Amy Tan:
sleeping 10 to 12 hours a day
WPVIABC
Philadelphia, PA
by Dawn Heefner
21 Apr 2004
ABC
Action News WPVI
Warmer weather has
brought Delaware Valley residents outside for work, sports, and gardening.
But as we become more active, so do the ticks that cause Lyme Disease. One
high-profile sufferer wants everyone to be aware of the risk. Amy Tan is
best known for her novels. But these days Tan is telling a second storyabout
her long struggle with Lyme Disease.
Amy Tan: Sleeping
10 to 12 hours a day
More than 4 years ago,
Tan developed tingling and numbness in her feet, then insomnia, then headaches,
then fatigue.
A host of doctors offered
a variety of diagnoses, one even thought it was post-traumatic stress, and
prescribed Prozac. Shed asked about the blotchy rash that developed
on her leg early on, but was told it wasnt related. And the doctor
didnt think she was a likely candidate for Lyme Disease.
I looked up
Lyme Disease on the internet, and saw a website with photos of rashes,
and was shocked to see my rash there.
Lyme Disease is spread
by the bite of infected deer ticks, which are smaller than the familiar
dog ticks. Tan split her time between California and here on the east coast,
where Lyme Disease is highest.
By the time she was
diagnosed, Tan was having memory problems, nightmare, and hallucinations.
The spiral bacteria had gone into her nervous system. She was put on antibiotics:
not the short course normally recommended, but a longer term one.
Only after
6 weeks did I start feeling that I was getting some of my energy back.
But the recovery has
been slow. Pain in her hands and feet make getting around harder. And her
memory and thinking slip when shes tired.