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Can medical miracle relieve life of pain?
Woman to undergo experimental treatment
By Erik Larsen
Coastal Monmouth Bureau, Asbury Park Press
OCEAN TOWNSHIP Imagine that the sharp pain caused by
anything from a stubbed toe to a surgeon's scalpel never went
away.
Welcome to Judy Hopkins' life.
The 25-year-old West Allenhurst resident suffers from a nightmarish
rare disorder called Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy Syndrome,
also known as Complex Regional Pain Syndrome, a chronic neurological
disease that leaves its sufferers in constant pain following
physical trauma or surgery.
Hopkins, once a dancer and high school basketball player,
first experienced symptoms of RSD in 1998, at age 16, after
undergoing surgery on her right foot to remove shards of broken
glass she had stepped on while working as a lifeguard.
In the years that followed, operations to correct intestinal
issues have left Judy Hopkins a weak, homebound insomniac,
downing 25 to 30 prescribed pills daily while wearing a Fentanyl
transdermal patch to manage what has become excruciating pain.
She is cared for by her parents, Robert and Linda, with whom
she lives.
After having exhausted all treatment options in the United
States, Hopkins is at the top of a two-year national waiting
list to travel to Germany for an experimental procedure so
dangerous the U.S. Food and Drug Administration does not allow
it here.
"Some people can go their entire lives and never know
they have (the disease)," Judy Hopkins explained as she
sat in her dining room one recent afternoon. "One of
the scary things is that anything, from a minor to major trauma
to the body, can trigger it. If you are lucky, you can get
it into remission."
That's what Hopkins' parents are praying for as they prepare
to take her on what will be an exhausting and emotionally
draining journey before the end of the year to undergo the
experimental procedure in question, called a "Ketamine
Coma," at the Klinikum Saarbruecken in Saarbruecken,
Germany.
Once there, Judy Hopkins will be put in a medically induced
coma for five to seven days and administered dosages of up
to 900 milligrams of ketamine, enough to cause brain damage,
kill her, put her RSD into remission or do nothing at all.
Dr. Robert J. Schwartzman of Drexel University's College
of Medicine in Philadelphia, perhaps the leading RSD expert
in the country, has advised Hopkins to put her affairs in
order, her family said.
The hope is that the high doses of ketamine will reset her
malfunctioning central nervous system, which for lack of a
better term, is stuck in a kind of repeating loop, still firing
pain receptors, unaware the body has long since healed from
the trauma that first triggered the pain. If successful, the
effects of the treatment should be immediate.
"One of the things they're finding, it (the treatment)
doesn't last as long as they had anticipated, even if it puts
you in remission, there's no guarantee it will last,"
Hopkins said. "The fact is, I'm now full-body RSD-CRPS-I,
that's the worst category. These things are unfortunately
counting against me. It's really a game of chance."
But given the amount of pain she has been unable to
leave her house in recent months except for doctors' appointments
and relies on a cane to walk outdoors when she does
she believes this treatment is her last hope.
The cost of travel to Germany and the treatment itself, which
is not covered by any insurance carrier, is estimated at between
$35,000 and $50,000, and friends of the family have started
raising money to offset expenses.
Jim Broatch, executive director of the Reflex Sympathetic
Dystrophy Syndrome Association, established in 1984, said
the disease was first identified in Civil War veterans.
"A neurologist in Philadelphia, Silas Weir Mitchell,
was treating Union soldiers who were complaining of stabbing
pains from injuries that had healed," Broatch said. Mitchell
first named the disease causalgia.
Given the limits of medical science, more than a century
would pass before the pathology of the disease was better
understood and treatment options explored. At the beginning
of the 21st century, the origins of the disease remain a mystery
to the extent that Judy Hopkins suffered with RSD for four
years and saw multiple doctors before she was correctly diagnosed
by a neurologist in August 2002.
"I wasn't able to complete college," she said.
"After my second year, I had to have multiple surgeries.
From that point on, my life really changed. I used to do things,
I went to school, I went out clubbing, but I would come back
to my room and cry all night . . ."
After her sophomore year of college, when she received the
RSD diagnosis, her doctor and her parents told her it would
be impractical for her to continue at college.
"It still baffles me that putting a sock on makes me
cry," Judy Hopkins said.
"You asked us how this affected our family I
can't hug my daughter, I have to let her hug me," Robert
Hopkins said. "If you touch her left arm, she'll go through
the roof. That's just one impact. I don't want to hurt her."
"I don't find any comfort in dwelling on my misfortune,"
Judy Hopkins said. "I'm very fortunate my parents have
the money to cover my medical expenses. It's become my line,
when someone asks me how I'm doing, I'll say: "Can't
complain.' If someone wants to hug me or touch me, I would
rather grind my teeth I actually chipped my tooth once
than let them know they're hurting me."
August 29, 2007
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