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Tuesday's conclusion by the prestigious Institute of Medicine was a blow to parents of autistic children who blame vaccination for the brain disorder and are pushing - http://www.search.com/search?q=pushing for more research of the issue.

But the Institute of Medicine's panel of prominent scientists pointed to five large studies, here and in Denmark, Sweden and Britain that tracked thousands of children since 2001 and found no association between autism and thimerosal.

While high doses of mercury can cause neurologic damage, there's no evidence that this type of damage causes the symptoms specific to autism -- and no laboratory or animal research that proves how the much smaller amounts in thimerosal could do so, either, the IOM concluded.

On the other hand, genetics plays a role in autism, and several studies show clear signs of prenatal onset of the disorder, including brain differences at birth, the report notes.

"Don't misunderstand: The committee members are fully aware that this is a very horrible and devastating condition," said Dr. Marie McCormick, a Harvard professor of maternal and child health who led the IOM probe. "It's important to get to the root of what's happening."

But, "there seem to be lots of opportunities for research that would be more productive" than continuing the vaccine hunt.

Autism is a complex developmental disorder best known for impairing a child's ability to communicate and interact with others. Recent data suggest a 10-fold increase in autism rates over the last decade, although it's not clear how much of the apparent surge reflects better diagnosis and how much is a true rise.

Thimerosal has been used as a pharmaceutical preservative since the 1930s. Although the amount of mercury it contains is very small, in 1999 public health officials ordered manufacturers to phase thimerosal out of common vaccines, from hepatitis to diphtheria, as a precaution, saying small infants had begun getting so many immunizations that they might get too much of the chemical. Today it's all but gone.

There is a notable exception -- flu shots. The CDC just added influenza to the list of shots for babies, and most flu shots still contain mercury.

Thimerosal critics, who had derived hope from a 2001 Institute of Medicine review that called the potential link unproven but medically plausible, were disappointed by Tuesday's reconsideration.

"The science is still out, the verdict is still out," said Lyn Redwood, president of the SafeMinds activist group and mother of an autistic son. "They've just set us back five years in terms of getting more science."

Some parents argue that children may be born genetically susceptible to autism and some environmental factor, such as thimerosal, 카지노사이트 - http://blog.printgila.com/ triggers it.

Jennifer Lassiter has a daughter with autism, reports CBS News Correspondent Sharyl Attkisson. Katelyn, a bright 8-year-old, cannot connect with the world.

Lassiter said Katelyn was a happy normal, babbling baby until getting her shots when she was 15-months-old.

"She got her vaccinations, she ran a low grade fever," she told Attkisson. "She had a little rash and then she stopped talking."

Her parents didn't connect the dots until they needed her shot records for preschool. Her doctor had misplaced them, so just gave her another round.

Afterwards, "she was walking in circles, she was lining things up, screeching and flapping," Lassiter said.

U.S. Rep. Dave Weldon, R-Fla., is a doctor who has proposed a bill banning just about all mercury in vaccines.

"The safety of thimeresol, which was the mercury product in the vaccines, has not been demonstrated. And actually a lot of the press reporting on this issue has been inaccurate,'' said Weldon.

Katelyn's parents support vaccines but not the mercury -- with their daughter unable to have a normal life, they ask how can it be wrong to err on the side of caution?

There were 18.2 million Americans — 6.3 percent of the population — with diabetes in 2002, and it is the nation's fifth-deadliest disease, says the American Diabetes Association

Women in the study who drank at least one sugar-sweetened soda a day were 85 percent more likely to develop type 2 diabetes than those who drank less, said Matthias B. Schulze, who presented the Harvard School of Public Health research at the American Diabetes Association's 64th scientific sessions.

In addition to the sodas' excess calories, their large amount of rapidly absorbable sugars could contribute to obesity and a greater risk of diabetes, 부산출장샵 - https://www.opanma.com/9-busan said Schulze, a post-doctorate student from Germany.

"It's not that sugar everywhere is important, but it seems that sugar specifically in liquid foods may be relevant," Schulze said. "So, sodas and other energy-providing drinks may lead to an over-consumption of energy that would lead to obesity and weight gain."

Diet sodas with sugar substitutes, however, did not increase the chances of developing diabetes, Schulze - http://www.travelwitheaseblog.com/?s=Schulze said. He added that the women who drank diet sodas tended to lose weight.

Diabetes is an illness that develops, often in middle age, when a body loses the ability to turn blood sugar into energy. There were 18.2 million Americans — 6.3 percent of the population — with diabetes in 2002, and it is the nation's fifth-deadliest disease, says the American Diabetes Association.

Worse yet, diabetes is a growing problem. The prevalence of diabetes was fairly flat during the 1980s, but nearly doubled from 1990 to 2002.

According to Schulze's study, the women most prone to gaining weight had increased their consumption of sugary soft drinks from less than one a week to more than one a day. On average, those women gained 9-10 pounds in a four-year period. But women who cut their intake of soft drinks gained an average of 3 pounds or less.

The research followed more than 91,000 adult women over an eight-year period. It is part of the Nurses Health Study at Boston's Brigham and Women's Hospital.

The research comes two months after the release of a British study showing school programs - http://realitysandwich.com/?s=school%20programs that discouraged drinking sodas appeared to be effective in reducing obesity among children.

Mike Jacobsen, executive director for the Center for Science in the Public Interest consumer advocacy group, said he wasn't surprised by the study's findings — but he was pleased.

"It provides ammunition for education efforts, labeling changes and restricting soft drink consumption in schools," Jacobsen said.

The National Soft Drink Association labeled the study as "unconvincing and inconclusive," because it has yet to be peer-reviewed and raises questions over factors that could create inaccuracies.

Schulze acknowledged the study's limitations in that its data came from observations, such as body weight the women themselves reported.

By Mike BranomBy Mike Branom

I still have a few pounds over to lose," she said

Colombian superstar Shakira is learning - http://www.paramuspost.com/search.php?query=learning&type=all&mode=searc... how to balance her demanding work schedule with being a new mom one day at a time.

"It's part of motherhood you know," she said of juggling personal and professional life. "You got to figure it out as you go."

The 36-year-old singer and her soccer star boyfriend, Gerard Pique, welcomed their first child, Milan Pique Mebarak, on Jan. 22.

"He's great. He's so mellow, but he's very alert too," she said in an interview Wednesday night at House of Blues in West Hollywood, Calif. "It's like he knows what's going on around him. He knows when someone comes in the room or comes out. He's something."

Shakira joined fellow "The Voice" coaches Adam Levine, Blake Shelton and Usher at a red carpet event celebrating the NBC signing competition's - http://blogs.realtown.com/search/?q=competition%27s top 12 finalists.

"The Voice" host Carson Daly said baby Milan has been a welcome addition to the kid friendly set, which features regular visits from Daly's young brood, Usher's children and 카지노사이트 - https://studiereis.cs.ru.nl/ Levine's nephews.

"With Milan it's a full blown nursery!" Daly said of Shakira's baby-proofed double-wide trailer. "It's just like Shakira's door opens and 'It's a Small World' starts playing. It's built for Milan. And it's really special and it's cool. We're like a little family."

But according to Shakira, it's not the children who cause the most trouble.

"It's like a kindergarten because these guys are already babies. They're babies!" she joked of her fellow coaches.

When it comes to getting those famous hips back into pre-baby shape, Shakira said she's still working on it.

"I still have a long way to go. I still have a few pounds over to lose," she said. "I look decent."

During her pregnancy, Shakira wasn't shy when it came time to releasing photos. She bared her baby belly in photos, which can be seen here.

The study was conducted and financed by the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer and released in New Orleans at a meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology

03314949=25668721]" style="max-width:440px;float:left;padding:10px 10px 10px 0px;border:0px;">Whether the treatment can help cure brain cancer remains to be seen, but the approach at least seems to slow the often rapid progression of the disease for some.

The treatment, tested in a form of brain cancer called glioblastoma multiforme, involves the drug Temodar. Until now, the medicine has typically been used only after radiation to shrink the tumor.

A major international study released Monday shows that giving low doses of the capsule at the very start - for six or seven weeks during and after radiation - doubles the chance of being alive two years later.

"This is the first trial that has been clearly positive in brain cancer in 30 years," said Dr. M.J. van den Bent of the Daniel den Hoed Oncology Center in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. "This is a great day."

Radiation and surgery are the first-line treatments for glioblastomas, but even with them the disease usually kills within a year or less. Intravenous chemotherapy available since the 1970s improves these odds only marginally and can have serious side effects.

Several doctors predicted that upfront Temodar will quickly become the new standard of care, routinely offered to all victims of this disease.

"To be able to tell people they may have two or three years of survival rather than nine months is pretty major," said Dr. Adam Mamelak of City of Hope National Medical Center in Duarte, Calif., who was not involved in the study.

The study was conducted and financed by the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer and released in New Orleans at a meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology. It was done at more than 80 hospitals in Europe, Canada and Australia.

The study's director, Dr. Roger Stupp of University Hospital in Lausanne, Switzerland, said patients found the drug easy to take, and fatigue was the most common ill effect.

"We have started with the most malignant - http://mommysavers.com/?s=malignant and devastating form" of brain cancer, he said. The next step will be to try the drug against less aggressive tumors and combine it with the newer, so-called targeted drugs designed to block cancer's internal growth signals.

Unlike most cancer, which kills by spreading through the body, glioblastomas grow quickly inside the head, destroying everything in their path. They are the most aggressive of the 100 or so forms of cancer that originate in the brain, and they account for half or more of all cases. Around the world, 175,000 cases are diagnosed annually, killing 125,000.

In the new study, 거제출장마사지 - https://www.anmastar.com/%ea%b1%b0%ec%a0%9c%ec%b6%9c%ec%9e%a5%ec%83%b5%c... 573 patients were randomly given standard treatment with or without early Temodar. After two years, 26 percent receiving Temodar were still alive, compared with just 10 percent getting the usual care.

Even with the treatment, most patients died quickly. Nevertheless, doctors said doubling short-term survival is an important milestone in such a grim disease.

"Twenty-six percent survival is not that great in the large scheme of things. But it is still progress," said Dr. Frank Haluska of Massachusetts General Hospital.

Until now, chemotherapy has also not had an important role in treating prostate cancer, which is much more common. At the meeting Monday, other researchers released details of studies that led the Food and Drug Administration last month to approve use of Taxotere, a standard chemotherapy drug, for men with advanced cases of this malignancy.

Before these studies, no treatment had been found to improve survival in prostate cancer. Spreading cancer can be suppressed with hormone treatment, but eventually this approach fails, and patients typically die within a year.

Two large studies released at the meeting show that Taxotere can improve survival in these men by a median of about two months, although some lived several years while on the drug.

"This is reason for celebration, because there is a survival advantage, and there is also reason for optimism, but we have a long way to go in these patients," said Dr. Mario Eisenberger of Johns Hopkins University, who headed one of the studies.

By Daniel Q. Haney

"Us & Them,'' based on the British hit "Gavin and Stacey,'' stars Jason Ritter (''Parenthood'') and Alexis Bledel (''The Gilmore Girls'') as a young couple who find their relationship complicated by family and friends

A futuristic drama from producer-writer J.J. Abrams of "Lost'' and the " Star Trek'' - http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en&gl=us&tbm=nws&q=Star%20Trek%27%27&g... movie franchise and a comedy with Andy Samberg of "Saturday Night Live'' fame as a carefree police detective will be on Fox's new schedule, the network said.

Four new dramas and five comedies were announced Wednesday for the 2013-14 season by Fox, which got a jump on network presentations to advertisers set for next week in New York.

The Abrams-produced drama, with the working title "Almost Human,'' was described by Fox as an "action-packed'' police series set 35 years in the future, when officers are teamed with human-like androids. The cast will include Karl Urban, Michael Ealy and Lili Taylor.

Greg Kinnear will take on his first continuing broadcast series role in "Rake,'' a legal drama based on a hit Australian series of the same name, Fox said. The actor, whose movie credits include "Little Miss Sunshine'' and "Baby Mama,'' starred in the cable miniseries "The Kennedys.'' Sam Raimi (''Oz the Great and Powerful'' and the "Spider-Man'' franchise) directed and was an executive producer on the "Rake'' pilot.

"Gang Related,'' about a gang task force in Los Angeles confronting the city's most dangerous criminals, stars Terry O'Quinn (''Lost'') as the task force's leader, and rapper-producer RZA, founder of the Wu-Tang Clan, and Ramon Rodriguez as members. Brian Grazer of "24'' and the film "A Beautiful Mind'' is an executive producer.

"Sleepy Hollow,'' the fourth drama announced by Fox, is described as an action-adventure retelling of Washington Irving's classic 19th-century tale, "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.'' Timid schoolmaster Ichabod Crane (Tom Mison) is resurrected 250 years in the future and discovers he must save the world from destruction, with a police officer (Nicole Beharie) as his partner.

The Samberg comedy, "Brooklyn Nine-Nine,'' which also stars Andre Braugher ("Homicide: 카지노사이트 - http://waghmaredd.com/ Life on the Street,'' "Men of a Certain Age'') is about a freewheeling detective who gets a by-the-book boss who's intent on making him into an adult, Fox said.

Other new sitcoms set for Fox's coming season:

"Dads,'' from Seth McFarlane (''Family Guy,'' the movie "Ted'' and a recent stint as Oscar host), stars Seth Green and Giovanni Ribisi as best friends whose lives are disrupted by their new roommates, their dads (Martin Mull, Peter Riegert).

"Enlisted,'' described by Fox as an "irreverent and heartfelt'' comedy set on a Florida Army base, is about three brothers getting to know each other and the misfits around them on the base.

"Us & Them,'' based on the British hit "Gavin and Stacey,'' stars Jason Ritter (''Parenthood'') and Alexis Bledel (''The Gilmore Girls'') as a young couple who find their relationship complicated by family and friends.

"Surviving Jack,'' based on Justin Halpern's semi-autobiographical book, is set in 1990s Southern California and stars Christopher Meloni (''Law & Order: Special Victims Unit'') in a coming-of-age story involving - http://www.exeideas.com/?s=story%20involving a man and his son.

The researchers calculated that diabetics faced a 65 percent increased risk of developing the mind-robbing disease

The participants in the study were 55 and older when the research began and were followed for an average of about six years. Alzheimer's developed in 151 participants, including - http://www.healthable.org/?s=including 31 who had diabetes.

The researchers calculated that diabetics faced a 65 percent increased risk of developing the mind-robbing disease.

The link remained strong even when the researchers factored in the prevalence of strokes, which are a common complication of diabetes and are also believed to raise the risk of Alzheimer's.

Previous research has linked diabetes with memory problems, and diabetes is known to damage blood vessels that supply the brain. But studies looking specifically at diabetes and Alzheimer's have had conflicting results.

"This is one of the first long-term studies to follow people who start out with no evidence of Alzheimer's disease and track how having diabetes affects their risk of developing it," said William Thies, vice president for medical and scientific affairs at the Alzheimer's Association. "It's a powerful argument for doing everything you can to control your blood sugar."

Type 2 diabetes, the most common type of diabetes in older people, can often be controlled and even cured with exercise and diet.

Dr. George King of the Joslin Diabetes - https://www.rewards-insiders.marriott.com/search.jspa?q=Joslin%20Diabetes Center in Boston called the research "quite important in light of the fact that diabetes is exploding," with some 18 million Americans affected and the numbers expected to double by 2050.

He said if the link is real, there could be a corresponding surge in Alzheimer's cases.

The study was led by Drs. Zoe Arvanitakis and David Bennett and 카지노사이트 - http://euwinecn.com/ colleagues at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago. It was published Monday in the May issue of Archives of Neurology.

The next step for researchers is to find out exactly how diabetes might lead to Alzheimer's.

Some scientists have theorized that diabetes might cause an overabundance of glucose in the brain, which could damage brain cells.

One recent mouse study involving Joslin researchers suggests that insulin abnormalities in diabetes might affect a protein called tau, which in Alzheimer's forms tangles in brain cells.

Investigators suspect a shipment of the drug was stolen from a storage building in eastern Kentucky

Dan Smoot, chief detective for an anti-drug task force in eastern Kentucky, said undercover narcotics investigators began purchasing the generic drug from street-level dealers earlier this week. Investigators suspect a shipment of the drug was stolen from a storage building in eastern Kentucky.

"When we first got the pills, we didn't know what they were," Smoot said. "They look nothing like the OxyContin we were familiar with."

OxyContin is a long-lasting version of oxycodone, a narcotic considered important therapy for many patients suffering chronic, 카지노사이트 - http://apoloniarasovic.me/ moderate to severe pain from illnesses such as cancer. The tablet, when swallowed whole, provides 12 hours of pain relief.

But the drug can produce a quick and potentially lethal high if it is chewed, snorted or injected. It has been linked to more than 100 deaths and bears the government's strongest warning label.

The Food and Drug Administration has given approval for Teva Pharmaceuticals of North Wales, Pa., and Endo Pharmaceuticals of Chadds Ford, Pa., to sell generic versions of the drug.

Law enforcement officials were dreading the release - http://www.stockhouse.com/search?searchtext=release of the generic version, saying it could increase availability and reduce prices of the drug on the black market.

Karen Engle, executive director of Operation UNITE, said the anti-drug task force is investigating the origin of the generic drug now available illegally in Kentucky.

"We actually had to call the poison control center to have them identify the substance for us," she said.

The generic drugs circulating in the mountain region may have been a stolen shipment intended for pharmacies in the region, Smoot said.

Kentucky State Police Detective Eddie Crum said a generic drug shipment was taken during an April 29 break-in at a storage facility in Pikeville. He said he was surprised that the generic drugs, which usually are transported in armored cars, were being stored so carelessly.

"We knew when the FDA approved generic OxyContin that it would end up in the region," Engle said. "But we didn't think it would be here before the pharmacies got it."

By Roger Alford

Marlowe ended up at another hospital, where she had a quick, natural birth she described as "a piece of cake." She didn't know about the first hospital's action until her husband was told by a reporter

Some women's advocates said the cases illustrate a newfound willingness by legal officials to interfere with women's choices about their pregnancies.

"My impression is that we have a political culture right now that falsely pits fetal rights against women's rights, and that you are seeing a kind of snowballing effect," said Lynn Paltrow, of the New York-based group Wilkes-Barre General Hospital wouldn't budge, so Marlowe checked herself out and went looking for a new doctor.

While she was on her search, Wilkes-Barre General's lawyers rushed to court to get legal guardianship of her unborn child, giving the hospital the ability to force Marlowe into surgery if she returned.

Marlowe ended up at another hospital, where she had a quick, natural birth she described as "a piece of cake." She didn't know about the first hospital's action until her husband was told by a reporter.

"They don't know me from anything, and they're making decisions about my body?" she said. "It was terrifying."

Officials with Wilkes-Barre General did not return calls - http://www.broowaha.com/search/return%20calls seeking comment.

Some groups representing doctors, including the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology, have said that physicians should refrain from doing procedures unwanted by pregnant woman, and that use of the courts to resolve conflicts is almost never warranted.

A spokesman for the American Hospital Association wasn't immediately sure whether the organization has ever taken a position on the issue.

In Salt Lake City, an acknowledged cocaine addict with a history of mental health problems resisted having the operation for about two weeks before acquiescing. One of the twins she was carrying died during the delay. The mother was charged with capital murder but ultimately pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of child endangerment and was sentenced to probation.

Last month, prosecutors in Pittsburgh charged an unlicensed midwife with involuntary manslaughter for failing to take a woman to the hospital when her baby began to be delivered feet-first. The child died two days later. The midwife said she had been trying to honor the mother's wishes to have the baby at home.

And in Rochester, New York, a judge in late March ordered a homeless woman who had lost custody of several neglected children not to get pregnant again without court approval.

Legal experts and medical ethicists said attempts to prosecute women for pregnancy choices, or force them to undergo certain procedures for the benefit of their children, may be on shaky ground.

"There are 50 years of case law and bioethical writings that say that competent people can refuse care, and that includes pregnant women as well," said Art Caplan, chairman of medical ethics at the University of Pennsylvania.

In one influential case, 카지노사이트 - http://www.sahachon-crane.com/shc/ a federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., ruled in 1990 that a judge was wrong to have granted a hospital permission to force a pregnant cancer patient to undergo a Caesarean in an attempt to save the life of her child. The mother and baby died within two days of the operation.

Doctors' opinions on forced care for pregnant mothers have changed, too.

A 2002 survey by researchers at the University of Chicago found only 4 percent of directors of maternal-fetal medicine fellowship programs believed pregnant women should be required to undergo potentially lifesaving treatment for the sake of their fetuses, down from 47 percent in 1987.

Dr. Michael Grodin, director of Medical Ethics at the Boston University School of Medicine, said doctors should seek court intervention - http://www.deer-digest.com/?s=intervention when a mother refuses care only if the patient is mentally ill.

"Women have a right to refuse treatment. Women have a right to control their bodies. It is a dangerous slope. What's next? If someone doesn't seek prenatal care, what are we going to do, lock them up?"

By David B. Caruso

The bank will ensure that researchers can explore the enormous potential of this exciting science for the future benefit of patients," said Professor Colin Blakemore, chief executive of the Medical Research Council

"Stem cell research offers real promise for the treatment of currently incurable diseases. The bank will ensure that researchers can explore the enormous potential of this exciting science for the future benefit of patients," said Professor Colin Blakemore, chief executive of the Medical Research Council - http://search.usa.gov/search?affiliate=usagov&query=Council .

The bank was set up at the National Institute for 카지노사이트 - https://waferexport.com/ Biological Standards and Control at Potter's Bar, 12 miles north of London. Its mission is to store, characterize and grow cells and distribute them to researchers around the world.

The first two human embryonic stem cell lines to be deposited in the bank were developed at King's College London and the Center for Life in Newcastle, England.

Regulations on cloning and stem cell research vary across Europe and around the world. The most liberal rules apply in Britain, where scientists can apply for a license to create human embryos by cloning in order to extract stem - https://www.rewards-insiders.marriott.com/search.jspa?q=extract%20stem cells.

Stem cells can potentially grow into any type of human tissue. Scientists believe they could potentially be used to treat a range of diseases. Stem cells can be found in adults, but scientists believe they may not be as versatile as those in embryos.

Extracting cells from embryos created by cloning using a cell from a patient would in theory ensure the cell transplant is a perfect match, averting rejection by the immune system.

Neither a fund-raiser nor an account set up at a local bank has brought in much relief

He's starting to lose his balance and peripheral vision. The 50-year-old has very little short-term memory, and the formerly glib salesman now struggles to remember and pronounce words like "raspberry" in simple conversation. And the headaches are so severe, he doesn't want to get out of bed.

It's because the left side — and only the left side — of his brain is shrinking, and has been for about 10 years.

"Every once in awhile, I realize, 'Gee, I can't do that anymore,"' Mitchell said.

Doctors do not have a clue why this is happening, and say normally suspect causes — like multiple sclerosis or Alzheimer's disease — are not at play here because they would equally shrink both sides of the brain.

But in Mitchell's case, the left side of his brain is 10 percent smaller than the right.

"That's very, very uncommon," Dr. Juan Troncoso, associate professor of pathology and neurology at Baltimore's Johns Hopkins - http://www.ehow.com/search.html?s=Hopkins University, said of Mitchell's condition. "There are cases described of degenerative diseases that are dominant on one side of the brain. But then, over 10 years of progression, you'd expect the other side to have some kind of abnormality."

Mitchell is scheduled to have a brain biopsy at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., later this month, a procedure that could be fatal.

Even though there is no guarantee it will uncover the cause of his shrinking brain, both Mitchell and his wife, Cynthia, said he has to try.

"I just don't want to sit there and not do anything," he says.

Mitchell's rare case has been featured at medical symposiums, but still hasn't produced a diagnosis.

He's seen about 15 neurologists, who have performed a battery of tests but found no answers.

"It was puzzling to the physicians," said Dr. Patrice Duvernay, a neurologist for Intermountain Health Care in Salt Lake City who has treated Mitchell.

Duvernay said the left side of his brain will continue to slowly shrink until doctors find a solution.

The shrinkage is only visible by looking at an MRI or CT scan, but what's going on inside his skull has taken a big toll on Mitchell's quality of life.

He can watch a movie a hundred times and still not remember how it ends.

His wife can tell him to be ready in a half an hour to visit a friend's house, 카지노사이트 - http://kientrucnoithat24h.com/ and within 15 minutes he will have no idea why she's disappointed that he's not dressed.

The condition has completely changed Mitchell's personality. He now sleeps 12-14 hours a day, and said before he never slept more than six.

Sleeping and staying in bed about two days a week, he says, is one of the only ways to escape the constant headaches. A cabinet full of pain medication doesn't help.

Cynthia has seen her husband transform from a runner and hiker to a shy shut-in.

"It's hard, because David used to be such a vibrant extrovert," said Cynthia, who knows when her husband is having a bad day because there is a bulging vein in his forehead.

Mitchell also no longer enjoys socializing, because it frustrates him to probe for words while others wait.

"It's too hard to do it," Mitchell says. "I'm a lot quieter with people I don't know that well."

Another problem facing the couple is that they no longer have medical insurance. They say they were dropped after missing a recent payment.

Cynthia Mitchell estimated they will have racked up about $100,000 in bills by the time he has the biopsy. Neither a fund-raiser nor an account set up at a local bank has brought in much relief.

Despite worries over money and health, the Mitchells remain amazingly upbeat.

They have learned to laugh when David Mitchell forgets things, like how to tell the difference between a club and a spade on playing cards (he has to be reminded that spades don't have the "things sticking out").

"We laugh. We have to, or we'd cry," Cynthia Mitchell says.

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