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- From: llama@tramp.cc.utexas.edu (sine nomine)
- Newsgroups: sci.med
- Subject: a strange question
- Message-ID: <85802@ut-emx.uucp>
- Date: 24 Dec 92 20:27:01 GMT
- Sender: news@ut-emx.uucp
- Lines: 61
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-
-
- for reasons i'd rather not go into, i'm trying to figure out the
- plausibility of someone's claim to be ill. i'd appreciate any comments
- anyone has on the situation.
-
- some background: the person in question is female, caucasian,
- middle-class. she was 39 when the claims of illness began, in 1974. at
- the time, she was functioning fairly normally in society, holding down
- a job and supporting herself. she drank fairly steadily (consuming
- probably two cases of beer and a few bottles of wine every week)
- during the entire time she claimed to be ill. about the time the
- complaints of illness started, she married a widower with four
- children whose wife had died of pneumonia as a complication of
- leukemia three years previously. one of the children had epilepsy (he
- died of it in 1987), one had moderate emotional problems including
- bedwetting, and the other two were fairly normal.
-
- the woman in question was convinced that the neighbors were out to get
- her and dealt with this by having a series of unlisted phone numbers;
- eventually the numbers were not given out to even the immediate
- family. she was prone to fits of rage marked by screaming and physical
- violence, but after these fits she seemed not to be aware of the
- damage she'd caused (she once gave one of her stepchildren a black eye
- and later asked the child how the injury had happened). she reacted
- with extreme violence to challenges to her veracity in any situation.
- the children were abused, though on more than one occasion when
- neighbors (concerned by bruises they'd seen and screams they'd heard)
- called the police, they denied that anything was wrong and asked not
- to be taken from their parents.
-
- this woman's main medical claim was that she was suffering from
- leukemia and being treated by a military hospital for the same. in
- support of that, she pointed to symptoms she said were caused by
- chemotherapy: severe morning nausea and vomiting of blood, a distended
- abdomen, a continually flushed face, and general fatigue. she never
- evidenced any hair loss, which made these stories of chemo and
- radiation therapy suspect to me. she also had access to what seemed a
- wide range of prescription medications, including valium, other
- tranquilizers, anti-inflammatories, and something that had antabuse
- properties (but seemed relatively nontoxic the time she dosed one of
- her stepchildren with it to make a point about drinking -- when she
- forced the child (a 14 year-old) to drink beer after taking the
- medication, the only ill effects were of the expected antabuse-type).
- she claimed that the drug which produced teh antabuse effects was an
- anti-leukemic.
-
- she died in august of 1992, 18 years after the initial diagnosis of
- leukemia was supposedly made. what i'm wondering here is if the
- symptoms and behaviors reported above and the length of time she
- survived after diagnosis are consistent with this disease. if not, is
- there a disease that would cause such symptoms and that could be
- survived for 18 years? i'm not entirely certain, as i don't have
- access to the relevant documents yet, but the implication at her death
- was that she died of an alcohol-related illness.
-
- any feedback would be appreciated. thanks.
-
- --
- sine nomine | deb martinson
- what's red and invisible?
- no tomatoes.
-