In the News
Resident With Rare Disease Aims To Educate, Help Others
By Samantha M. Friedrich
THOMASTON - If you ever have the opportunity to meet or talk with
Raye Bohn, you may never guess that she has a rare, incurable and
life-threatening disease that forces her to be medicated 24 hours a day.
Bohn, who turns 57 today, said she will not let something like Pulmonary
Hypertension stop her from doing what she wants to do.
"I don't have it as bad as people with cancer," she said. "Chemo
treatments are 10 times worse than mixing a medication once a day. I
know my limitations and I am going to do as much as I can do."
Bohn was diagnosed with Pulmonary Hypertension, also known as PH, in
December of 2003, after years of symptoms and misdiagnosis. PH is a
blood vessel disorder resulting in continuous high blood pressure in the
lungs, which results in an enlarged heart that can lose its ability to
pump. People with PH often do not look sick and are often misdiagnosed
as having asthma, congestive heart disease or chronic bronchitis.
Bohn said she always had respiratory problems, however, a
misdiagnosis leads to a loss of precious time in treating PH, for which
there is no known cure. It is an illness that can affect small children,
as well as the elderly, of any ethnicity. An estimated 50 percent of
patients survive five years from diagnosis.
Symptoms include chest pain, especially during physical activity,
coughing, shortness of breath with minimal exertion, fatigue, edema
(swollen legs and ankles), extreme fatigue, fainting, light-headedness
and dizziness, especially when climbing stairs or upon standing up.
There is no known cause for PH, which is not contagious, but may be
hereditary or may develop as a result of breathing disorders .
Bohn is currently on Epoprostenol (or Flolan) which helps to open up
her constricted lung blood vessels, and reduces high blood pressure in
her lungs. It is delivered by a constant intravenous infusion - the
"fanny pack" she carries around with her - which also needs to be on ice
24 hours a day.
She was told she had asthma and chronic bronchitis for years until
she saw a specialist at the UConn Health Center in Farmington. She said
she did not know about PH when she was diagnosed and when she researched
the disease she was horrified that she may only have a short time to
live.
Since then, Bohn has joined a support group with other PH patients.
She said the group has given her hope as some of the others have
survived more than 10 years with the disease. The disease is so rare,
however, that only about 400 people have PH in New England, she said.
The current medications can be very expensive, Bohn's costs her more
than $100,000 per year. Though she says she is fortunate her insurance
company covers it, some patients are not as lucky. When she was
diagnosed there were only three treatments available for her symptoms,
now there are five FDA approved treatments and five more in trials and
ongoing research is hopeful, she said. Congress has a bill pending for
the PH Research Act, which could help research move along. The bill
would amend the Public Health Service Act to provide for the expansion,
intensification and coordination of the activities of the National
Heart, Lung and Blood Institute with respect to research on PH.
Bohn is not thinking about dying, but about living and helping
others. Her mission during the month of November was to educate people
about her illness. With early diagnosis, and the promise of new
treatments, she hopes lives can be saved.
"Whatever I can do to help, I will do," said Bohn. "It may not only
affect me, it will affect others."
Gov. M. Jodi Rell proclaimed November 2005 as Pulmonary Hypertension
Awareness Month in Connecticut. Bohn and members of her support group
have been working throughout the month to spread awareness. Visit
Thomaston Public Library to check out Bohn's education display or check
out The Pulmonary Hypertension Association Web site at
www.phassociation.org.
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