Christina's World of CMT
Christina's World by Artist Andrew Wyeth
Andrew
Wyeth’s 1948 painting “Christina’s World,” depicts a woman crawling in the
grass near her gray and dismal farmhouse in the distance. Wyeth would observe
his neighbor, Anna Christina Olson, crawling frequently around her treeless
property in rural Cushing, Maine.
Ranking
as one of the most iconic paintings in modern American history, it was always
assumed that Olson had Polio, a common infectious disease that causes muscle
weakness and in some cases the inability to move. Olson told Wyeth at the time
that she preferred to crawl everywhere rather than use one of those raggedy
wheelchairs of the day.
In
2016, a neurologist at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, decided to review
the health details of Olson’s life, which led him to believe that Olson had a
form of Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease instead of Polio.
Unlike
Polio which moves fast and invades the central nervous system, Olson indicated
that the disease moved slowly throughout her life, affecting her feet first at
age three, causing her to painfully walk on the edges of her curling feet.
Foot deformities
along with a decrease of nerve sensations in the foot and toes is probably one
of the most classic signs of CMT, according to medical professionals. Olson
also indicated that she would burn herself while sleeping too close to the wood
burning stove at night. Many with CMT also have less feelings and sensations in
their legs, arms, hands and other parts of the body.
I
also burn myself very frequently after accidentally touching the hot stovetop. While
I do feel the sting of pain from the heat, it takes me a split second longer
than the average person to pull away, which causes more cell damage than what a
healthy person would experience.
I
also remember burning my toe many years before my CMT diagnosis. I don’t
remember how I did it, but I do remember having terrible pain for several hours,
prompting me to send a donation the next morning to a burn organization for
kids.
The incident
later turned into a little joke with my wife and I after we began to laugh
hard during a television episode of “The Office,” when the lead character
Michael Scott burned his foot on a George Foreman Grill. Scott was angry
because his coworkers didn’t show him any sympathy during the episode.
One
of my favorite presidents, Franklin D. Roosevelt, also may have not suffered
from Polio, according to doctors and historians. Many believe he had
something called Guillain Barre Syndrome.
I was
first falsely diagnosed with Guillain Barre. The syndrome, which is a
bacterially induced autoimmune disease, is extremely scary because the pain
hits you almost overnight and often experience temporary paralysis.
I met a
local police officer who found himself paralyzed in a hospital bed for almost
six months due to this illness. Like many with Guillain Barre, he eventually
recovered fully and lives a normal life again, including working on the police
force. Scientists have leaned that a small percentage of people who receive the
flu shot can develop Guillain Barre.
Roosevelt
was 39 years old when he woke up one morning in pain and found his legs and
arms to be paralyzed. He said he was out jogging the day before and felt great
while doing physical activities.
The
quickness of the illness and paralysis later led doctors to believe decades
later that it was Guillain Barre rather than Polio, which is slower and doesn’t
usually affect adults over the age of 30. Roosevelt did all he could to keep
his illness a secret from the public. He would tell press photographers to “Take
no photographs of me boys,” until he sat down or held his body up against a podium.
It’s amazing that the press at the time respected his wishes.
One
famous individual who does have CMT is Julie Newmar who played the sexy Catwoman
in the Batman television show in the 1960s. Newmar recently told
CMTJournal.org that she started to feel fatigued and movement began to feel
tougher toward the last episodes of the television show. She later found out
she had CMT. Newmar eventually learned to live with the disease and finds it
helpful to stretch daily as a way to keep the illness from progressing.
Newmar,
for many, is living proof that people with CMT can be superheroes.
By Joseph Ruzich with Editor-in-Chief Emily Ruzich.
Julie Newmar played the Catwoman
in the Batman television show in the 1960s
Thanks for another really interesting blog. I did not know about the similarities and distinctions between polio, CMT, and Guillain Barre that could have resulted in mis-diagnoses given to Anna Christina Olson, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and probably many others.
ReplyDeleteReturning to this website also gave me the opportunity to re-read your first blog post again. I don't know if you realize this, but the two posts work together really nicely, and are good companion pieces.
BTW, I think maybe FDR might have liked your stamp -- thanks again, Liz C.
Thanks for reading it Liz! We may not have Polio anymore, but we still have many similar diseases out there, many that inflict children too. Best,
ReplyDeleteJoe