What happens when you have a disease doctors can't diagnose | Jennifer Brea

934,192 views ・ 2017-01-17

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Translator: Joseph Geni Reviewer: Camille Martínez
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Hi.
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Thank you.
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[Jennifer Brea is sound-sensitive.
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The live audience was asked to applaud ASL-style, in silence.]
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So, five years ago, this was me.
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I was a PhD student at Harvard,
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and I loved to travel.
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I had just gotten engaged to marry the love of my life.
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I was 28, and like so many of us when we are in good health,
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I felt like I was invincible.
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Then one day I had a fever of 104.7 degrees.
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I probably should have gone to the doctor,
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but I'd never really been sick in my life,
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and I knew that usually, if you have a virus,
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you stay home and you make some chicken soup,
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and in a few days, everything will be fine.
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But this time it wasn't fine.
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After the fever broke,
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for three weeks I was so dizzy, I couldn't leave my house.
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I would walk straight into door frames.
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I had to hug the walls just to make it to the bathroom.
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That spring I got infection after infection,
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and every time I went to the doctor,
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he said there was absolutely nothing wrong.
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He had his laboratory tests,
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which always came back normal.
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All I had were my symptoms,
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which I could describe,
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but no one else can see.
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I know it sounds silly,
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but you have to find a way to explain things like this to yourself,
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and so I thought maybe I was just aging.
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Maybe this is what it's like to be on the other side of 25.
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(Laughter)
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Then the neurological symptoms started.
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Sometimes I would find that I couldn't draw the right side of a circle.
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Other times I wouldn't be able to speak or move at all.
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I saw every kind of specialist:
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infectious disease doctors, dermatologists, endocrinologists,
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cardiologists.
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I even saw a psychiatrist.
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My psychiatrist said, "It's clear you're really sick,
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but not with anything psychiatric.
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I hope they can find out what's wrong with you."
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The next day, my neurologist diagnosed me with conversion disorder.
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He told me that everything --
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the fevers, the sore throats, the sinus infection,
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all of the gastrointestinal, neurological and cardiac symptoms --
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were being caused by some distant emotional trauma
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that I could not remember.
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The symptoms were real, he said,
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but they had no biological cause.
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I was training to be a social scientist.
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I had studied statistics, probability theory,
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mathematical modeling, experimental design.
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I felt like I couldn't just reject my neurologist's diagnosis.
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It didn't feel true,
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but I knew from my training that the truth is often counterintuitive,
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so easily obscured by what we want to believe.
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So I had to consider the possibility that he was right.
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That day, I ran a small experiment.
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I walked back the two miles from my neurologist's office to my house,
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my legs wrapped in this strange, almost electric kind of pain.
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I meditated on that pain,
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contemplating how my mind could have possibly generated all this.
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As soon as I walked through the door,
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I collapsed.
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My brain and my spinal cord were burning.
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My neck was so stiff I couldn't touch my chin to my chest,
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and the slightest sound --
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the rustling of the sheets,
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my husband walking barefoot in the next room --
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could cause excruciating pain.
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I would spend most of the next two years in bed.
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How could my doctor have gotten it so wrong?
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I thought I had a rare disease,
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something doctors had never seen.
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And then I went online
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and found thousands of people all over the world
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living with the same symptoms,
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similarly isolated,
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similarly disbelieved.
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Some could still work,
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but had to spend their evenings and weekends in bed,
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just so they could show up the next Monday.
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On the other end of the spectrum,
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some were so sick
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they had to live in complete darkness,
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unable to tolerate the sound of a human voice
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or the touch of a loved one.
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I was diagnosed with myalgic encephalomyelitis.
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You've probably heard it called "chronic fatigue syndrome."
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For decades, that's a name
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that's meant that this
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has been the dominant image
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of a disease that can be as serious as this.
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The key symptom we all share
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is that whenever we exert ourselves -- physically, mentally --
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we pay and we pay hard.
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If my husband goes for a run, he might be sore for a couple of days.
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If I try to walk half a block, I might be bedridden for a week.
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It is a perfect custom prison.
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I know ballet dancers who can't dance,
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accountants who can't add,
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medical students who never became doctors.
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It doesn't matter what you once were;
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you can't do it anymore.
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It's been four years,
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and I've still never been as well as I was
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the minute before I walked home from my neurologist's office.
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It's estimated that about 15 to 30 million people around the world
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have this disease.
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In the US, where I'm from, it's about one million people.
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That makes it roughly twice as common as multiple sclerosis.
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Patients can live for decades with the physical function
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of someone with congestive heart failure.
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Twenty-five percent of us are homebound or bedridden,
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and 75 to 85 percent of us can't even work part-time.
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Yet doctors do not treat us
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and science does not study us.
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How could a disease this common and this devastating
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have been forgotten by medicine?
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When my doctor diagnosed me with conversion disorder,
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he was invoking a lineage of ideas about women's bodies
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that are over 2,500 years old.
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The Roman physician Galen thought
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that hysteria was caused by sexual deprivation
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in particularly passionate women.
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The Greeks thought the uterus would literally dry up
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and wander around the body in search of moisture,
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pressing on internal organs --
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yes --
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causing symptoms from extreme emotions
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to dizziness and paralysis.
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The cure was marriage and motherhood.
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These ideas went largely unchanged for several millennia until the 1880s,
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when neurologists tried to modernize the theory of hysteria.
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Sigmund Freud developed a theory
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that the unconscious mind could produce physical symptoms
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when dealing with memories or emotions
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too painful for the conscious mind to handle.
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It converted these emotions into physical symptoms.
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This meant that men could now get hysteria,
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but of course women were still the most susceptible.
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When I began investigating the history of my own disease,
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I was amazed to find how deep these ideas still run.
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In 1934,
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198 doctors, nurses and staff at the Los Angeles County General Hospital
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became seriously ill.
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They had muscle weakness, stiffness in the neck and back, fevers --
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all of the same symptoms I had when I first got diagnosed.
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Doctors thought it was a new form of polio.
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Since then, there have been more than 70 outbreaks documented
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around the world,
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of a strikingly similar post-infectious disease.
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All of these outbreaks have tended to disproportionately affect women,
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and in time, when doctors failed to find the one cause of the disease,
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they thought that these outbreaks were mass hysteria.
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Why has this idea had such staying power?
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I do think it has to do with sexism,
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but I also think that fundamentally, doctors want to help.
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They want to know the answer,
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and this category allows doctors to treat what would otherwise be untreatable,
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to explain illnesses that have no explanation.
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The problem is that this can cause real harm.
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In the 1950s, a psychiatrist named Eliot Slater
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studied a cohort of 85 patients who had been diagnosed with hysteria.
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Nine years later, 12 of them were dead and 30 had become disabled.
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Many had undiagnosed conditions like multiple sclerosis,
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epilepsy, brain tumors.
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In 1980, hysteria was officially renamed "conversion disorder."
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When my neurologist gave me that diagnosis in 2012,
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he was echoing Freud's words verbatim,
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and even today,
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women are 2 to 10 times more likely to receive that diagnosis.
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The problem with the theory of hysteria or psychogenic illness
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is that it can never be proven.
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It is by definition the absence of evidence,
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and in the case of ME,
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psychological explanations have held back biological research.
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All around the world, ME is one of the least funded diseases.
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In the US, we spend each year roughly 2,500 dollars per AIDS patient,
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250 dollars per MS patient
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and just 5 dollars per year per ME patient.
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This was not just lightning.
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I was not just unlucky.
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The ignorance surrounding my disease has been a choice,
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a choice made by the institutions that were supposed to protect us.
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We don't know why ME sometimes runs in families,
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why you can get it after almost any infection,
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from enteroviruses to Epstein-Barr virus to Q fever,
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or why it affects women at two to three times the rate of men.
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This issue is much bigger than just my disease.
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When I first got sick,
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old friends were reaching out to me.
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I soon found myself a part of a cohort of women in their late 20s
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whose bodies were falling apart.
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What was striking was just how much trouble we were having
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being taken seriously.
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I learned of one woman with scleroderma,
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an autoimmune connective tissue disease,
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who was told for years that it was all in her head.
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Between the time of onset and diagnosis,
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her esophagus was so thoroughly damaged,
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she will never be able to eat again.
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Another woman with ovarian cancer,
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who for years was told that it was just early menopause.
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A friend from college,
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whose brain tumor was misdiagnosed for years as anxiety.
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Here's why this worries me:
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since the 1950s, rates of many autoimmune diseases
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have doubled to tripled.
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Forty-five percent of patients who are eventually diagnosed
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with a recognized autoimmune disease
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are initially told they're hypochondriacs.
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Like the hysteria of old, this has everything to do with gender
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and with whose stories we believe.
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Seventy-five percent of autoimmune disease patients are women,
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and in some diseases, it's as high as 90 percent.
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Even though these diseases disproportionately affect women,
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they are not women's diseases.
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ME affects children and ME affects millions of men.
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And as one patient told me,
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we get it coming and going --
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if you're a woman, you're told you're exaggerating your symptoms,
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but if you're a guy, you're told to be strong, to buck up.
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And men may even have a more difficult time getting diagnosed.
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My brain is not what it used to be.
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Here's the good part:
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despite everything, I still have hope.
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So many diseases were once thought of as psychological
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until science uncovered their biological mechanisms.
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Patients with epilepsy could be forcibly institutionalized
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until the EEG was able to measure abnormal electrical activity in the brain.
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Multiple sclerosis could be misdiagnosed as hysterical paralysis
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until the CAT scan and the MRI discovered brain lesions.
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And recently, we used to think
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that stomach ulcers were just caused by stress,
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until we discovered that H. pylori was the culprit.
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ME has never benefited from the kind of science
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that other diseases have had,
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but that's starting to change.
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In Germany, scientists are starting to find evidence of autoimmunity,
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and in Japan, of brain inflammation.
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In the US, scientists at Stanford are finding abnormalities
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in energy metabolism
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that are 16 standard deviations away from normal.
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And in Norway, researchers are running a phase-3 clinical trial
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on a cancer drug that in some patients causes complete remission.
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What also gives me hope
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is the resilience of patients.
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Online we came together,
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and we shared our stories.
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We devoured what research there was.
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We experimented on ourselves.
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We became our own scientists and our own doctors
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because we had to be.
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And slowly I added five percent here, five percent there,
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until eventually, on a good day,
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I was able to leave my home.
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I still had to make ridiculous choices:
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Will I sit in the garden for 15 minutes, or will I wash my hair today?
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But it gave me hope that I could be treated.
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I had a sick body; that was all.
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And with the right kind of help, maybe one day I could get better.
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I came together with patients around the world,
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and we started to fight.
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We have filled the void with something wonderful,
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but it is not enough.
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I still don't know if I will ever be able to run again,
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or walk at any distance,
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or do any of those kinetic things that I now only get to do in my dreams.
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But I am so grateful for how far I have come.
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Progress is slow,
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and it is up
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and it is down,
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but I am getting a little better each day.
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I remember what it was like when I was stuck in that bedroom,
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when it had been months since I had seen the sun.
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I thought that I would die there.
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But here I am today,
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with you,
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and that is a miracle.
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I don't know what would have happened had I not been one of the lucky ones,
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had I gotten sick before the internet,
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had I not found my community.
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I probably would have already taken my own life,
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as so many others have done.
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How many lives could we have saved, decades ago,
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if we had asked the right questions?
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How many lives could we save today
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if we decide to make a real start?
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Even once the true cause of my disease is discovered,
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if we don't change our institutions and our culture,
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we will do this again to another disease.
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Living with this illness has taught me
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that science and medicine are profoundly human endeavors.
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Doctors, scientists and policy makers
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are not immune to the same biases
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that affect all of us.
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We need to think in more nuanced ways about women's health.
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Our immune systems are just as much a battleground for equality
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as the rest of our bodies.
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We need to listen to patients' stories,
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and we need to be willing to say, "I don't know."
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"I don't know" is a beautiful thing.
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"I don't know" is where discovery starts.
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And if we can do that,
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if we can approach the great vastness of all that we do not know,
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and then, rather than fear uncertainty,
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maybe we can greet it with a sense of wonder.
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Thank you.
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Thank you.
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About this website

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