Fifteen-year-old San Diegan Terry
Leach wants to destroy Huntington’s disease, the condition that has devastated
him since his toddler years and threatens to take his life very soon.
Terry’s story deeply moved San Diego
artist Lee Ellingson to imagine a different outcome. In Lee’s Superman-like
comic-book-style rendition (below), Terry has overcome HD by becoming
“SuperTerry.” SuperTerry knocks out Huntington’s and saves the world from the
ravages of the deadly disease that afflicts an estimated 30,000 Americans and
could devastate as many as 250,000 more Americans who live at risk.
SuperTerry is vigorous, powerful, and
triumphant. He beams with the joy of restored health and newfound happiness
that the real-life Terry – along with every other victim of HD and juvenile HD
– hopes for as scientists seek effective treatments and a cure.
“Wouldn’t it be great if this
Huntington’s disease was like some kind of monster and Terry had super powers
and could defeat the monster?” Lee told me in an interview. “That was my idea.
It just kills me that a kid like Terry can have a disease like this at such a
young age.”
Lee recently learned of Terry because
of his own son Arnold’s struggle to live. Terry and Arnold attend the same
after-school care program for disabled children and teens.
Arnold, who turns 13 later this
month, was born hydrocephalic, a condition once known as “water on the
brain.” He had an emergency operation immediately after birth to insert a shunt
that drains fluid from the brain. He has had 23 more operations to adjust the
shunt. Arnold also has autism and cerebral palsy.
Although Lee has made drawings for
Arnold, SuperTerry is his very first piece illustrating a disease. He was
shocked to learn that HD can affect children.
“He’s aware of what’s going on, but
his body doesn’t do what it should be doing,” Lee, whose work includes
background layout for the 1990s TV series Attack
of the Killer Tomatoes and pieces for the San Diego Museum of Natural
History, said of Terry. “That’s what’s especially heartbreaking for me. He’s a
normal 15-year-old kid inside.”
Lee imagined the monster by thinking
of the horrors of HD.
“He’s kind of like a blob,” Lee said.
“He’s transparent and green. Slimy! I just wanted him to look real mean.
“I’ve always been pretty religious,
but seeing all these kids really tests your faith,” Lee continued. “Kids like
Terry and Arnold are the closest things on earth to an angel. Terry will never
steal or cheat or rob or hurt anyone.”
Lee made the illustration based on
photographs. On August 2 the two met in person for the first time at a
fundraising event for the San Diego Chapter of the Huntington’s Disease Society
of America (HDSA-San Diego). Lee presented Terry with the illustration.
“Terry was very appreciative of the
picture,” his mother Angela told me. “He liked it a lot.”
Lee Ellingson (left) and Terry Leach
A feeding tube, operations, and looming death
SuperTerry HD treatments are needed now.
HD patients constantly struggle to
maintain weight because they burn large amounts of calories and suffer from
severely hampered swallowing. In 2010, in an end-of-life measure, the real
Terry started taking meals and water through a feeding tube connected several
times each day to a surgically produced hole in his abdomen. Before the
operation, he weighed only 67 pounds. He now weighs 100, enough to help extend
his life but still way below the average of 126 pounds for a 15-year-old male.
Terry’s body reacts to the hole as if
it were an ulcer, causing him to produce large amounts of saliva that he wipes
away with a towel constantly at hand. Doctors will inject botox into his
salivary glands to diminish their output. He’s also gotten botox in his arms
and legs to relieve pain.
Terry has undergone leg and foot
operations to further relieve pain and tightness, correct deformities, and
allow him, with assistance, to occasionally leave his wheelchair and walk. (For
further background on Terry, please click here and here.)
Terry
Because he can’t talk, Terry
partially communicates through a language program on his iPad, which allows him
to interact with people as the device’s speaker pronounces words and phrases
that he selects. He takes regular classes at Madison High School, where he is
starting tenth grade. Last fall he made the honor roll by carrying a
grade-point average of at least 3.5. In middle school he received a number of
other awards.
Terry loves computer games. During my
visit to the Leach household, he played Club Penguin while I spoke to his
mother for 90 minutes.
“He’s always happy,” said Angela, a single
parent who depends on Medi-Cal and other programs for financial assistance and,
when she misses work because of Terry’s medical appointments and crises, the
generosity of her employer, the San Diego Convention and Visitors Bureau. “He’s always wanting to give me a hug. And he’s so strong. He deals
with everything and never quits fighting. He never complains, either. He’s
always wanting to help. Everybody that knows Terry sees the light within him.”
However, Angela knows that, unless
treatments become available very soon, Terry will die of HD. Recently a cousin
of Terry’s with juvenile HD died at the age of 23. Other juvenile HD patients
die in their teens or even childhood.
Angela Leach with the original drawing of SuperTerry (photo by Gene Veritas)
Raising awareness, saving the children
Knowing how little time remains for
Terry, both Angela and Lee want to use SuperTerry to raise funds for HD
research and increase awareness about HD and the difficult issues surrounding
it.
Lee plans to expand SuperTerry into a
comic strip and perhaps even a graphic novel about HD. Angela hopes to sell
SuperTerry t-shirts in collaboration with HDSA.
“I don’t want any fame or glory,” Lee
said. “I just want to help raise money. I want Terry to be the star.” As
research progresses, science will also find ways to cure other diseases, too,
he added. Such research could also benefit Arnold.
Above, San Diego Chargers football stars Philip Rivers (left rear) and Antonio Gates with Arnold Ellingson (left foreground) and Terry at HDSA-San Diego fundraiser in spring 2012. Below, friends Arnold and Terry enjoy Disneyland together.
Angela hopes that her and Lee’s
efforts will help inform HD families about the option of genetic testing so
that couples can avoid passing the disease onto their children through the use
of preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) or in the event of pregnancy – and depending
on the couple’s personal and religious beliefs – early termination of the pregnancy.
She wants SuperTerry to “save the children” from HD.
“I would never want another mother to
go through what I did,” explained Angela, whose husband at the time (now an HD
patient living in a nursing home in Indiana) did not tell her about the disease
in his family until after Terry was born and the husband himself developed symptoms.
HD families need to “get more proactive” about testing and family planning, she
added.
“Terry’s
life shows you what you face if you take a chance” by conceiving without all of
the information, genetic counseling, and other resources available to HD
families, she said.
“It would be
best to be proactive to minimize that situation,” Angela continued. “It’s a
lifelong situation. I’ve watched Terry grow up and deteriorate. There are so
many challenges. We’re forever fighting.
“I don’t want his life to be in
vain,” she concluded, recalling how an old friend’s son who had been in baby
photos with Terry was now an imposing teenage football player. “I was happy for
her, but it broke my heart. That could have been Terry. He could have been a
football player. Or at least talk.”
1 comment:
I lost my Keely to JHD at the age of 17, and I hate this disease. Terry, you look so much like Keely to makes my heart ache. Keely was always smiling and happy too! Hang in there, buddy!
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