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Young mother fights paralysis to save life

Despite what d octors say, Shana Lowther, 26, plans to overcome her illness and walk again.

By CAMILLE C. SPENCER
Published December 12, 2006


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photo
[Times photo: Lance Aram Rothstein]
Shana Lowther, 26, of Port Richey, gets help from Agnes Vargara to move from her wheelchair to the physical therapy table.

PORT RICHEY - The pain was excruciating.

It started in her back, then moved up her chest. Shana Lowther said it felt like someone was trying to snap her back in two. Her mother called 911.

Later that August day, in the waiting room at Regional Medical Center Bayonet Point, she lost feeling in her left leg. Slowly, the loss of movement crept toward Lowther's abdomen. Within an hour, Lowther, 26, was paralyzed from her chest down.

Things quickly unraveled for Lowther, her fiance, Jason Camp, and their 11-month-old daughter, Makayla, and 6-year-old son, Denny. Their lawn care business suffered. They fell behind on bills, lost their truck and got evicted.

"It's a really crappy Christmas," Lowther said.

Three times a week, as part of her physical therapy, Lowther uses large elastic bands to exercise her arms. A physical therapist stretches her legs.

Doctors call her affliction transverse myelitis, a neurological condition that kills spinal cells, which the body can't regenerate. No one can say why it struck her. Her condition is simply described as "idiopathic," doctor-speak for unexplainable.

About 50 percent of patients with transverse myelitis can regain the ability to walk. But Lowther's doctors doubt she will be one of them.

"She hasn't made any recovery," Dr. Jennifer Steel said.

The staff at Mitchell Rehabilitation Center, affiliated with Morton Plant North Bay Hospital, see hard-luck cases every day. But they were particularly touched by Lowther's case.

"When she came in, she was extremely debilitated," nurse Arlene Rudolph said. "She has improved slightly, but she won't regain use of her legs.

"You go through depression trying to accept the fact that this happened. This is not something that usually happens at her age."

The family moved in with Lowther's mother. They will continue the Christmas tradition of going to relatives' homes and opening gifts with their children. Relatives, Lowther said, will buy gifts that she and her fiance can't.

"I wouldn't say it's frustrating, but it's a little scary," she said. "I tell my friends that they need to take a look at me and assess their lives. You never know what could happen."

Lowther still enjoys life's little pleasures. She reads Harry Potter books. Denny likes to push her in her wheelchair. And she writes poetry, some of which has been published on www.poetry.com.

Jesus Cries is about tears shed over the world's troubles.

Any time in life you lose your way,

All you have to do is pray.

And every time you cry because you don't know what to do,

Remember Jesus is crying too.

Despite what doctors say, Lowther dreams of walking. She hopes the tingling in her legs is a sign that they're not lost, saying: "They can't tell me if I can walk again."

Camille C. Spencer can be reached at 727 869-6229 or cspencer@sptimes.com.

 

[Last modified December 12, 2006, 06:16:56]


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Comments on this article
by alan 02/14/07 03:01 PM
my thoughts are with you,don't give up you will gain your movement,i too have transverve myelitis,august of 2006 was laid up for a month ,but therapy really helps and family support too i wish you all the best and will pray for you recovry
by Ademola Adejumo 01/09/07 02:52 PM
There is nothing impossible for JESUS to do,you will walk in Jesus name.
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