Round-Up, Week 1
Weekly post summary for the week of October 12-17, 2009, Volume 1
adrenal
adrenal crisis
Cancer
Clinical trials
Swine Flu And Asthma: NIH Prepares To launch 2009 H1N1 Influenza Vaccine Trial In People With Asthma
Cushings
You Know You’re Chronically Ill When You…
General Health
pituitary
podcast
Rare Diseases
I’m just testing to see how this comes out on this first one!
You Know You’re Chronically Ill When You…
…have a pajama collection.
…call the pharmacist and she recognizes your voice before you tell her what it is.
…are psyched to get a computer table tray for sitting in bed as a gift.
…find out that you can order a three month supply of meds online and you think it’s great.
…share and discuss journal articles with your doctor.
…have an inbox full of emails all from people with your disease or related to your disease.
…get updates from MedScape.
…set up your pills a month ahead of time in pill holders.
…have pill stashes in your car, purse, backpack, etc.
MaryO’Updates:
…have Dr F, Dr L and/or Dr IMMC on speed dial.
…bought a case of sharps containers on eBay.
…have a hospital bag always ready to go.
…have a “Got Hump” tattoo
…share pictures online of your stretch marks like they were badges of honor
…you know why there’s a zebra in my avatar
Added by Facebook friends:
…know approximately how much your urine output is in mL’s before you go because you’ve measured it so often before.
…When a specialists at a leading university hospital tells you “you are too complicated”.
…when multiple specialists at multiple leading hospitals tell you your case is complicated! (had to add to that!)
…when you only know the day of the week by your pill container!!
…when you get to park in the handicap spots and you’re only 25 years old!!
…you know to tell the person who’s drawing your blood to ice and centrofuge your vile for the ACTH test!!
…you can’t make plans beyond the next hour because you don’t know how sick you’ll feel!!
…when the most excitement you’ve had in a month is your drs appt! And you’re looking forward to your next appt so you can get out of the house!!
…When the people who work in the lab great you like Norm on Cheers when you arrive.
…When you know which vein is the “sweet vein.”
Feel free to add your own!
Münchausen By Media
The Internet makes it so easy to develop weird and unusual diseases. Just plop a symptom into Google and suddenly you find yourself with stomach cancer, Cushing’s or other dread diseases.
Even on TV, the ads for lawyers almost convince people they might have mesothelioma and other rare illnesses that might bring you – and them! – bundles of money if you just sue someone.
Magazine ads implore you to “ask your doctor about…” this drug or that you might or might not need. Your doctor might just give it to you to keep you from asking. And there’s a needless medication that brings profit to the drug company and side effects to you.
TV shows like House and Mystery Diagnosis will show you diseases you never dreamed about.
There’s a great topic on the Power Surge message boards, What’s the worst “disease or ailment” you’ve had, where the women discuss the diseases they thought that they had, based on symptoms, what they’ve seen online, in the news but not based on reality.
I’ve done it myself. About the only time I was right was with my Cushing’s diagnosis. That one was a good call. But my thoughts of kidney cancer metastasis haven’t come true (yet, anyway!).
There’s been information online lately about Münchausen Syndrome. Wikipedia says:
“…the affected person exaggerates or creates symptoms of illnesses in themselves or their child/children in order to gain investigation, treatment, attention, sympathy, and comfort from medical personnel. In some extremes, people suffering from Münchausen’s Syndrome are highly knowledgeable about the practice of medicine, and are able to produce symptoms that result in multiple unnecessary operations. For example, they may inject a vein with infected material, causing widespread infection of unknown origin, and as a result cause lengthy and costly medical analysis and prolonged hospital stay. The role of “patient” is a familiar and comforting one, and it fills a psychological need in people with Münchausen’s. It is distinct from hypochondriasis in that patients with Münchausen syndrome are aware that they are exaggerating, whereas sufferers of hypochondriasis believe they actually have a disease.”
I think we’ve all see this, especially online. It’s so easy to sit in the comfort of ones home and add “just a little” to the symptoms, making it more impressive for the readers.
From A Strange Case of Münchausen By Internet:
“…When I first got online, I “met” a young woman who claimed to be a vet, and offered me all kinds of advice about my cat and my tropical fish. She got cancer, slowly declined, then died. We wanted to send flowers, and maybe attend the funeral, and got her ISP to contact her family for us. To our shock, her parents said there was no funeral. She wasn’t dead, she wasn’t even sick. At least not physically. She’d pulled this kind of “pretend death” several times before, and was in therapy, but every time life got stressful, she’d do it again.
And the Internet is the ideal place for a Munchausen sufferer. With the click of a button, you can find out all kinds of information, to help you pose as anyone you want. People don’t expect to see you in person or even talk to you except by e-mail, making deception easier. And often, mailing lists, message boards, etc., will give unqualified support to their members…”
And Media Makes Me Sick:
“…The Internet is hands-down the worst thing to ever happen to the medical world. With Web sites like WebMD, any paranoid hypochondriac like me can jump online, look for symptoms and immediately convince himself he has cancer or Cushing’s disease or non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma or any other of a million things.
WebMD allows you to find one symptom and then “helps” you by listing 15,000 things it could mean.
Oh my God. I do have a slight ache! That’s it. I must have a brain tumor. I’m not kidding, I recently scared myself into thinking I had cancer. It took a specialist, a CT scan and an ultra-sound to convince me otherwise…”
Karen found this older article at http://www.villagevoice.com/2001-06-26/news/cybersickness/1
“…Over nearly three years, from 1998 to 2000, a woman—let’s call her Anna—posted to an online support group for people with mental illness. To the larger circle of readers, she acted mostly as friendly counselor. But to a select few, she e-mailed stories of escalating catastrophes. Her husband and two children had perished in a plane crash, she wrote. As a kid, her father had molested her, and she had suffered multiple personality disorder. Finally, she told her trusted—and trusting—confidants that she had just been diagnosed with leukemia.
Gwen Grabb, a psychotherapy intern and mother of three in Los Angeles, says the group believed Anna because she took on the role of helping others, revealing her own difficulties much later, and to an intimate audience. “She was very bright,” recalls Grabb. “She was very supportive and kind. One day, she started telling me about `the crash,’ what they found in the black box, how you could hear her daughter screaming. I had known her a year. I believed her.”
But as the tales became more elaborate and grotesque, Grabb grew suspicious. Along with another group member—Pam Cohen, a bereavement counselor in the Mid-Atlantic region—she did some research and discovered Anna was making it up. It was a shock to all, but worse than that to Cohen. “It is like an emotional rape,” she says. People may have been upset over the online life and fatal cancer of the fictional Kaycee, whose creator admitted last month she’d invented the high school character for expressive purposes. But that was geared to a general audience, however easily suckered. Pretenders like Anna hurt a much more vulnerable group—folks who may be seriously ill and are seeking help…”
So – use caution and remember that not everything you read will happen to you!
iPhone Medical Apps
I just downloaded a free app from Medscape. It looks very nice and there are doctor and hospital finders based on location and, in the case of doctors, by specialty. Unfortunately, there aren’t any reviews of doctors and I saw some on the endocrinology list that I would never go to but it’s a great start.
There are also drug interactions and more.
More info and flash preview at http://www.medscape.com/public/iphone?
WebMD Mobile offers a symptoms checker, drugs and treatments, and first aid information.
There’s more info and a flash preview here: http://www.webmd.com/mobile
What other good medical apps have you found?
Corlux in the news again
Associated Press
10/13/09 8:10 AM PDT
MENLO PARK, CALIF. — Corcept Therapeutics Inc. said Tuesday it expects to raise about $18 million by selling stock and options to institutional investors.
Corcept said the money will be used to complete enrollment of patients in a late stage clinical trial of its drug candidate Corlux as a treatment for Cushing’s syndrome, and to cover the cost of filing for Food and Drug Administration marketing clearance.
The $18 million is a gross estimate and does not include expenses connected to the offering.
Corcept said it will sell 12.6 million units at $1.43 per share. The units will consist of one share of stock, and a warrant to buy 0.35 shares at an exercise price of $1.66 per share. Buyers include current Corcept investors such as Longitude Capital Management, Sutter Hill Ventures, Alta Partners and new investors including Federated Kaufmann Funds.
The sale is expected to close on Friday.
The company is testing Corlux as a treatment for Cushing’s syndrome and psychotic depression. Cushing’s syndrome occurs when the body produces to much of the hormone cortisol, or by overexposure to cortisol. Symptoms can include high blood sugar and blood pressure, fatigue, and weak muscles.





