2009 Annual Report: Spotlight on Arthritis
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Spotlight on Arthritis
Barbara D'Amico
redwood city, ca
Six days a week, Barbara D’Amico hits the gym. “I do intensive workouts. I do weights. I do aerobics. That’s my part-time job, to stay healthy,” D’Amico said.
Barbara D'Amico
She’s fighting rheumatoid arthritis. The Redwood City accountant has had the degenerative disease more than 40 years. She can make it seem like a snap; it’s anything but..
"There are challenges every day — getting up, starting my day. I'm frustrated when I can’t button certain things, when I can’t zip things, when I can’t dance like I used to be able to dance. But I still do my aerobics. I push myself. I challenge myself,” D'Amico says.
Today, the drug Orencia holds her disease at bay. “It’s the best medicine I’ve ever had,” she said. But when she was first diagnosed, doctors had little to offer. They told her to take it easy. “
I really didn’t listen to the doctor. It’s probably the best thing I ever did.”
Seeing the way therapies have improved makes her hopeful for a future stem cell-derived treatment to restore the damage done by arthritis.
“I think in the long run it will help people and correct the deformity of the disease,” she said. “The problem is, now, they can’t reverse it.”
