Living With Lupus: Maria's Story
En Español (Spanish Version)
Maria was diagnosed with lupus twenty-five years ago.
While life with lupus has not been easy, the now 43 year-old New
Jersey widow works full time as a resident director of an assisted
living facility's Alzheimer's unit and is raising three
children.
Twenty four years ago, not long after leaving home for my
freshman year of college, I began experiencing a laundry list of
baffling symptoms. Every week something was wrong; joint pain,
rash, headache, weight loss - my parents thought I was a
hypochondriac. When I came home on break, I was still sick. Then
one morning I awoke to find I couldn't move; my whole body was
stiff. My doctor admitted me to the hospital, thinking I had
poly-arthritis, but several days and numerous tests later, I was
diagnosed with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), most commonly
referred to simply as lupus. When my doctor told me I had lupus, I
told him, "Okay, fix it." He told me it could be controlled, but
not cured. The worst blow came, though, when I asked whether I
might die and the doctor told me that, yes, it was possible.
I was very lucky to have a doctor who knew to look for something
unusual and who knew it was something he couldn't handle. Back then
much less was known about lupus than is known today. My doctor
referred me to a rheumatologist, Dr. Thomas Kantor, who admitted me
to NYU hospital where I spent the next several weeks undergoing
tests including kidney biopsies and bone scans. Treatment followed.
I was given massive doses of prednisone, a steroid, and Imuran
which, at the time, was experimental, but without which I wasn't
expected to last more than six months. I lost a tremendous amount
of weight and the prednisone caused my face to puff up.
Once I was home again, the medication began taking a toll on my
body. My hair fell out and my body blew up like a balloon. My
dosage included twelve pills in the morning and additional ones
throughout the day. To reduce the side effects of my medication I
had to take even more medications. Finally, when I was 20, my lupus
went into remission. I went back to college and, although I wasn't
completely off the medication for about a year and still required
close monitoring, I began to feel whole again. Eventually my mother
and I opened a dress shop and I fell in love and got married.
When I was twenty-eight and a newlywed of six months, my husband
Ralph and I went out to celebrate on New Year's Eve. At the
restaurant, I noticed my feet were swollen. My remission had ended.
I had lupus nephritis—my kidneys were involved. Another, briefer,
hospital stay was followed by weekly doctor appointments and tons
of pills. Finally, after a year, my doctor began to again wean me
off my medications. Although many doctors discourage women with
lupus from becoming pregnant, Dr. Kantor, seeing how badly I wanted
children, encouraged me to go ahead. My husband and parents were
concerned that the stress of pregnancy would result in another
lupus flare, but my pregnancy resulted, joyfully, in the births of
full-term twin girls. Three years later, my husband and I welcomed
our son into the family. I always felt the pregnancies would be
okay. Others were afraid my pregnancies would be difficult, but
they were wonderful. The births of my children were my happiest
moments.
Sadly, my husband died of a ruptured brain aneurysm in January
1998, leaving me to raise our children, then 11 and 8. When Ralph
died, the doctor upped my medications for several months to ward
off a potential stress-induced flare and checked me monthly for
nearly a year. I now see him every three months. Since my
diagnosis, I've enjoyed tremendous support from my family. I've
decided that, while I may have lupus, it doesn't have me. My
parents and family have been with me every step of the way; they've
been my greatest source of support. My dad was in the medical field
so my parents gathered all the information available at the time of
my diagnosis. I firmly believe that being well-informed and
maintaining a positive attitude helps. My doctors have always
involved me in pretty much every decision. Never once, even when I
was younger, did I not know everything that was going on every step
of the way. I'm the type that needs to know everything. It makes me
feel more in control.
Choose your doctors and your care. Become knowledgeable about
the disease and your medications. Learn your family history. It's
your body - you're in control. I haven't felt the need to look into
alternative therapies—things are going pretty well—but I might
if the lupus becomes truly horrible. I live daily with the side
effects of my medications including painful bursitis. I'm getting a
lot of dental work done because one of my medications has caused
bone loss in my jaw. I have stomach problems and I know the time
isn't far off when both of my hips will have to be replaced because
of damage caused by prolonged steroid use. With the exception of a
few small flares with no kidney involvement, I have been in
remission since I was thirty. Now, at age forty-two, I work
full-time in marketing for an assisted living facility. I helped
run a lupus support group at the facility where I work, and attend
school programs and my children's sporting events. I have had to
make adjustments. Once an avid sun worshipper, I no longer go to
the beach because I can't be out in the sun. I am learning to relax
although I find it difficult, and to get plenty of sleep. I
exercise regularly, but I know my limits.
My lupus sometimes affects my kids because there are things I
can't do. All-day trips, for example, are too wearying. I can't
take them to the beach. But I've found there's always something
else to fill the space left by the things you can no longer do. I
do wish I had known, when I was diagnosed, that there is so much
hope for people with this disease; that you can lead a normal life.
I wish I had known more about the disease and its symptoms. The
educational materials available from the Lupus Foundation are very
good. There's so much more information out there now than there was
when I was diagnosed. I have a favorite quote hanging on my
refrigerator. It says something like "God never promised that life
would be easy, just that He would be there walking with us along
the peaks and through the valleys". When I was first discharged
from the hospital after being diagnosed with lupus I felt awful and
my prognosis was uncertain. I was in a valley. My father picked me
up to take me home, and he asked me then what I most wanted to do.
I told him I wanted to go to the jewelry store and buy a bracelet
to replace my hospital bracelet. He was somewhat apprehensive
because I could hardly walk and parking on New York City's Canal
Street was difficult. So we made a deal. We wouldn't shop unless we
could get a parking space in front of the store. God was with me.
We found a space right outside the door. There have been a lot of
peaks and valleys since then, but that bracelet is still on my
wrist - a reminder of my journey and all those who have traveled it
with me.
Interviews were conducted in the past and may not reflect current standards and practices in medicine. Talk to your doctor to learn more about how this condition is diagnosed and managed today and what treatment approaches are right for you.