Alerted about this article on my Sarcoid support group site.  Thought that I’d share..
 
From: webbednumber

Sent: 8/13/2008 5:48 PM
i found this om a site thought you might read itSarcoidosis can damage organs all over the body

BY JUDITH GRAHAM • CHICAGO TRIBUNE • August 13, 2008

* Read Comments(4)
* Recommend
* Print this page
* E-mail this article

* Share this article:
* Del.icio.us
* Facebook
* Digg
* Reddit
* Newsvine
* What’s this?

Andrea Wilson felt sick to her stomach Saturday when she heard comedian Bernie Mac had died in a Chicago hospital.
Advertisement

It was her private fear — the fear of sudden death — suddenly splashed across the news.

Like Mac, Wilson has sarcoidosis, a mysterious and sometimes devastating immune system disorder that causes cells to cluster and can damage organs throughout the body.

Last year, the disease jumped to her brain and started causing stroke-like symptoms — vision changes, numbness in her left side, tingling in her face and mouth — as well as extreme pain. When sarcoidosis flares up in her skin, she gets lesions on her face, knees and legs and lumps "like cauliflower growing out of your body," said Wilson, 43, of Chicago.

When it becomes active inside her heart, she gets palpitations and feels like she’s going to faint or have a heart attack. Wilson has had two heart surgeries related to sarcoidosis damage. The disease has also made a home in her lungs, causing its signature symptoms — shortness of breath, wheezing and difficulty breathing.

There is no cure for sarcoidosis, an affliction that hits adults younger than 40 and disproportionately affects African-Americans, especially women. Sometimes the illness is mild and goes into remission, but sometimes it is severe and unremitting, causing progressive damage to multiple organs. Often misdiagnosed, sarcoidosis remains a little known disorder, even in the medical community.

Bernie Mac’s publicist has said the comedian’s illness was in remission and wasn’t related to the pneumonia that killed him at age 50. Still, pneumonia is a frequent complication of sarcoidosis, and the medications people take to control the condition make them vulnerable to infections.

Faith Lundy of Houston said she was diagnosed with pneumonia twice last year before doctors performed a chest X-ray in December and discovered evidence of sarcoidosis.

"It felt like I was dying," she said Monday afternoon. "I was running a fever of 104 degrees and it was hard to breathe. I was weak, and I couldn’t sweat it off."

In May, Lundy, 41, collapsed at her job during a flare-up of the disease. Her eyes are so dry she needs to put in drops daily; blindness is a potential complication. Lundy’s chest aches, and climbing stairs now takes all the wind out of her.

"It’s hard because a lot of people don’t understand what I’m going through these days. Nobody has heard of sarcoidosis. Nobody knows anything about it," Lundy said.

Like many people with sarcoidosis, the news of Mac’s death hit her hard. "It scared me real deep," she admitted. "I was like, oh my goodness, could that happen to me?"

In Zion, Ill., Brenda Harris knows a lot about how vulnerable sarcoidosis patients are, physically and emotionally.

Since being diagnosed in April 1989, Harris has had four bouts of pneumonia and six hospitalizations. "The medications you take suppress your immune system and then you get staph infections, fungal infections and bacterial infections," she said.

Harris is lucky in a way; her disease is relatively stable and confined to her lungs. But there, it’s wreaked significant damage, and the upper right lobe has been removed.

Emotionally, the uncertainty associated with sarcoidosis — never knowing when you’re going to have a flare-up or how serious it will be — is one of the hardest parts of dealing with this disease, patients say.

And then, there’s the loneliness of "having this disease with the funny name that no one knows about. You feel very isolated," said Harris, who this year started a sarcoidosis support group in Lake County, Ill.

One day, you might be racing around and the next day you might not be able to even get out of bed — that’s how fickle this illness can be, said Gwen Mitchell, 54, who’s lived with sarcoidosis for 18 years.

Back in 1990, before she got the diagnosis, doctors told her for six months that she had walking pneumonia. "I couldn’t talk, I’d be coughing so hard, and it’d go on for 15 or 20 minutes. They kept giving me stuff and none of it would help," Mitchell said.

After collapsing on her way home from work, her husband’s physician suggested she be tested for sarcoidosis. Mitchell has had pneumonia twice since then and tends to be hospitalized multiple times a year with complications.

As for Mac’s death, Mitchell said: "I’m sorry to see him gone, but he’s bringing a lot of awareness of sarcoidosis to the forefront, and that’s a good thing."

It took four years for Sandra Conroy, 62, to be diagnosed with sarcoidosis after symptoms started to appear in 1980. Often, the condition is mistaken for other diseases, from arthritis and asthma to fibromyalgia.

For three years, Conroy’s left leg would start dragging — she’d try but couldn’t pick it up — then return to normal. Multiple tests and visits to several medical centers were inconclusive. Eventually a bout of pneumonia put Conroy in the hospital for six weeks. Her vision was the next to go, as the outlines of objects blurred and "all I could see was shadows."

Two sets of experts delivered two diagnoses. One group thought she had multiple sclerosis, the other sarcoidosis. A biopsy eventually confirmed sarcoidosis in her lungs and evidence of the disease in her brain.

Today, Conroy uses a wheelchair, unable to walk. "The hardest thing for me is, doctors still aren’t really sure how to treat (sarcoidosis) symptoms," she said. "There’s a lot of research on what to do for other diseases, but not for this one. So, it can be hard to get the proper treatment."
In your voice
Read reactions to this story
User Image
sickofbusinessasusual wrote:
This is such a little known disease, and you don’t hear much about it until a celebrity dies, such as Bernie Mac and Reggie White. I was diagnosed with this after a lymphoma scare. Fortunately, the symptoms went into remission and haven’t returned in 8 years.
08/13/2008 11:58:40 a.m. EDT
This is such a little known disease, and you don’t hear much about it until a celebrity dies, such as Bernie Mac and Reggie White. I was diagnosed with this after a lymphoma scare. Fortunately, the symptoms went into remission and haven’t returned in 8 years. sickofbusinessasusual
Recommend(1) New post Reply to this Post Report Abuse
User Image
flamincheney wrote:
My father passed away from Sarcoidosis related complications in 1998 at 49.

While I am glad to see that this disease it is getting some coverage in the MSM it is extremely disheartening to hear the Mac family and publicity team so quickly distance themselves form the disease by claiming the pneumonia was unrelated. I would bet a large sum that it was absolutely related.

I just wish they’d use this tragedy in a positive way to spread knowledge of a disease, and to potentially get funding for additional research of it (there is very limited funding available- could it be because it is largely a feminine black disease?). Instead they are playing the role of the scared ostrich.

08/13/2008 11:04:36 a.m. EDT
My father passed away from Sarcoidosis related complications in 1998 at 49.

While I am glad to see that this disease it is getting some coverage in the MSM it is extremely disheartening to hear the Mac family and publicity team so quickly distance themselves form the disease by claiming the pneumonia was unrelated. I would bet a large sum that it was absolutely related.

I just wish they’d use this tragedy in a positive way to spread knowledge of a disease, and to potentially get funding for additional research of it (there is very limited funding available- could it be because it is largely a feminine black disease?). Instead they are playing the role of the scared ostrich.

flamincheney
Recommend(1) New post Reply to this Post Report Abuse
User Image
Archimedes wrote:
I miss you already Bernie!
08/13/2008 10:53:43 a.m. EDT
I miss you already Bernie! Archimedes
Recommend(4) New post Reply to this Post Report Abuse
User Image
greatone0248 wrote:
What an awful disease
08/13/2008 9:29:54 a.m. EDT
What an awful disease greatone0248
Recommend(6) New post Reply to this Post Report Abuse
You must be logged in to leave a comment. Login | Register

1000 characters left
{staffMark}
{authorIcon}
{authorHandle} wrote:
{commentBody}
{commentTimestamp}
{commentBody} {authorNameHandle}
{recommendLink} {newpostLink} {replylink} {reportAbuseLink}
Report item as: (required) X
Comment: (optional)
Missing input fields.
You must fill out the comment body in order to submit a comment.
Comment too long.
The comment you have entered is too long. Please limit your post to {maxchars} characters or less.

photo

Bernie Mac died of pneumonia, a frequent sarcoidosis complication.

(AKIRA SUWA/McClatchy-Tribune)
For more information

• Foundation for Sarcoidosis Research, http://www.stopsarcoidosis.org, 312-341-0500.

• National Sarcoidosis Resource Center, http://www.nsrc-global.net, 732-699-0733.

More Entertainment headlines

* Forward progress in new ‘Madden NFL 09’ Post a Comment
* Bernie Mac death spotlights disease
* Eminem faces Nas in rapper derby Read Comments(1)
* Action TV, movies on demand Post a Comment
* More of today’s best Post a Comment

Leave a Reply

Please log in using one of these methods to post your comment:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s