Meningitis victims face long, uncertain recovery
|
FILE
- In this photo made available, Oct. 9, 2012, by the Minnesota
Department of Health shows shows vials of the injectable steroid product
made by New England Compounding Center implicated in a fungal
meningitis outbreak that were being shipped to the CDC from Minneapolis.
On Thursday, Oct. 18, 2012, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said
the fungus was in one lot of vials made in August, 2012 by the New
England Compounding Center of Framingham, Mass. The specialty pharmacy
has been at the center of a national investigation into more than 250
fungal meningitis cases, including at least 20 deaths. |
OCALA, Fla.
(AP) -- Vilinda York lies in her Florida hospital bed, facing a
dry-erase board that lists in green marker her name, her four doctors
and a smiley face.
Also on the board is this: "Anticipated date of discharge: NOT YET DETERMINED."
The
64-year-old contracted fungal meningitis after receiving three tainted
steroid shots in her back. She's one of 284 people nationwide who are
victims of an outbreak that began when a Massachusetts compounding
pharmacy shipped contaminated medication. Twenty-three people have died.
Like
many trying to recover, York, who has been hospitalized since Sept. 27,
faces a long and uncertain road. Many people have died days or even
weeks after being hospitalized. Fungal meningitis - which is not
contagious - is a tenacious disease that can be treated only with
powerful drugs.
"I'm determined I'm going to fight this thing," she said. "The devil is not going to win."
Dr.
William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist who chairs
Vanderbilt University's Department of Preventive Medicine, said the
treatment includes intravenous anti-fungal medicines that are tricky to
use.
"These are powerful drugs. They're
toxic," he said. "You're walking a tightrope because you want to get
enough into a patient to have the therapeutic effect while at the same
time you're trying not to affect, or to minimize the effect on the liver
and kidneys."
Even after leaving the hospital, he said, patients will continue antifungal drugs for weeks or months.
The infectious disease doctor handling York's case did not immediately respond to a phone message.
When
York talks about the last six weeks, tears run down her cheeks. She
knows the disease is deadly. And if she needed a reminder, it's right
there in the headline from a local newspaper on her hospital bed: "Third
death reported in Marion County from fungal meningitis."
For
York, 2012 started well. The retired clothing shop clerk and widow from
Illinois was doing water aerobics three times a week, tending to her
flower garden and spending time with church friends. They'd get together
at Olive Garden and Red Lobster a couple of times a week and go to
church every Sunday.
On Jan. 21, she was on
her way to a wedding when she got into a car crash. It wasn't enough to
put her in the hospital, but she did suffer back problems.
The
pain was strong enough for her to visit a doctor at Marion Pain Clinic,
where she received two steroid shots on Aug. 16. A week later, the pain
was still there and she began feeling headachy, nauseous and dizzy. She
chalked it up to her back and got a third shot Aug. 28.
In
the weeks that followed, her health deteriorated. She couldn't lie down
without extreme back pain. A friend gave her a recliner to sleep in.
The headaches grew severe, sharp pains shooting from all directions into
her skull.
"I couldn't walk well, I couldn't see good and I could wipe the sweat off my arms," she said.
On Sept. 27, her legs and arms grew numb. The numbness flowed upwards to her waist. That's when she called 911.
"I didn't know whether I was getting ready for a stroke," she said.
When she arrived at the hospital, doctors took a spinal tap and discovered she had meningitis.
Health
officials have noticed that the sickest patients with meningitis are
those who either did not catch the symptoms early or who didn't receive
appropriate treatment early because doctors didn't know what they were
dealing with. The fungi become harder to kill once they have established
themselves in a person's body.
"If treatment
is given early, it is very effective," said Dr. David Reagan, medical
officer for Tennessee, where the outbreak was first detected. "If it is
given late, it is not very effective."
Most of
the positively identified cases are caused by Exserohilum rostratum
(ex-sir-oh-HY-lum ross-TRAH-tum). The fungus is commonly found in the
environment, but it has never before been observed as a cause of
meningitis.
Because of that, Reagan said,
officials have been unable to firmly establish the incubation period and
give those who received the tainted injections a date for when they
will no longer need to worry about developing meningitis.
"We're
saying at least six weeks, or 42 days, but we probably will extend
that," he said. "This is new territory. There's no literature to tell us
how long."
In York's case, doctors initially
thought she had bacterial meningitis, but when she told them about the
steroid shots, doctors began to assemble a theory. On Sept. 25, the New
England Compounding Center had voluntarily recalled three lots of the
steroid methylprednisolone acetate.
York's
three shots were that steroid - and the Marion Pain Clinic had gotten
some of the tainted medicine, health officials said.
York
said a doctor from Marion Pain Clinic visited her in the hospital and
told her about the contaminated shots. The doctor was crying as she
spoke, York added.
York passes her days by
talking on the phone to two children and three grandchildren who live
out of state, receiving visitors from her church and reading the Bible.
She's
lost more than 10 pounds in the past month. She realizes she's not the
woman she once was; now she's pale and weak whereas before, she liked to
put on a little makeup, fix up her short brown hair and go for a walk.
The only time she has walked since Sept. 27 was to shuffle to the shower
on Oct. 17.
"I got to shampoo my hair and the whole nine yards," she smiled. "I enjoyed it tremendously."
York
is worried about whether the meningitis will have lasting effects on
her body, and she's concerned about the powerful anti-fungal medication
she's taking. Doctors have had to pause the treatment because they were
concerned about her liver and kidney.
York has filed a lawsuit against NECC claiming negligence, and her lawyer is getting calls from others who were sickened.
She says she's "blessed, not lucky," to be alive at this point.
"I
want to get out of here," she said. "I want to go home, I want to live a
normal life again. God still has a plan for me, and I'm looking forward
to it."
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