An Elegant Defense

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An Elegant Defense Page 33

by Matt Richtel


  After Jason died, I stood at the base of his bed and thanked him for always being kind to the little guy. Depending on the setting, each of us can find ourselves as the little guy or the top dog, as needing or being able to give, as supplicant, friend, bully, or antagonist. Each of us, like microscopic bit players in a larger organism, also has an outsized power to signal cooperation, find harmony, to hasten hostilities or dampen them.

  The deep friendship I wound up forming with Jason captures a searing truth instructed by the immune system. We are in this together.

  Acknowledgments

  One day I was talking about the immune system for this book with Dr. Mike McCune, an accomplished researcher and clinician at the University of California, San Francisco. We’d spent hours talking at various points. I thanked him for the generosity of his time.

  He said, “I’m trying to build the world’s most conversational immunologist.”

  I asked what he meant, and he explained that immunology needs a translator, someone to bring these concepts to life and explain them to the public.

  Dr. McCune, I hope you feel that your time was invested wisely. This is a wish I have too for the dozens upon dozens of scientists and doctors to whom I owe an incredible debt. This group includes the men and women I wrote about and quoted in the book and many others whose names are not included here but whose time and wisdom proved invaluable to me. Please accept my deepest gratitude for your patience, your good humor, and above all, your scientific work. You have saved, strengthened, and lengthened many lives.

  Thanks to Dorsey Griffith for your patient research assistance. Vicki Yates, you’ve been a godsend on this and other projects.

  I am lucky to have found a family at William Morrow. Peter Hubbard, editor and friend, thank you for your humor, bedside manner, and great wisdom. Thanks to Nick Amphlett, ever present, ever able. Huge thanks, as always, to Liate Stehlik, a publisher, friend, and unflappable ship’s captain in the rocky book-world seas.

  Laurie Liss, my agent and sister slightly removed, much love. Our tree isn’t dead yet.

  I owe tremendous debt to Douglas Preston, world-class writer and teacher, who took on the role of sounding board and periodic editor for this book. I couldn’t have asked for better counsel.

  Thank you and love to my wife, Meredith Jewel Barad, the foundation of the whole damn thing, and to Milo and Mirabel, our angels, and Uncle Mort and Pickles, our pets. Thanks, Mom and Dad.

  To Dr. Mark Brunvand: You spent hours sharing, explaining, opening your heart, becoming teacher and friend. Thank you for all of that and for a lifetime spent doing the same for so many of your patients, steering the narrows.

  To Bob Hoff: I will forever carry your story because it taught me so much about courage. You weathered a brutal period in this country, and of course, in your own health and in the deaths of so many friends. Your dignity blows me away. Thank you for being so open. I find it pitiful that the pockets of discrimination remain, and I hope like hell that this sickness, this autoimmunity of bigotry, will subside before it leads to the catastrophic.

  To Linda Segre, I offer three words: grace under pressure. I realize it can’t be as easy as you make it sometimes look. I’m sure the reader shares my gratitude for your sharing of the challenges of making your own way while struggling with the demons of autoimmunity.

  To Merredith Branscombe, please accept a double shot of thanks: you told me your story and you acted as an eagle-eyed aide-de-camp in my journalistic thinking. Your experience as a writer and creator added a layer of insight that elevated this effort. Thank you.

  To Jason’s family, and to Beth, words are insufficient. You treated me like a brother. I am sorry for the loss of Jason and for Cathy. She was a blast of a human being, funny and warm and most certainly the font of Jason’s fire.

  Jason.

  Every so often, I talk to Jason. It’s usually a whisper after Milo, my son, has done something special on the baseball field. “Greenie,” I’ll say, “I’d have called you about that one.” Or “Did you see that, Greenie?”

  You remain in my heart. I count among my blessings that we came to call each other friend. Your light shines on.

  Index

  The pagination of this digital edition does not match the print edition from which the Index was created. To locate a specific entry, please use your e-book reader’s search tools.

  Note: Page references in italics indicate photographs.

  ABVD chemotherapy, 277–78

  Acquired immunological tolerance, 98–99

  Acute stress, 266–67

  Acyclovir, 369

  Adaptation, 238–39

  Adaptive immune system, 77, 146, 149–54

  antigen presentation, 151–54

  genetic recombination, 88–91

  HIV and, 348, 349

  Adderall, 231

  Adrenal glands, 206, 216, 267, 278

  Adrenaline, 206, 265, 267, 287, 288, 402–3

  AIDS. See HIV/AIDS

  Alien (movie), 264

  Alkan, Sefik, 140

  Allergic sensitization, 243–44

  Allergies, 236–37, 241–42

  Amish study, 242–45

  Allison, James, 295, 296–99, 305, 308–9, 330

  Alzheimer’s disease, 356–59, 360

  Ambien, 217, 353

  American College of Rheumatology, 214, 228, 355

  Amish, 242–45

  “Among School Children” (Yeats), 233

  Amyl nitrate, 176

  Anfinsen, Christian, 125, 131

  Antibacterial soaps, 235, 236, 246–47, 257–58

  Antibiotic resistance, 247–49, 259

  Antibiotics, 11, 82–85, 400

  Antibodies, 42–43, 66–67, 311

  Antibody diversity, 254–55

  Antibody-encoding genes, 88–91

  Antibody-forming precursor cells, 71–72

  Antibody-mediated immunity, 67

  Antigen presentation, 151–54

  Antigens, 42, 77, 100–101, 115, 135, 149–54

  Antikörper, 42

  Antimicrobial resistance, 247–49, 259

  Antinuclear antibodies (ANA) test, 208, 212

  Anti-Semitism, 224–25

  Apoptosis, 219–20

  Argonauts, 56, 93–94, 409

  Armstrong, Neil, 379

  Aselli, Gaspare, 38, 73

  Ashwell, Jonathan, 266

  Asthma, 241–42, 243, 244

  Astrocytes, 360–62

  Atkins diet, 197–98

  Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, 60

  Attenuated, 80

  Autoimmune disorder, 8–9, 91, 109, 133, 198

  of Hobbs, 228–30

  of Linda, 29–30, 199–201, 212, 216–18, 249, 351–53

  of Merredith, 30, 31–32, 226–27, 232–34, 399–400

  treatments, 29, 99–100, 143–44, 206–7, 216–18, 234–35

  Autoimmune response, 118–19

  Autoimmunity, 8–9, 91, 136, 202, 398

  diagnosis, 202, 212–14

  diagnosis of Linda, 29–30, 201, 212, 216

  diagnosis of Merredith, 31–32, 227, 229–30

  environmental factors, 215–16, 241

  genetics and, 226

  history, 203–10

  sex and, 9, 214–15

  sleeplessness and, 272

  Automobiles, 259

  Avian influenza, 169–70

  Axilla, 334–35

  Azathioprine, 228

  Azidothymidine (AZT), 183–84, 193

  B7-1, 295, 296–97, 313–14

  B7-2, 295, 296–97

  Bacteria, 49–50, 51, 258–59

  antibiotic resistance, 247–49

  microbiome, 250–55, 257

  Baker, Brian, 189, 343–44, 349

  Barad, Meredith, 280, 290–91, 393

  Barker, Clyde F., 95

  Barres, Ben, 360, 362–64, 408

  Barré-Sinoussi, Françoise, 179

  Basel Institute for Immuno
logy, 88, 140

  Basic science, 122–23

  Basophils, 43, 117

  B cells (B lymphocytes), 46, 55, 71–74, 76, 76–77

  antibody-encoding genes, 88–91

  BEAM chemotherapy, 319–20, 321–22

  Beethe, Poppy, 335, 373–74, 378

  Beginner’s Guide to Winning the Nobel Prize, The (Doherty), 102

  Bingo Experiment, 185

  Bird flu, 169–70

  Black Plague, 49–50, 169

  Blood-brain barrier (BBB), 359–60

  Bluestone, Jeffrey, 295

  Bob Hoff. See Hoff, Robert T. “Bob”

  Body temperature, 109–10

  Boehm, Thomas, 106

  Bone marrow, 70–72, 207

  Bone marrow transplant, 92–93, 100–101, 319–20, 321–22

  Boston Consulting Group, 28, 199–200, 201

  Boulder High School, 15–17

  Bowman, Carol, 198

  Bowman, Linda. See Segre, Linda

  Brain, 7, 356–65

  cells and immune function, 360–62

  Branscombe, Bea, 222, 223–26

  Branscombe, Merredith, 11, 30–32, 221–35, 223

  autoimmune disorder of, 30–32, 31–32, 226–27, 398, 399–400

  autoimmunity diagnosis, 31–32, 227, 229–30

  autoimmunity symptoms, 227, 232–34

  autoimmunity treatment, 227–29, 231–32, 234, 400

  early life of, 30–31, 222–23

  family background of, 222–26

  genetic predisposition to autoimmunity, 225–26

  lifestyle changes of, 234–35

  Brentuximab vedotin, 322–23, 328, 331–32, 334, 336, 368, 369, 370

  Bristol-Myers Squibb, 295, 312, 329, 332

  British Journal of Homeopathy, 236

  British Society for Immunology, 64

  Brodie, Maurice, 80–81

  Brunvand, Mark, 383–84

  connection with patients, 325–27

  early life of, 325, 327

  Fauci and, 320, 325

  HIV/AIDS and, 161–62, 166

  Jason’s treatment, 277, 319–20, 322–23, 328, 334, 335–36, 367–76, 378–79, 385–86, 388–89, 391

  Mount McKinley climb, 324–25

  Bruton, Ogden, 66–67

  Bubonic plague, 49–50, 168, 169

  “Buffalo hump,” 189

  Bursa of Fabricius, 37, 67–68, 70

  B vitamins, 400

  California Institute of Technology (Caltech), 131, 250–51, 257

  Cancer, 6, 59, 275–79, 356, 397

  monoclonal antibody therapeutics, 310–18

  sleep loss and, 270

  wound healing and, 303–4, 306–7

  Carter, Jimmy, 386

  CD8, 177, 191, 345–47

  CD19, 330

  CD28, 295, 297, 313–14, 315

  CD30, 322, 336

  Celebrex, 228, 231

  Celiac disease, 29, 242

  Cell division, 15, 54–55, 304, 306–7

  Cell phones, 259

  Celsus, Aulus Cornelius, 110–11

  Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 74, 78, 79, 166, 168

  Charity Hospital (New Orleans), 68–69

  Chemotherapy, 130

  immunotherapy compared with, 144

  Jason’s treatments, 277–79, 280–81, 291–92, 319–20, 321, 369–71

  Chester Beatty Research Institute, 60

  Chevron, 197

  Chrysler Concorde, 19

  Circumstantial evidence, 214, 216

  Citalopram (Celexa), 328

  Classical conditioning, 150

  Cleaning products, 239, 240, 246–47, 257–58

  Clinical Chemistry, 205

  Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10), 234

  Colds, 7, 112, 395, 399

  Colon cancer, 15

  Colonic cleansing, 190

  Colorado Blood Cancer Institute, 319–20, 334, 371

  Columbia School of Journalism, 284–85, 286, 288–89, 290

  Complement component 1q (C1q), 363

  Compound E, 206–7

  Concerned Fellows League (CFL), 16, 285, 336

  Conflict, 397

  Connors, Mark, 184–85, 187–88, 346–47

  Cooper, Max, 68–70, 92–93, 100, 107

  Cooperation, 396–98

  Coors Events Center, 11–12

  Cortisol, 206–7, 267

  Cosmas, Saint, 94, 95

  “Covering up,” 210

  Crohn’s disease, 9, 198

  Crying, 365

  CTLA-4, 295–99, 305, 308, 313–14, 332

  Cutter Laboratories, 82

  Cyclobenzaprine, 231

  Cyclosporine, 100

  Cytokines, 133–37, 315–16, 403–4

  interleukin-1 discovery, 125–28

  Cytokine storm, 170, 315–16, 330, 391

  Cytotoxic (killer) T cells, 103–5, 117–19

  Damian, Saint, 94, 95

  Dampening the immune system, 99, 256–57, 258, 270, 271

  Delwart, Eric, 51

  Denali, 324–25

  Dendritic cells, 114–15, 115, 134–35, 313

  Dendron, 114

  Denver Broncos, 335, 372, 376

  Denver General Hospital, 161–62, 278

  Denver Post, 222–23

  Depression, 268, 270, 289, 328

  Dermatomyositis, 229

  Diabetes, 6, 9, 189, 242, 398

  Diamond Foods, 249, 352

  Diet, 197–98, 365, 398, 403

  Dinarello, Charles, 119–28, 187, 401, 402

  early life of, 121–22

  fever and inflammation research, 109, 110, 119–21, 123–24, 136–37

  interleukin-1 discovery, 125–28

  rabbit research, 120–21, 124–25, 131

  Direct evidence, 213–14

  Dirt eating, 235, 246

  Disinfectants, 239, 240, 246–47, 257–58

  Diversity, 348–50, 396. See also Immune diversity

  DNA, 50, 145, 178, 264, 304–5

  Doherty, Peter, 102–5, 145, 192, 318

  Dulbecco, Renato, 87–88

  Dunne, Jack, 176

  Dust mites, 241

  Dvorak, Harold, 303

  Ehrlich, Paul, 41, 41–43, 204–5

  Eichler, Joseph, 197

  Eisenhower, Dwight D., 122

  Enbrel, 219–20, 228, 231, 353–55

  Engleman, Ephraim, 404

  Environment

  autoimmunity and, 215–16, 241

  immune system and, 69, 239–41

  microbiota and, 254

  Eosinophils, 117, 244, 245

  Epidemiology, 175–76

  Epinephrine, 267, 287, 403

  Epstein-Barr virus, 263

  Erythrocyte sedimentation rate, 21–22

  Escherichia coli (E. coli), 50, 154, 238

  Eukaryotic parasites, 51

  European Journal of Immunology, 117

  Evolution, 43–44, 49, 106–7, 214, 238–39, 252–53, 266–67, 276–77, 364, 406

  Exercise, 402–4

  Fabricius ab Aquapendente, 37

  Fauci, Anthony, 65, 138–39, 143, 397, 398

  Brunvand and, 320, 325

  on cytokines, 134, 137

  HIV/AIDS research, 164–65, 173, 175, 176, 179, 180–81

  on natural killer cells, 119

  on neutrophils, 116–17, 126

  Fentanyl, 369

  Festival of Life, 45–47, 66, 134, 405–6

  Fever, 109–11, 120–21, 123, 125–26, 397–98

  Fibroblast, 301–2

  Fight-or-flight response, 266–67, 269–70, 271–72, 286–87, 288

  Flash Gordon (comic), 129

  Fleming, Alexander, 83–84

  Flexeril, 217

  Flu, 59, 74–75

  Flu pandemic of 1918, 167–69

  Food allergies, 241–42

  Food and Drug Administration (FDA), 183, 219, 228, 248, 317

  fast-track designation, 332–33

 
Ford Windstar, 3–4, 281, 382, 408

  Formaldehyde, 81

  Formalin, 81

  “Frankenmouse,” 311–12

  Fukuda, Keiji, 169–70

  Gallagher, Danny, 12

  Gallo, Robert, 177–80

  Gamma globulins, 66–67

  Garrod, Alfred, 204

  Gender differences, 214–15

  General Services Administration (GSA), 24

  Genes (genetics), 53, 88–91, 178, 242, 250

  antibody-encoding genes, 88–91

  Genetic recombination, 88–91

  Genetics Society of America, 99

  Genetic structure, 88

  Germ killing, 234–35, 236, 239, 240, 245–47, 257–58

  Amish study, 242–45

  Giardia, 51, 86

  Glaser, Ronald, 261–63, 262

  Alzheimer’s disease of, 357–59, 364–65

  death of, 408

  stress and immune response research, 262–63, 265–66, 286

  Glaucoma, 363

  Glial cells, 360–61

  Glucocorticoid, 267

  Glucocorticoid receptor, 266

  “Gold shots,” 209

  Gout, 204

  Grady, Denise, 329–30

  Granulocytes, 117

  Green Man Group, 18–19

  Greenstein, Catherine, 4, 15, 20, 21, 280, 376, 382–89, 407

  Greenstein, Guy, 15, 384, 407

  Greenstein, Jason

  arrest of, 338

  back issues of, 385–91

  BEAM and transplant, 319–20, 321–22

  bone marrow transplant, 101, 319–20, 321–22

  brentuximab treatment, 328, 331–32, 334

  business ventures of, 3–4, 18–19, 291, 331–32

  cancer diagnosis of, 4–6, 9–10, 10, 11–12, 19–22, 275–77

  chemotherapy treatments, 4–6, 11–12, 277–79, 280–81, 291–92, 319–20, 321, 369–71

  counsel of friends, 335–39

  death of, 393–94

  early life of, 13–18, 14

  father Joel and, 13–16, 17–18

  girlfriend Beth and, 4–6, 20, 281–84, 323, 337, 377–78, 391

  hospice care discussion, 373–75

  nicknames of, 5, 13

  psychological counseling, 320–21

  relapses, 381–83, 385–86, 390

  remission, 381, 383–85

  storytelling of, 280–81

 

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