Treating the symptoms, but missing the disease - Growing pressure on doctors to deliver quick fixes - Patients come to expect a few tests and a prescription
Growing pressure on doctors to deliver quick fixes
Patients come to expect a few tests and a prescription
DAVID SHAYWITZ
SPECIAL TO THE STAR
I met Tom seven days before he died. He was transferred to our hospital with
the slim hope that he could receive a combined heart-liver transplant.
Donor organs never became available. He died during a desperate resuscitation
attempt in our intensive care unit, his unnaturally bronzed 55-year-old body
barely visible beneath a tangled mass of tubes, lines and wires.
But ultimately, Tom did not die because of the technical limitations of
medical hardware. Rather, he died because two decades ago, when his first
symptoms appeared, no one thought to search for their underlying cause.
Tom was in his early 30s when he lost interest in sex and was bothered by
achy joints. He saw his doctor, who found Tom's testosterone level to be
extremely low. Tom was started on testosterone treatment, as well as
over-the-counter anti-inflammatory medication for the arthritis. Tom's libido
returned, and his joints improved; the medications seemed to work.
Gradually, Tom's skin became darker. He attributed this to a tan, though he
spent little time in the sun. A year ago, he noticed difficulty exercising. His
abdomen began to swell, and when he could take only a few steps before becoming
short of breath, he came to the hospital.
Tom's condition was diagnosed as hemochromatosis, a surprisingly common
genetic disorder in which iron builds up in various tissues. When the
accumulation is in the pituitary gland, the testosterone level can be affected;
accumulation in the joints leads to arthritis; accumulation in the skin darkens
the complexion. Iron can also poison the heart and liver, gravely compromising
their function.
This was what happened to Tom. His heart could no longer pump blood
effectively; his liver was no longer able to detoxify the blood properly or make
the factors necessary for blood clotting. The surgeon who opened Tom's chest
during the resuscitation effort said simply, "He was bleeding from everywhere.''
Hemochromatosis was first described by Dr. Armand Trousseau, a Parisian
physician, in 1865. The gene responsible for hereditary hemochromatosis was
identified in 1996, but scientists are still not sure how mutations in the gene,
designated HFE, cause the symptoms.
While scientists struggle to understand the molecular subtleties of
hemochromatosis, the clinical treatment of the disorder remains remarkably
primitive: serial phlebotomy. That is, weekly bloodletting. It turns out that
removing about a pint of blood a week can prevent excess iron from accumulating,
and if started early enough, can often reverse disease symptoms.
If Tom's disease had been diagnosed and phlebotomy begun two decades ago, he
might have required testosterone therapy, but he could have avoided the
progression of the disease to his liver and his heart.
In other words, if someone had thought to ask why a young, healthy man should
suddenly have low testosterone levels and arthritis, Tom might have been saved.
Unfortunately, Tom's story will probably become more and more common. As
doctors are compelled to see more patients in less time and are encouraged to
order minimal testing, there is a pressure to treat patients rather than
understand them. Low potassium level? Give potassium supplements. Belly hurt?
Here's an antacid. Depressed? Try Prozac.
And more often then not, in the short term, the medications we prescribe
work. We have become very good at alleviating symptoms and correcting laboratory
abnormalities. We often feel good when this happens, and our patients are often
grateful. Indeed, this is what many patients expect when they see a doctor a
couple of lab tests, and a prescription to fix whatever their problem is.
But if doctors treat only symptoms, then we really are just the pill pushers
our critics describe. As doctors, we have been schooled in science precisely so
we can try to understand the root causes of a disease, and not simply provide a
salve for its most troublesome manifestations. It is our responsibility to
consider what a particular symptom or collection of symptoms may mean, and our
obligation to avoid the increasingly common reflex to "treat and street" the
patients we encounter.
The need to look beyond a patient's immediate clinical symptoms and to search
intensively for deeper meaning has been and must always remain a defining
quality of the medical profession.
DISCLAIMER: All
information, data, and material contained, presented, or provided here is for
general information purposes only and is not to be construed as reflecting the
knowledge or opinions of the publisher, and is not to be construed or intended
as providing medical or legal advice. The decision whether or not to vaccinate
is an important and complex issue and should be made by you, and you alone, in
consultation with your health care provider.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"