[The title
was written by my editor.]
Surfing exposes cystic fibrosis patients to ocean salt water, something
that doctors in Australia originally discovered and which led to the
development of hypertonic saline treatment.
by John
Tyburski
Copyright © Daily
Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
For some,
surfing is a way of life. For a few suffering from cystic fibrosis, it is a way
for life. One family of seven illustrates how.
Rob and
Paulette Monelone have five children, three of which suffer from cystic
fibrosis, or CF, a degenerative genetic disease that involves thick, viscous
secretions in primarily the lungs but also in the pancreas, liver, and
intestine. There is no cure for CF, and the lifespan typically does not extend
beyond about 40 years. Many CF patients die in their teens. Approximately
70,000 people worldwide suffer from CF.
The three
Monelone children with CF, or the “CF-ers,” as the family affectionately calls
them, have joined a growing number of CF patients who surf as a means of
loosening the thick mucus that collects in their lungs. As Australian doctors
first noted about ten years ago, the salty sea water that surfing exposes one
to helps lubricate airways and facilitates the expulsion of the congestion.
“We have
found the silver lining to it all and that has been through surfing,” Paulette
Montelone said recently while at San Onofre State Beach in Southern California
with her children. “It’s helping them breathe better… but it’s also helping us,
as a family, enjoy something together.”
Several
organizations oriented toward supporting and promoting surfing among CF
sufferers have formed, including the Mauli Ola Foundation. “Mauli Ola” is
Hawaiian for “breath of life.” The Foundation links patients with professional
surfers, including Sunny Garcia and Kelly Slater.
“They’re
spitting up their mucous. I mean I’m out there going, ‘hey cough it up man. No
shame,’” said Josh Baxter, a world champion who volunteers for Mauli Ola and
often surfs with the Montelone children.
The
Monelones travel from their home in Yorba Linda, California, to the beach
weekly in the summer and often camps at San Onofre for days at a time.
“I still
fear that, like, I’m gonna die or my brother and sister might,” Michael, the
oldest of the CF-ers said. “I know that could happen but I try and put it in
the back of my head so that I can keep moving through all the days.”
No comments:
Post a Comment