survivors up for a fall. PPS over the years is the result of those overworked damaged neurons dying off or failing as a result of what we call overuse, abuse," says Dr. Bruno. Richard Bruno says the condition gets worse if untreated. Bruno: "Polio survivors are losing on average seven percent of their motor neurons a year. All you can do is to read a couple of articles on PPS and you will see that this is a physical condition and not a mental condition." It took Angene Anthony 22 years to find out what was wrong with her. That was in part because she didn't know she had polio as a child. All she remembers is an illness with a high fever, temporary paralysis, but nothing diagnosed as polio. As she got older the fatigue, muscle soreness, eating and sleeping problems got worse. It remained a mystery even to her doctors. Angene Anthony was 48, the mother of two grown daughters, at the peak of her career as a trainer for a weight loss program when she finally discovered the truth. "I was in total shock finding out I had polio, and I think that was just as devastating as the illness itself, mentally, just recognizing the fact firstly that I had polio and then secondly, I had Post-Polio," she says. "What happened [to me?]" Her diagnosis came from the Post Polio Institute. 5)Therapists there advised her to conserve energy. She began to use a wheel chair, take frequent naps, eat a higher protein diet, and as she describes it, totally rearrange her life. "When I began to realize that it is not what I had [post polio] that was important, but how I was going to cope with it, that is when my life began to change," she says. Angene Anthony now wears a brace, walks with canes or rides in a motorized scooter painted the same bright red as her nails. Activity logs tell her what triggers fatigue and other post-polio 6)symptoms. But, the most dangerous part of treatment, she says, is when she starts feeling better. Anthony:"Then you call Dr. Bruno and say, 'I am going out to see the world,' and you do. And, he says, 'You better be careful because that is when you hit that brick wall again.' And, you'll hit [it]. And if you think you won't, you are deceiving yourself. The fact is that unless you learn to deal with it and cope with it, both mentally and physically you will not get anywhere [in your therapy]. I'm Rosanne Skirble. 1) Post-Polio Sequelae 脊髓灰质炎,小儿麻痹后遗症 2) anesthesia[7Anis5Wi:zjE]n. 麻木,麻痹 3) diagnosis[7daiE^5nEusis]n.诊断 4) poliovirus[7pEuliEu5vaiErEs]n.[微]脊髓灰质炎病毒 5) therapist[5WerEpIst]n.临床医学家 6) symptom[5simptEm]n.[医]症状, 征兆 |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2003/2/3694.html |