Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Remicade, Lidocaine and Cortisone

I went in today for my Remicade infusion.  After two loading doses I had definitely felt some real improvement in my smaller joints.  I’d had pain and stiffness in my hands, which had made typing and even writing much with pen or pencil difficult.  My left thumb and my right middle finger would sometimes lock in position and I literally had to snap them loose with the other hand.  And it didn’t feel good!  My feet as well as the heels of the foot were always stiff and sore, especially with any standing at all.  The thickening of both shoulders had stretched the muscles and connective tissue and those hurt often.  There were other aches and pains as well.  Remicade thus far has improved the way those smaller joints feel by a noticeable amount.  I am hoping that I see even more benefit now that it is at full strength in my blood.  Since advanced osteoarthritis – something I have a strong family history of, but that likely was set in motion decades earlier than typically by the bone-grafting and revascularizations surgeries I had on my left knee as an early teen – is another contributor to my creakiness, and my knees have both been very sore, I got injections today of lidocaine (numbed the joint for an hour or two) and cortisone (intended to reduce inflammation).  Hopefully the cortisone will reduce the inflammation.  I’ll also have the synthetic joint fluid injections done next week or so.  Those of you who’ve had needles inserted into swollen and sore joints will know that it isn’t that much fun.  Today the lidocaine kicked in quickly and within seconds the knees weren’t hurting at all.  I’d love to be able to use lidocaine every day!  I’ll have to hope that the cortisone does it’s bit and the synthetic joint fluid works well also. 

It is always complicated to resolve interrelated conditions - when you have more than one or two issues contributing to one another, and I’m working on a half-dozen conditions that feed one another.  I’ve been pretty limited and I am still not able to be very active.  But for the first time in years I have seen this degenerative group of conditions stopped, and actual progress has begun.  So I have my fingers crossed.  I’d seen a rheumatologist a couple years ago, but that doc noted advanced osteoarthritis and sent me on my way with instructions to see an orthopedic surgeon and get the knees replaced.  I was referred to Dr. Stephen Overman at Seattle Arthritis Clinic and from the moment I had my intake appointment I knew that if I could be helped, I would be.  He’s written a great book for people combating diseases which are not obvious, called You Don't Look Sick!, written with a patient named Joy H. Selak (http://www.joywrites.com/). 

As a person who has always been active, busy, engaged and had a good time too, the degenerative process that I had been experiencing over recent years was more like a death in the family than an illness.  I found myself unable to do so many things I’d always done, and my sense of humor went to live with somebody else!  Though I have a long way to go, Dr. Overman, the book he has written with Ms. Selak, Remicade, and the many tools and techniques I’ve been made aware of at the Seattle Arthritis Clinic have given me the first progress I’ve seen in years, and hope that I’ll gain back a meaningful semblance of the things I have seen slip away in recent years. 

Saturday, September 26, 2009

The Zodiac Killer: New Technology, New Leads?

If you’ve ever read about the Zodiac killer, you’ll know it remains one of the most well-known cold cases in the US, if not the world.  The murderer has never been identified.  For an overview of the cases please check out the Wikipedia entry, primarily written by Ed Neil.  You can find it here:  Zodiac Killer on Wikipedia

zodiac killer

(Zodiac letter to the San Francisco Chronicle)

Several new tidbits of news are percolating and will be fully announced between now and September 30.  First, former LAPD Supervising Detective Steve Hodel, the author of Black Dahlia Avenger, has released his second book about his father.  Steve built a case against his father – a case believed by many readers of his first book, including me ; and the case was strong enough that the Head Deputy District Attorney issued a ten page memo indicating that were Steve Hodel’s father, George H. Hodel still alive, he would feel confident in bringing him to trial and seeking the death penalty.  That telling opinion, by one of the most experienced prosecutors in the country, based on the investigation conducted by Steve Hodel – himself a veteran homicide investigator for the LAPD, and with  over three hundred homicide investigations and a very high solve rate on his resume, convinced many people that Steve’s father George Hodel did indeed kill Elizabeth Short, the Black Dahlia.

Beginning with the knowledge (opinion, really) that the elder Hodel was a serial murderer, and he had fled the country to live in Asia for forty years, it was a natural thing for Steve to think:  ‘I wonder if this was his first…or his last’?  And so he began a new investigation which has spanned six years and has brought Steve to the conclusions in his books.  Released this week,Steve’s second book focuses on the trails Steve has found that appear to be the very paths that his father walked.  Steve believes that he has found a series of murders that took place – were committed I ought to say – by his father, George Hodel both before the Black Dahlia series and after it as well.  Steve’s book can be found at the link below, as can links to Tom Voigt’s excellent  website, which has more data, accessible to any researcher with an internet connection, than all other Zodiac sites combined.  I have just finished Hodel’s new book: Most Evil: Avenger, Zodiac and the Further Serial Murders of George Hill Hodel.  It is a fascinating book and I highly recommend to true crime readers. 

Finally, the episode of the History Channel’s new series MysteryQuest which deals with Zodiac.  The promotional ad that is running now in advance of the September 30th episode says:  “Years later, new technology, a new suspect…one step closer to solving the mystery/” 

All together, these events add up to a flurry of activity that brings new attention, and hopefully, new leads to the people still working to see this case solved. 

Most Evil and othe Zodiac books available at Amazon, through Zodiackiller.com

Steve Hodel webpages, blogs, exhibits

http://www.zodiackiller.com/

For a group of amateur sleuths, retired law enforcement, and researchers around the world, these events are eagerly anticipated in that they stir the pot, and provide the possibility of new clues, and possibly new evidence – perhaps even DNA results that could exclude someone.  Quite a week from 22nd to the 30th. 

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (Spoiler Free)

I wanted to wait to read the Harry Potter books with my kids. But, my wife really enjoyed the series and somehow she got me I started reading the books last year.

Once I got into the first book, I was eager to read the rest. I have been enchanted by JK Rowling's imagination - one which I have heard called "first rate" by a first rate imagination in his own right. The world, history, plot lines and most especially the characters in her books are rich and delightful, and I came to like many and enjoy all of them. I have read the 'Lord of the Rings' series, the 'Chronicles of Narnia' and I enjoyed the former far more because the background was so rich. Rowling's work is equally rich, but I must say that it engages without relying on the gravitas of epic. Tolkien's wonderful books make it clear early on that this is the story of the struggle of good and evil, and on it rests the fate of the world (Middle Earth). Rowling starts us in a cupboard beneath the stairs, with a young boy beginning an adventure. Only later does it become clear that around this boy swirls the epic struggle of good and evil. He becomes lovable to us, as do many of his friends, before we learn of the great quest that will settle the fate of this imagined world.

Now, having read the final installment, I must say that Rowling truly ended the series admirably. Many things we wondered about and hoped for and feared came to pass, but the end of the series was brilliantly wrought and as well-plotted as any part of the story. No spoiler here, but I must say that I was pleasantly surprised that she was able to wrap the series up without artifice and without hitting a false note. And, I am grateful that my wife talked me into reading the books, so that I can enjoy them again as I read them with the kids.

Sunshine on Discovery Bay

Sunshine on Discovery Bay
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