Pair Seek Proof of a Cluster
Many ALS cases in Pomperaug area
Tuesday, November 26, 2002
By Chris Gardner
© 2002 Republican-American
There is still no proof of a cluster of Lou Gehrig's disease in western
Connecticut, but Susan Hufford and Ray Chenkus remain suspicious.
Hufford, who lives part-time in Roxbury, and Chenkus, of Southbury, lost their
spouses to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, the fatal neuro-muscular disorder that
killed baseball great Lou Gehrig in 1941.
Eighteen months ago, they asked residents of western Connecticut to contact them
if they knew someone who had ALS, a rare disease that affects two out of every
100,000 people in the United States.
They had already documented about 275 cases in the area, including several in
Southbury, but they got calls from about 50 more people after their story "Red
Flags Raised By Disease" ran in The Sunday Republican.
They haven't completed their research, so they're putting out a second call for
information, hoping to document a cluster.
"I don't want to alarm anybody, but we need to find answers," said
Hufford, who will ask new callers to fill out a confidential questionnaire. The
results of the study will be shared with researchers and doctors who want to
know how ALS is contracted, and ¯ perhaps more importantly ¯ how it can be
cured.
About 30,000 people in the U.S. have the disease, which attacks nerve cells in
the spinal cord and brain that control muscle movement. Victims, usually
middle-aged adults, lose their ability to move as the nerves shut down.
Researchers suspect something in the environment causes some people to contract
the disease, so they're studying cluster areas to find a link between victims.
The largest known cluster is at Kelly Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas,
where more than 100 current and former military employees have been diagnosed.
There's another cluster near Middleborough, Mass., a town of approximately
20,500 between Boston and Providence.
Hufford said more attention can be paid to ALS victims in the area if a cluster
can be documented in western Connecticut.
She already has made contact with influential people, such as U.S. Sen. Hillary
Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., who want to help. Hufford's late husband, Michael Zaslow,
was an Emmy Award-winning actor who is best remembered for portraying the
villainous Roger Thorpe on CBS's "Guiding Light" and composer David
Renaldi on ABC's "One Life to Live."
She uses her husband's connections because he was determined to find a cure
before he died in 1998, about a year after his diagnosis. After forming
Zazangels, an organization that raises money for ALS research, Zaslow and
Hufford went to Washington to lobby former House Speaker Newt Gingrich for money
for research.
Hufford also enlists help from Hollywood to raise funds. Every year her
organization hosts a benefit Broadway play; this year's performance of
"Sing for a Cure: An Evening of Love Songs by Richard Rodgers" will be
Feb. 10 in New York. Actor Alec Baldwin is an honorary chairman for the event.
Chenkus' fund-raising efforts have been felt locally. Up until this year, he
coordinated a benefit golf tournament in Heritage Village that raised more than
$100,000 for research.
The tournament was held in memory of his wife, Gail, who died of ALS in 1999,
exactly one year to the day after Zaslow died. Chenkus, who teaches science and
mathematics at Rochambeau Middle School in Southbury, said he is bothered no one
can tell him how his wife got the disease.
"We don't have any idea. That's the frustrating part," he said.
He suspects there is a link between ALS and gardening, specifically the risk
posed by ticks that carry Lyme Disease.
Gail Chenkus, who worked for the Heritage Development Group in Heritage Village,
loved tending her garden and often came inside with ticks on her, he said. She
also was exposed to ticks from the family's cats, which roamed outdoors.
Ray Chenkus said his wife was never tested for Lyme Disease, but suspects she
had it when she died.
He said his theory was bolstered last year when he talked to a woman from
Maryland who also suspects she got ALS through Lyme Disease.
"I'm not saying that's how people get it, but it's a theory," he said.
At Kelly Air Force Base, researchers are looking at a link between any one of
numerous health hazards, including contaminated water, asbestos, rats and
radioactive waste.
Chenkus and Hufford don't know of any environmental threats in western
Connecticut that could be linked to ALS, but they remain concerned because more
people continue to get the disease.
Chenkus said he recently learned of two more adults in Southbury who were
diagnosed.
"We got more calls than we expected last year," he said. "I've
got a feeling that this is a cluster."
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* Email can also be sent to Susan Hufford at shufford@michaelzaslow.com
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Teaming Up To Find Answers For ALS
Lou Gehrig's Disease Claimed Pair's Spouses
By Chris Gardner
April 29, 2001
© Copyright 2001 Republican-American
Southbury -- In laboratories across America, researchers are studying why some people become afflicted with Lou Gehrig's disease.
They may not be scientists, but
Ray Chenkus and Susan Hufford are helping to find the elusive breakthrough to
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, the disease that killed baseball great Lou Gehrig.
Chenkus, of Southbury, and Hufford, who lives part time in Roxbury, were brought
together after their spouses died from the fatal neuromuscular disorder.
Gail Chenkus died December 6, 1999, exactly one year to the day after Hufford's
husband, Michael Zaslow, died.
The two share other
coincidences. Most notably, they live within a few miles of each other in
a region that seems to have a cluster of ALS cases.
About 30,000 people in the United States have ALS. Chenkus and Hufford
know of 275 men and women in western Connecticut who are afflicted. They
think that's a high number, so they've started to gather evidence to support a
theory that suggests ALS may have a geographical component.
"Something seems to be triggering it," said Chenkus, who teaches
science and mathematics at Rochambeau Middle School. "We want to
determine the relationships between people and find out why, in some places
there are higher occurrences than others."
Symptoms usually begin to show up in middle age. Chenkus said his wife,
who worked for the Heritage Development Group in Heritage Village, was in
perfect health before she slowly began to lose control of her muscles. One
day, her gait became unsteady and she lost her balance.
Eventually, she couldn't breathe, move, swallow or speak without assistance, and
she had to communicate using eye movements. She fought the disease for
seven years before she died of complications.
Others don't live as long. Zaslow, who was best known for his character
Roger Thorpe in the soap opera "Guiding Light", had the disease for
about a year.
Before he died, he and Hufford started ZazAngels, an organization that raises
money for ALS research. In honor of Zaslow, the group will host a benefit
Broadway play May 6 at the Neil Simon Theater in Manhattan.
Besides raising money, Hufford is equally concerned with the cluster of ALS
cases in western Connecticut. "We have a list of names, but we'd like
other people (who have ALS) to contact us," she said. Victims and
their families will be asked to complete a short questionnaire. Hufford
and Chenkus hope to find a pattern that may uncover a cause and, ultimately, a
cure.
There are other studies of cluster cases, most notably in Texas, where more than
40 current and former employees of an Air Force base in San Antonio were
diagnosed with ALS. The federal government is also studying Gulf War
veterans to determine a link between veterans and military service.
Like Hufford, Chenkus is raising money for research and patient care.
After his wife was diagnosed, he coordinated a benefit golf tournament in
Heritage Village that in the past six years has raised more than $100,000.
This year's tournament will be July 23. Chenkus and Hufford are soliciting
celebrities to attend the event.
Chenkus got in contact with Hufford after she donated money to his tournament
last year. The two became fast friends, and they talk on the phone
frequently. She helped convince him to keep running the tournament after
his wife died.
"I thought about giving it up, but I was coaxed back," he said.
"Gail is the only reason I keep it going. It's to honor her
memory."
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TO CONTACT
To reach Ray Chenkus or Susan Hufford contact the ALS Answering Service at
(203) 267-5222 and leave your name, address and telephone number. A
representative will respond to your call.
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Copyright © 1999 by Michael
Zaslow's ZazAngels. All rights reserved.
01/04/06 05:14:23 PM
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