Physician, Heal Thyself
Detachment, viewed as a virtue among scientists, often feels
unnatural to medical practitioners, who see human involvement as
central to the healing art. For those who have themselves been
afflicted with disease or observed it in a loved one, the
experience can become a driving force in their search for a
cure. Here are five whose close encounters with illness have
produced important contributions to medical science:
BY LEON JAROFF
PAUL O'BYRNE: Fighting asthma by inducing episodes in himself
Paul O'Byrne was a sickly child. He often had trouble breathing
and woke frequently at night, coughing and wheezing. No
medication or other treatment seemed to help, and when O'Byrne
was six a Dublin doctor explained to his parents that, for some
unknown reason, cold, damp climates worsened the child's asthma.
He advised them to leave Ireland for a dryer, warmer place.
The change worked. Paul's family moved to Rhodesia, where he
regained his health. Later he attended medical school in
Ireland, and, motivated by his childhood illness, became a
pulmonologist and a leading asthma expert. "I wish I could speak
to that Dublin physician now. He had great insight," says
O'Byrne, who has learned that his early asthma attacks were
allergic reactions to dust mites, which thrive in damp conditions.
Today, as head of the Division of Respirology at McMaster
University in Hamilton, Ont., O'Byrne, 46, works in a most
unusual way to develop treatments for allergy-related asthma. In
most of his studies, he himself is a test subject, periodically
doing "challenges"--inhaling allergens to give himself short
episodes of asthma. He has even examined his own bone marrow and
tissue biopsied from his airways and lungs. "I'm a good
subject," he says, "because I'm on time, and I do the test
properly."
O'Byrne was shocked when he first viewed his airway tissue. It
was "very abnormal, with a lot of scarring," and convinced him
that "having a severe childhood disease and not treating it can
change the airway forever." He believes that early treatment,
particularly with inhaled steroids, outweighs the risk of side
effects for children with recurrent asthma.
Discovering how those steroids work and finding which allergens
inflame the airways of asthmatics are the goals of O'Byrne and
his team of 15 researchers at McMaster. In their studies,
O'Byrne will continue to be a test subject. "I wouldn't have
learned the things I have about the disease," he says, "if I
weren't looking at my own airways, my own cells, my own lungs."
--Reported by Nicole Nolan/Toronto
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