CureZone.org
   Home > Article Index > Alzheimer's Disease > All

• Go Back

Reprinted from:
St. Petersburg Times

Risky drug was boy's last chance (Ralph Leon Pitts)

St. Petersburg Times

Risky drug was boy's last chance
St. Petersburg; Aug 22, 1995; STEPHEN HEGARTY;

Full Text:
Copyright Times Publishing Co. Aug 22, 1995

As he did most days, Ralph Leon Pitts lined up to take his medication at about 8 o'clock on a Saturday morning in July.

For the mentally retarded 16-year-old and some of the other residents of the group home in Seffner, taking medication was a routine part of the morning - like eating breakfast and getting dressed.

On this morning, Leon suddenly keeled over backward and dropped to the floor. He hit his head and lay sprawled on the living room carpet with his muscles painfully rigid. He was having another seizure.

As sudden as it was, the seizure was not unexpected. Leon had been having intense and frequent seizures since his medication was eliminated in May. The anti-seizure medication, Felbatol, was suspected of deadly long-term effects, and doctors everywhere were reconsidering its use.

In Leon's case, eliminating the drug might have been just as deadly. Since being taken off Felbatol, Leon had experienced dozens of seizures every day. He often collapsed without warning. One time he fell face-first on a sidewalk and smashed his front teeth. His falls were so frequent he had to wear a helmet all the time.

So it wasn't unusual when Leon hit the living room floor that Saturday morning in the medication line.

For about an hour after the July 8 seizure, no one moved Leon. Intense seizures can be physically draining, and Leon often wanted to nap afterward. He was left to sleep it off.

But as he lay on the floor after the seizure, Leon wasn't sleeping.

He was dying.

The impact of the fall - and perhaps the seizure itself - caused the veins between Leon's skull and brain to tear. As he lay there seemingly asleep, a pool of blood was forming inside his skull. Pressure was building around his brain. Leon was dying right where he fell. `He just fell apart'

Teacher Peggy Ferro was at Dover Elementary School on Monday morning, July 10, when she learned that Leon died. He was one of her students, and she had expected he would stroll into class any minute.

Ferro, a special education teacher, knew firsthand of Leon's problems. For weeks she watched in frustration as the handsome teen who was so popular with the girls got banged up and worn out by the constant seizures.

Still, his death seemed impossibly sudden.

"A few weeks earlier he was a completely healthy kid," Ferro said. "Then his medication was changed, and he just fell apart."

Days after his fall, Leon's death was determined by the medical examiner to be accidental. He fell. He hit his head. He died.

Still, Ferro believes Leon's death could have been prevented. She has a sense that the people who were supposed to look out for Leon failed him - before and after his fall. Ferro questions the decision to change his medication, and the lack of attention after he fell. More than two hours passed before the group home staff called 911.

"I understand that sometimes these things happen," Ferro said. "If I knew in my heart that everything that could be done for him was done, I would be fine. But I feel like a lot of people let him down."

Leon was born to Edna McDonald, who lives up in the Florida Panhandle between Interstate 10 and the Alabama state line. It wasn't long before Leon's seizures started and he became a tough child to care for.

"He started having seizures when he was about 2," said Chris "Manny" Mira, associate director of the Florida Center for the Handicapped, the group home where Leon lived. "His mom loved him. I know that. But I think she had trouble handling him. Leon's a pistol. He didn't listen to his mother."

When Leon was about 10, Mrs. McDonald gave up caring for him. He was a tough case, and he was sent to the group home far away in Seffner. His mother retained custody and remained in telephone contact. A few times a year she made the seven-hour drive to visit him. In fact, just days before his fatal fall, she came down for a visit.

But for the last six of his 16 years, Leon lived with other children who were retarded or had behavioral problems.

"I just about raised him," Mira said.

Leon was considered trainably mentally handicapped, the middle range of retardation. That means he had limited intelligence, yet could learn and possibly hold a job. He wanted to be a country music star. Or a professional wrestler. Perhaps Leon's biggest handicap in life was his seizures.

About a year and a half ago, a new epilepsy drug entered the market, and it proved near-miraculous for Leon. With the new medication, Felbatol, Leon experienced only a few seizures a year.

"Originally it was seen as a panacea - the wonder drug," said Dr. Richard Gunderman, a Tampa neurologist. "It really did a wonderful job controlling seizures for a lot of people."

Then came the bad news about Felbatol. Last year, word spread through the medical community that Felbatol caused aplastic anemia and liver failure. Several deaths were attributed to the drug.

"There was quite a scare all around the country," said Dr. Gregory L. Holmes, director of the epilepsy program at Children's Hospital in Boston and an associate professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School. "There was a great deal of pressure from patients and from doctors, who felt everyone had to be off the drug.

"We learned a great deal during the scare, and we learned it the hard way. A lot of patients took a turn for the worst" after they stopped taking the drug. `Damned if you do . . .'

At the Florida Center for the Handicapped, Manny Mira set out to take Leon off Felbatol.

Mira had received an Aug. 2, 1994, memo from the state Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, which licenses the group home. The memo referred to a TV news report on Felbatol, which "recommended that the medicine be discontinued on patients now using." The memo also said patients' records should be reviewed by their doctors.

"We were under the impression there was a recall, and nobody could use it anymore," Mira said. "As far as I knew, we had no choice. Our hands were tied."

Leon's case was reviewed. The medication was ended.

Around the same time, experts such as Gregory Holmes were urging doctors to familiarize themselves with the risks of Felbatol, but also to consider the significant risks of taking patients off the medication.

As soon as he stopped taking Felbatol in early May, Leon lost control of his body. The seizures started with a vengeance.

"They said we might see an increase in seizure activity," said Ferro, his teacher. "We saw an increase, all right."

Ferro kept a record of Leon's seizures. He had a seizure at the prom. He fell face-first on a sidewalk and smashed his teeth. He landed on his chin and needed stitches. The seizures came so often and were so unexpected, the school hired a full-time aide to keep an eye on him.

The seizures wreaked havoc in the group home, too. Mira estimated that Leon suffered dozens of seizures each day, and as many as 75 one day.

"This was a medicine that worked pretty well for him," Mira said. "I understand there was a danger if he stayed on the medicine. But the falling and the seizures, they were beating him up. You're damned if you do, damned if you don't."

Leon was given another anti-seizure medication, but it didn't work like Felbatol.

Mira took Leon to the hospital at least twice. Each time Leon was released. Once after leaving the hospital, Mira took Leon to McDonald's. He had three seizures there. They got their food to go.

Even when he wasn't having a seizure, Leon had a constant reminder: the helmet that he hated to wear.

On the morning Leon fell while in line for medication, there was one woman on duty at the group home. Mira described her as perhaps five inches shorter and 20 pounds lighter than Leon, who stood about 5 feet 6 and weighed around 125 pounds. She probably couldn't have moved Leon if she had to, he said.

According to the group home report of the incident, Leon fell at about 8 a.m., his helmet on his head. After the seizure passed, he mumbled and squeezed the woman's hand. She allowed him to doze where he fell. At 9 a.m., two more staff members came on duty, and they moved Leon to a couch. Mira was called and told about the seizure. He agreed to let Leon sleep.

"It might seem tacky, but that was Leon," Mira said later. "He had to go to sleep afterward. You'd check on him later and he'd still be lying there, but he'd be watching TV."

At 10 a.m., two hours after the fall, Mira was called and was told that Leon was not responding to efforts to wake him. He was pale. His breathing was shallow. Mira told them to take Leon to the hospital. When the staff went to move him, they discovered his skin was cold and clammy. His eyes were dilated. At about 10:15, the staff phoned Mira a third time and told him they were going to call for an ambulance.

Leon lost the ability to breathe on his own about 1:30 p.m. Doctors were able to keep him alive for nearly two days. The official time of his death was 4:55 a.m. July 10. The official cause was subdural hematoma resulting from "blunt impact to the head."

The medical examiner did not perform an autopsy, because Leon's mother did not want one done.

"I told her I would strongly recommend a medical exam to clear the air, to find out exactly what happened," Mira said. "She said, `No, I don't want nobody cutting on my baby.' "

The death was ruled accidental. The group home was found to have acted appropriately.

Three days after his death, a memorial service was held for Leon at the First Baptist Church of Brandon. Classmates, teachers, group home staffers and residents attended. In the center of it all was a picture of Leon, taken just a few months earlier when he was handsome, full of energy and mischief. He was buried near Marianna in the Panhandle.

Peggy Ferro has gone over the details of Leon's death more than a few times. She knows that Leon often slept after seizures. He sometimes slept it off in her class. And she knows that there was great risk in keeping him on a medication that might kill him years from now.

"But he went downhill so quick," she said. "I can't believe nobody could help him. I feel like ultimately there was not a soul in the state of Florida who was looking out for him."

Manny Mira has gone over the details a few times himself. He has been interviewed by the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services and by the medical examiner's office. He has questioned his staff. And he's lost sleep.

"I got angry after he died," Mira said. "I guess he needed that medication. The question is do you leave a child on medication that might hurt him later? I don't want to be the person to have to answer that question."

Reprinted from:
St. Petersburg Times

Related
News
Homeopathy, Economics, and Government  Aug 23 2003
Raw Milk Vs. Pasteurized Milk  Jun 06 2003
SARS ANTHRAX WEST NILE SMALLPOX FLU AIDS THE COMMON COLD  May 04 2003
Mercury fillings may be affecting dentists - study  Apr 19 2003
How I treated myself for Amalgam Illness  Apr 18 2003
The Most Interesting Stories from CureZone  Apr 18 2003
The Bowen Technique  Apr 18 2003
_BOB's Quick Cleanse  Apr 18 2003
Parasites? Me? Are you Kidding?  Apr 18 2003
Liver Flush - Quackery or Valuable Remedy  Apr 18 2003
Robert C. Atkins, M.D. Dies at 72  Apr 18 2003
Why You Don’t Want to Drink Pasteurized Milk  Mar 30 2003
DMD Epidemic on the Rise   Feb 08 2003
Astrological take on 911  Feb 03 2003
It is the Oil, Stupid!  Jan 24 2003
Astrology and Health  Jan 24 2003
Babies Pick Up Emotional Clues From TV, Experts Find  Jan 24 2003
Fish Farms Become Feedlots of the Sea  Dec 28 2002
Herbal Allies for Pregnancy Problems  Dec 08 2002
The Remarkable Raspberry  Dec 08 2002
FLU JAB KILLS RITA (66)  Nov 25 2002
5 suffered muscle-wasting disease after flu vaccination  Nov 25 2002
Flu shot left executive paralyzed  Nov 25 2002
Nytt forsøk med skandale-vaksine - Jenny (26) fikk livet ødelagt  Nov 25 2002
Leeches reduce the pain of osteoarthritis  Nov 22 2002
Effect of Leeches Therapy in Periarticular Symptoms of Rheumatoid Arthritis and Osteoarthritis  Nov 22 2002
What is Maggot Therapy?  Nov 22 2002
Leeches reduce the pain of osteoarthritis  Nov 22 2002
MMR-vaksinen kan gi barn autisme  Nov 19 2002
Organic Solvent Exposure at Work May Boost MS Risk  Nov 15 2002
Bacteria Promote Vessel Growth in Gut  Nov 06 2002
Exercise reduces cancer risk  Oct 22 2002
Sauerkraut packed with cancer-fighting compounds  Oct 22 2002
Anthrax drug blamed for lingering ailments  Oct 22 2002
The Breast Cancer Awareness Month Story  Oct 03 2002
Vaccination in Animals  Oct 03 2002
New concerns over breast screening  Sep 25 2002
Schools Teach 3 C's: Candy, Cookies and Chips  Sep 25 2002
Healing Properties of Umeboshi "Plums"  Sep 21 2002
Are we overlooking the obvious in cancer prevention?  Sep 15 2002
The Truth about Osteoporosis  Aug 30 2002
The Grisanti Report  Aug 30 2002
What Every Hypothyroid Patient Should Know about Synthroid  Aug 30 2002
HOW TO LOWER YOUR CHOLESTEROL  Aug 30 2002
MAGNESIUM DEFICIENCY & SUDDEN DEATH  Aug 30 2002
Toxic Teacher Syndrome  Aug 30 2002
Scientists shocked at GM gene transfer  Aug 28 2002
Autism 'Linked to Mercury Vaccine'  Aug 16 2002
Autism and Mercury  Aug 16 2002
Vitamin A -- A Vital Nutrient  Aug 12 2002
Vegetarian Diet In Pregnancy Linked To Birth Defect  Aug 12 2002
Oppose Senator Frist's Vaccine Bill S 2053  Aug 12 2002
MAD COWS OR MAD SCIENTISTS?  Aug 10 2002
Vitamin E for Your Brain  Aug 09 2002
Death By Lethal Vaccine Injection  Aug 09 2002
Conventional vs. Alternative Medicine  Aug 06 2002
When Healing Becomes a Crime  Jul 29 2002
The cruelty of sucking gallbladder juice (bile) from live bears in China  Jul 23 2002
Bear's Bile - Big Business that may save bears  Jul 23 2002
Tibetan Herbal Medicine, Interview with Dr. Sonam Wangdu Changbhar  Jul 23 2002
Agreement reached to phase out bear farming in China  Jul 23 2002
China's bile bears finding sanctuary  Jul 23 2002
Can GM food make your body immune to ANTIBIOTICS ?  Jul 20 2002
New England Journal loosens its rules on conflict of interest  Jun 26 2002
How You Can Avoid Having a Premature Baby  Jun 26 2002
Hospitalization Can Traumatize a Child  Jun 15 2002
New cholesterol guidelines for converting healthy people into patients  Jun 15 2002
The Cholesterol Myths  Jun 15 2002
THE FRIGHTENING ROAD AHEAD FOR PRESCRIPTION DRUGS  Jun 14 2002
Medical Journal Changes Policy of Finding Independent Doctors to Write  Jun 14 2002
Interview on Menopause  Jun 11 2002
Playing With Fire - It's Not EASY To Fool Mother Nature  Jun 11 2002
WHAT THE FDA, CDC, ACIP AND INDUSTRY WON’T TELL YOU ABOUT THE MERCURY IN VACCINES  Jun 11 2002
My Personal Experience, Healing Multiple Sclerosis  Jun 10 2002
Mercury in Childhood Vaccines: What Did the Government Know?  Jun 08 2002
The Danger of MSG and How it is Hidden in Vaccines  Jun 08 2002
Update on CDC Plans to Force Smallpox Vaccine on the US  Jun 08 2002
Fish Oil Reduces Breast Cancer  Jun 08 2002
My husband's full recovery from lung tumor and massive heart attack without drugs/chemo/surgery  Jun 07 2002
How I achieved optimum health after a lifetime of suffering  Jun 07 2002
A doctor diagnosed me as having AIDS  Jun 07 2002
New Drugs Same As The Old Drugs?  May 30 2002
Taming the Beast; My Progress - Multiple Sclerosis  May 30 2002
Beating Multiple Sclerosis  May 29 2002
Hospital Drug-Error Trends Continue  May 29 2002
This is what you will bring into your life  May 29 2002
My Fight Against Multiple Sclerosis  May 29 2002
Some pain killers may delay bone healing  May 28 2002
Most Women Satisfied With Having Their Healthy Breasts Removed  May 28 2002
Insulin and Estrogen linked to Breast Cancer  May 28 2002
Hormone Replacement Casually Related to Breast Cancer  May 28 2002
Pesticides Increase Breast Cancer Risk  May 28 2002
Healthy Women Having Their Breasts Removed  May 28 2002
Unnecessary Mastectomies  May 28 2002
Broccoli sprouts kill helicobacter pylori  May 28 2002
12 Plants that have no purpose  May 26 2002
Pesticides and the Immune System: The Public Health Risks  May 23 2002
The Human and Scientific Story of Adrenoleukodystrophy  May 22 2002
Experiments Strengthen Link Between Fish Oil, Mental Problems  May 21 2002
An interview with Sue Best whose son Billy is over 7 years cancer free  May 21 2002
Raw Eating - A book by A.T. Hovannessian (Aterhov)  May 21 2002
5th Flush Results and a Totally Awesome Experience  May 18 2002
Dr. Clark's - Letter to the "Health Freedom Movement"  May 18 2002
Infant food industry's practices in the US and Canada !!!  May 18 2002
Action group urges Britain to withdraw acne drug Roaccutane  May 18 2002
Caffeine, even in small doses, may hurt arteries  May 18 2002
Mother’s love “helps keep kids off drugs”   May 18 2002
Want a Healthy Heart? Drink Water  May 16 2002
POISON FOR PROFIT - WHAT A BUSINESS PLAN!  May 16 2002
The Truth is Out There   May 16 2002
Moving Toward a Cashless Society  May 16 2002
The Future, Big Brother and You  May 16 2002
Superhighway to Dystopia  May 15 2002
Do Killer Microbes Cause Breast Cancer?  May 15 2002
Why Do Pharmaceutical Drugs Injure and Kill?  May 15 2002
Are Vaccines Causing More Disease Than They are Curing?  May 15 2002
Fluoride and Aluminum - toxic combination of fluoroaluminum complex   May 15 2002
The Nocebo Effect: Placebo's Evil Twin  May 15 2002
Medical Patents and the WTO  May 08 2002
A Chronology of Fluoridation  May 08 2002
Avoiding Wheat and Gluten May Reverse Liver Failure and Hepatitis  May 08 2002
Fish Oil Helps Prevent Diabetes  May 08 2002
HYPERTHERMIA - The "COLD SHEET" Treatment   May 05 2002
Ailments & Herbal remedies - Dr. Richard Schulze  May 04 2002
Incurables Program - Dr. Richard Schulze  May 04 2002
Herbal Formulas - Dr. Richard Schulze  May 04 2002
Patient Handbook - Dr. Richard Schulze  May 04 2002
Study: Folk remedy used in India cuts cholesterol  May 03 2002
Black Raspberries Thwart Colon Cancer  May 03 2002
HEALTHY WEB LINKS  May 03 2002
Excitotoxins - MSG and Aspartame  May 03 2002
COLORADO bill to add Hepatitis A Vaccine  May 02 2002
UK Parents Say NO To Fluoride In School Milk  May 02 2002
Crib Death - Infection May Cause SIDS  May 02 2002
Exercise Can Lower Risk of Death from Stroke  May 01 2002
Safety of New Drugs Cannot Be Known for Many Years  May 01 2002
Mercury fillings are affecting dentists  May 01 2002
Biological clock starts ticking in late 20s: study  Apr 30 2002
Ulcer surgery linked to risk of pancreatic cancer  Apr 30 2002
British group says patients can refuse treatment  Apr 30 2002
Vegetarians Face Child Abuse Charge  Apr 30 2002
Minnesota - the first US State to offer Freedom of Choice  Apr 30 2002
The Signs of Inner Peace  Apr 30 2002
Patients Turn to Nutrition to Help in War on Cancer  Apr 30 2002
WHO announces urgent meeting on new food cancer scare  Apr 29 2002
Hudfletter forskerne som slo kreftalarm  Apr 27 2002
Few Antispasmodic & Antiinflammatory Herbs  Apr 26 2002
A Simple Guide To Herbs  Apr 26 2002
Diet, Aging, and Muscle by Joe Friel  Apr 26 2002
Akrylamid-listen  Apr 26 2002
Kreftalarm etter giftfunn i mat  Apr 26 2002
Cooked tomatoes 'better for you than raw'  Apr 26 2002
Cancer expert exposes sunbed 'danger'  Apr 26 2002
Angry Young Men At Greater Risk Of Heart Disease  Apr 26 2002
'Programmed Obesity' Handed Down To Next Generation  Apr 26 2002
Dr. Atkins suffered cardiac arrest  Apr 25 2002
Understanding the Healing Crisis  Apr 25 2002
Cut Bowel Cancer Risk by Eating Less, Better: Study  Apr 25 2002
UPDATE 3-Crisps, french fries, bread may cause cancer-study  Apr 25 2002
Swedish Study of Food and Cancer Rings Alarm Bells  Apr 24 2002
Cancer Risk Found in French Fries, Bread   Apr 24 2002
First 20 Years in Life Key to Cancer Risk  Apr 24 2002
Make-Up Holds Hidden Danger of Cancer  Apr 24 2002
Virgin Olive Oil May Reduce Cholesterol Damage  Apr 24 2002
Fish Oil Cuts Risk of Sudden Death  Apr 24 2002
Beans and Peas Can Cut Heart Disease Risk  Dec 15 2001

Back To Top




 


 

Donate to CureZone

0.0156 sec
IP 3.144.82.70