WATERBURY, Conn. (Ivanhoe Broadcast News)
-- There's often a battle among doctors about the value of alternative
medicine. But one physician has a foot in both worlds and is hoping that can
save some of his patients from a lifetime of pain.
Three years ago, Jeanne Langlais couldn't
pick up a brush to fulfill her favorite pastime. "Couldn't paint anymore,"
she says. "I couldn't lift my arms up. Your thighs ached when you stood up,
my arms ached, my neck ached. I couldn't understand why."
Langlais also could not exercise. The
chronic muscle pain forced her into early retirement. After two years of
tests, she finally got the diagnosis: fibromyalgia. But finding a treatment
was another story. "Anti-inflammatories, pain killers, anti-depressants, and
none of them worked for me."
She sought an alternative treatment called
intravenous micronutrient therapy. IVMT is a cocktail of highly concentrated
vitamins injected into the vein. Langlais says: "About the 5th treatment I
started to feel better, and by the 6th treatment I had no pain. I was
clicking my heels."
David
Katz, M.D., a Yale-trained physician, is one of a few doctors using IVMT.
He's treated more than 60 patients so far. About 80 percent of them have had
good results.
"If I'm able to help patients who for
years have suffered and couldn't find help -- it doesn't get any better than
that," says Dr. Katz, who is now a preventive medicine specialist at
Yale-Griffin Prevention Research Center in Derby, Conn.
He is conducting a clinical trial on IVMT
sponsored by the National Institutes of Health. He says the treatment has
few side effects, but a major drawback is cost. It's not covered by
insurance ... not yet, at least.
"If we prove that this is a cost-effective
therapy for fibromyalgia, it then becomes a reimbursable commodity," Dr.
Katz tells Ivanhoe.
For
Langlais, the $55-weekly injections are a hardship. But she'll continue
them, she says, because of the promising picture they paint for a future
without pain.