Waking Up After Two Decades

Story From The Washington Post Here, Non-paywall Version Here.

Story from the Washington Post here, non-paywall version here.

Washington Post stop blocking linksharing and shit challenge.

"The young woman was catatonic, stuck at the nurses’ station — unmoving, unblinking and unknowing of where or who she was.

Her name was April Burrell.

Before she became a patient, April had been an outgoing, straight-A student majoring in accounting at the University of Maryland Eastern Shore. But after a traumatic event when she was 21, April suddenly developed psychosis and became lost in a constant state of visual and auditory hallucinations. The former high school valedictorian could no longer communicate, bathe or take care of herself.

April was diagnosed with a severe form of schizophrenia, an often devastating mental illness that affects approximately 1 percent of the global population and can drastically impair how patients behave and perceive reality.

“She was the first person I ever saw as a patient,” said Sander Markx, director of precision psychiatry at Columbia University, who was still a medical student in 2000 when he first encountered April. “She is, to this day, the sickest patient I’ve ever seen.” ...

It would be nearly two decades before their paths crossed again. But in 2018, another chance encounter led to several medical discoveries...

Markx and his colleagues discovered that although April’s illness was clinically indistinguishable from schizophrenia, she also had lupus, an underlying and treatable autoimmune condition that was attacking her brain.

After months of targeted treatments [for lupus] — and more than two decades trapped in her mind — April woke up.

The awakening of April — and the successful treatment of other people with similar conditions — now stand to transform care for some of psychiatry’s sickest patients, many of whom are languishing in mental institutions.

Researchers working with the New York state mental health-care system have identified about 200 patients with autoimmune diseases, some institutionalized for years, who may be helped by the discovery.

And scientists around the world, including Germany and Britain, are conducting similar research, finding that underlying autoimmune and inflammatory processes may be more common in patients with a variety of psychiatric syndromes than previously believed.

Although the current research probably will help only a small subset of patients, the impact of the work is already beginning to reshape the practice of psychiatry and the way many cases of mental illness are diagnosed and treated.

“These are the forgotten souls,” said Markx. “We’re not just improving the lives of these people, but we’re bringing them back from a place that I didn’t think they could come back from.” ...

Waking up after two decades

The medical team set to work counteracting April’s rampaging immune system and started April on an intensive immunotherapy treatment for neuropsychiatric lupus...

The regimen is grueling, requiring a month-long break between each of the six rounds to allow the immune system to recover. But April started showing signs of improvement almost immediately...

A joyful reunion

“I’ve always wanted my sister to get back to who she was,” Guy Burrell said.

In 2020, April was deemed mentally competent to discharge herself from the psychiatric hospital where she had lived for nearly two decades, and she moved to a rehabilitation center...

Because of visiting restrictions related to covid, the family’s face-to-face reunion with April was delayed until last year. April’s brother, sister-in-law and their kids were finally able to visit her at a rehabilitation center, and the occasion was tearful and joyous.

“When she came in there, you would’ve thought she was a brand-new person,” Guy Burrell said. “She knew all of us, remembered different stuff from back when she was a child.” ...

The family felt as if they’d witnessed a miracle.

“She was hugging me, she was holding my hand,” Guy Burrell said. “You might as well have thrown a parade because we were so happy, because we hadn’t seen her like that in, like, forever.”

“It was like she came home,” Markx said. “We never thought that was possible.”

...After April’s unexpected recovery, the medical team put out an alert to the hospital system to identify any patients with antibody markers for autoimmune disease. A few months later, Anca Askanase, a rheumatologist and director of the Columbia Lupus Center,who had been on April’s treatment team, approached Markx. “I think we found our girl,” she said.

Bringing back Devine

When Devine Cruz was 9, she began to hear voices. At first, the voices fought with one another. But as she grew older, the voices would talk about her, [and over the years, things got worse].

For more than a decade, the young woman moved in and out of hospitals for treatment. Her symptoms included visual and auditory hallucinations, as well as delusions that prevented her from living a normal life.

Devine was eventually diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder, which can result in symptoms of both schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. She also was diagnosed with intellectual disability.

She was on a laundry list of drugs — two antipsychotic medications, lithium, clonazepam, Ativan and benztropine — that came with a litany of side effects but didn’t resolve all her symptoms...

She also had lupus, which she had been diagnosed with when she was about 14, although doctors had never made a connection between the disease and her mental health...

Last August, the medical team prescribed monthly immunosuppressive infusions of corticosteroids and chemotherapy drugs, a regime similar to what April had been given a few years prior. By October, there were already dramatic signs of improvement.

“She was like ‘Yeah, I gotta go,’” Markx said. “‘Like, I’ve been missing out.’”

After several treatments, Devine began developing awareness that the voices in her head were different from real voices, a sign that she was reconnecting with reality. She finished her sixth and final round of infusions in January.

In March, she was well enough to meet with a reporter. “I feel like I’m already better,” Devine said during a conversation in Markx’s office at the New York State Psychiatric Institute, where she was treated. “I feel myself being a person that I was supposed to be my whole entire life.” ...

Her recovery is remarkable for several reasons, her doctors said. The voices and visions have stopped. And she no longer meets the diagnostic criteria for either schizoaffective disorder or intellectual disability, Markx said...

Today, Devine lives with her mother and is leading a more active and engaged life. She helps her mother cook, goes to the grocery store and navigates public transportation to keep her appointments. She is even babysitting her siblings’ young children — listening to music, taking them to the park or watching “Frozen 2” — responsibilities her family never would have entrusted her with before her recovery.

Expanding the search for more patients

While it is likely that only a subset of people diagnosed with schizophrenia and psychotic disorders have an underlying autoimmune condition, Markx and other doctors believe there are probably many more patients whose psychiatric conditions are caused or exacerbated by autoimmune issues...

The cases of April and Devine also helped inspire the development of the SNF Center for Precision Psychiatry and Mental Health at Columbia, which was named for the Stavros Niarchos Foundation, which awarded it a $75 million grant in April. The goal of the center is to develop new treatments based on specific genetic and autoimmune causes of psychiatric illness, said Joseph Gogos, co-director of the SNF Center.

Markx said he has begun care and treatment on about 40 patients since the SNF Center opened. The SNF Center is working with the New York State Office of Mental Health, which oversees one of the largest public mental health systems in America, to conduct whole genome sequencing and autoimmunity screening on inpatients at long-term facilities.

For “the most disabled, the sickest of the sick, even if we can help just a small fraction of them, by doing these detailed analyses, that’s worth something,” said Thomas Smith, chief medical officer for the New York State Office of Mental Health. “You’re helping save someone’s life, get them out of the hospital, have them live in the community, go home.”

Discussions are underway to extend the search to the 20,000 outpatients in the New York state system as well. Serious psychiatric disorders, like schizophrenia, are more likely to be undertreated in underprivileged groups. And autoimmune disorders like lupus disproportionately affect women and people of color with more severity.

Changing psychiatric care

How many people ultimately will be helped by the research remains a subject of debate in the scientific community. But the research has spurred excitement about the potential to better understand what is going on in the brain during serious mental illness...

Emerging research has implicated inflammation and immunological dysfunction as potential players in a variety of neuropsychiatric conditions, including schizophrenia, depression and autism.

“It opens new treatment possibilities to patients that used to be treated very differently,” said Ludger Tebartz van Elst, a professor of psychiatry and psychotherapy at University Medical Clinic Freiburg in Germany.

In one study, published last year in Molecular Psychiatry, Tebartz van Elst and his colleagues identified 91 psychiatric patients with suspected autoimmune diseases, and reported that immunotherapies benefited the majority of them.

Belinda Lennox, head of the psychiatry department at the University of Oxford, is enrolling patients in clinical trials to test the effectiveness of immunotherapy for autoimmune psychosis patients.

As a result of the research, screenings for immunological markers in psychotic patients are already routine in Germany, where psychiatrists regularly collect samples from cerebrospinal fluid.

Markx is also doing similar screening with his patients. He believes highly sensitive and inexpensive blood tests to detect different antibodies should become part of the standard screening protocol for psychosis.

Also on the horizon: more targeted immunotherapy rather than current “sledgehammer approaches” that suppress the immune system on a broad level, said George Yancopoulos, the co-founder and president of the pharmaceutical company Regeneron.

“I think we’re at the dawn of a new era. This is just the beginning,” said Yancopoulos."

-via The Washington Post, June 1, 2023

More Posts from Aarya-aa and Others

7 months ago
Celeste Ng, Little Fires Everywhere

Celeste Ng, Little Fires Everywhere


Tags
7 months ago
Sylvia Plath // Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Sylvia Plath // Fyodor Dostoyevsky

Sylvia Plath // Fyodor Dostoyevsky

7 months ago
Susan Nathiel, Daughters Of Madness

Susan Nathiel, Daughters of Madness

7 months ago
The Crucial Decision That Can Protect Women’s Health as They Age — The Wall Street Journal
apple.news
Removing ovaries with a hysterectomy might increase risk of heart disease, stroke and dementia

A 2013 study in the journal Obstetrics and Gynecology found that among more than 750,000 women, about 46% removed their ovaries at the time of hysterectomy whereas 54% didn’t. Even premenopausal women who preserve their ovaries during a hysterectomy are at increased risk of dementia and heart disease but less so, according to multiple studies.

The health risks associated with the removal of ovaries are significant.

Rocca was co-author of a 2021 Jama Network Open study that found that women under 46 who removed both of their ovaries with or without a hysterectomy had an increased risk of mild cognitive impairment and performed worse on cognitive tests 30 years later compared with women who didn’t undergo the procedure.

Another study Rocca co-wrote found that women who had ovaries removed before age 50 faced higher risks for several conditions years later, including heart disease and osteoporosis.

Other studies have linked the procedures to an increased risk of dementia, Parkinson’s disease and accelerated aging.

Partial quote. Just got this as a little news alert and it’s something I think about semi frequently because of my job. Really under discussed and kind of wild

7 months ago
text id: [   The floor seemed wonderfully solid. It was comforting to know I had fallen and could fall no farther.]

— Sylvia Plath, "The Bell Jar"


Tags
7 months ago

Joan Didion writes, in On Keeping a Notebook, that the purpose of keeping a notebook, or a journal for that matter, isn’t because you simply want keep a personal record of things; but because you want to remember the person you were at that specific moment. we write things down on our notebook/journal/diary (whichever one of those you keep) because we want to remember. we want to remember what specific people meant to us on a particular day or hour. or minute. we want to remember our first impression of something (or of doing that something), possibly of someone, too. sometimes we think we’ll “always remember” important events: “I’ll make a mental note of that” etc etc. but in reality everything is fleeting. so Didion says write it down. keep a journal. that way, people, places, and certain events will always be there in case you ever want to come back to them sometime in the future. but also so that they don’t ever haunt you.


Tags
7 months ago
Scan Of 1 Cubic Millimeter Of The Human Brain

Scan of 1 cubic millimeter of the human brain

Full scan of 1 cubic millimeter of brain tissue that took 1.4 petabytes of data, equivalent to 14,000 4K movies.


Tags
7 months ago
NEVER A GOD
NEVER A GOD
NEVER A GOD
NEVER A GOD
NEVER A GOD
NEVER A GOD
NEVER A GOD
NEVER A GOD
NEVER A GOD
NEVER A GOD

NEVER A GOD

Garden Song - Phoebe Bridgers/LadyBird dir Gerwig/LadyBird dir Gerwig/warsh_tippy and zelda - whatever, dad/unknown/unknown/Little Women dir Gerwig/V.E. Schwab Vicious/LadyBird dir Gerwig/Waiting Room - Phoebe Bridgers

7 months ago
 {Words By José Olivarez From Citizen Illegal /@fatimaamerbilal , From Even Flesh Eaters Don't Want
 {Words By José Olivarez From Citizen Illegal /@fatimaamerbilal , From Even Flesh Eaters Don't Want

{Words by José Olivarez from Citizen Illegal /@fatimaamerbilal , from even flesh eaters don't want me.}


Tags
  • arthursmarthur
    arthursmarthur liked this · 1 week ago
  • louhilohi
    louhilohi reblogged this · 1 week ago
  • tinywafflerat
    tinywafflerat liked this · 1 week ago
  • chirisu-night
    chirisu-night reblogged this · 1 week ago
  • chirisu-night
    chirisu-night liked this · 1 week ago
  • nadaismus
    nadaismus liked this · 1 week ago
  • eggfreak
    eggfreak liked this · 1 week ago
  • juggalohidan
    juggalohidan liked this · 1 week ago
  • maximumminimum
    maximumminimum reblogged this · 1 week ago
  • ansautism
    ansautism reblogged this · 1 week ago
  • liliannflourel
    liliannflourel liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • shes-unforgettable
    shes-unforgettable liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • mshyde
    mshyde reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • biscuitschauds
    biscuitschauds liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • 1anti
    1anti liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • chickenonafencepost
    chickenonafencepost liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • eugeniedanglarseloped
    eugeniedanglarseloped reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • justalittlewhimsicalgay
    justalittlewhimsicalgay liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • deathdestiny
    deathdestiny liked this · 1 month ago
  • thenightmaidens
    thenightmaidens liked this · 1 month ago
  • runthepockets
    runthepockets liked this · 1 month ago
  • falloutshelterfordolls
    falloutshelterfordolls liked this · 1 month ago
  • lovecomesdown
    lovecomesdown liked this · 1 month ago
  • mybrainnevershutsup
    mybrainnevershutsup reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • mybrainnevershutsup
    mybrainnevershutsup liked this · 1 month ago
  • sayo-nora
    sayo-nora liked this · 1 month ago
  • alittlequirkygirl2
    alittlequirkygirl2 reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • a-comprehensible-horror
    a-comprehensible-horror reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • a-comprehensible-horror
    a-comprehensible-horror liked this · 1 month ago
  • misfitwings
    misfitwings liked this · 1 month ago
  • hormonologize
    hormonologize reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • hormonologize
    hormonologize liked this · 1 month ago
  • xxxpersonanongrataxxx
    xxxpersonanongrataxxx liked this · 1 month ago
  • blue-woman
    blue-woman liked this · 1 month ago
  • allowmetoreintroducemyself
    allowmetoreintroducemyself liked this · 1 month ago
  • parasocialized
    parasocialized liked this · 1 month ago
  • pu55yswag
    pu55yswag liked this · 1 month ago
  • feminist-pussycat
    feminist-pussycat reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • songofpamina
    songofpamina liked this · 1 month ago
  • h34t-rises
    h34t-rises liked this · 1 month ago
  • lissomelights
    lissomelights liked this · 1 month ago
  • withmeicarryit
    withmeicarryit reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • gothe
    gothe liked this · 1 month ago
  • basicbabe
    basicbabe liked this · 1 month ago
  • girlblogger360
    girlblogger360 reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • girlblogger360
    girlblogger360 liked this · 1 month ago
aarya-aa - 🧠🧠
🧠🧠

49 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags