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Psychologists want ability to prescribe drugs

By Blythe Bernhard
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
03/10/2008

For the last five years, Donna McArthur has seen a psychologist every week for one hour.

Then once a month, she travels 80 miles to spend 20 minutes with a psychiatrist to get prescriptions for antidepressants.

She wouldn't have to make the extra trip under a proposed law now making its way through committees in the Missouri Legislature. Two similar bills, sponsored by Rep. Danielle Moore. R-Fulton, and Sen. Jack Goodman R-Mount Vernon, would give psychologists the authority to prescribe some psychiatric drugs after receiving additional training.

A similar bill was introduced in Illinois last year but did not make it through the approval process. Supporters in Missouri believe their bill has enough co-sponsors to get passed.

Advocates say the law is needed to address the lack of psychiatrists in the state, particularly in rural areas. There are an estimated 350 psychiatrists and 1,800 psychologists in the state, according to the Missouri Psychological Association.

On the other side of the debate, some doctors question the safety of expanding prescribing privileges to psychologists who don't undergo the same medical training.

McArthur, a retired restaurant owner, travels to Springfield, Mo., to see a psychiatrist because she could not find one closer to her home in Branson.

"If I happen to have a bad day two days after I've seen (the psychiatrist), the chances of me remembering that and bringing it to her attention are slim," said McArthur, 45. "The psychologist is going to be more apt to control, regulate and monitor my dosage. She's the one who's monitoring my ups and downs every week."

Psychologists generally treat mental health disorders through behavioral and talk therapy. Typically, psychologists hold doctorate degrees in their field but are not required to attend medical school. Patients must visit a psychiatrist or another medical doctor to be prescribed medications, including those used to treat depression and anxiety.

But the wait to see a psychiatrist can take months in many areas, says Mark Skrade, president of the Missouri Psychological Association.

That's why primary care physicians such as gynecologists and general practitioners prescribe up to 85 percent of psychiatric medicines. Skrade argues that psychologists generally spend more time with patients and are better suited for mental health care.

Two states, Louisiana and New Mexico, allow psychologists to write prescriptions
.

Psychiatrists who oppose the legislation say the training required would not be enough to protect patients.

"Pharmacology is very complicated, and there's so much interaction between drugs," said Dr. David Ohlms, a psychiatrist at CenterPointe Hospital in St. Charles. "I think they're going to make mistakes."

Others say the change could put more patients on drugs they might not need. A new British study comparing clinical trials shows that antidepressants are of little value to people with mild to moderate depression.

Psychologists, through behavioral therapy, already have the power to treat the majority of their patients, said Dr. John Abramson, a clinical instructor at Harvard Medical School and author of "Overdosed America."

"The cause of those symptoms is usually not medical," Abramson said. "It has to do with the way a person is living his or her life and often in relation to their past experiences."

But psychologists say the prescribing power also would also allow them to take patients off drugs when appropriate. The main goal of the measures is to remove barriers to mental health care by allowing one caregiver the ability to evaluate and fully treat patients, Skrade said.

"This is another tool in a psychologist's toolbox that opens up access to patients and decreases expense for patients," he said.

Thomas Parquette of Branson, Mo., spoke last month to state legislative committees in support of the proposed law. Parquette, 60, has tried 28 combinations of drugs to treat bipolar disorder and depression. Having to see a psychiatrist or other physician to get the prescriptions has led to delays of five weeks in some cases, he said.

"It requires modifications, changes, different pairings of prescriptions," Parquette said. "This is best handled from a patient's perspective by the psychologist who is treating me."

bbernhard@post-dispatch.com | 314-340-8129

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Daring to Think Differently About Schizophrenia

By Alex Bernson
02/24/2008

NORTH WALES, Pa.   SCIENTISTS who develop drugs are familiar with disappointment   brilliant theories that dont pan out or promising compounds derailed by unexpected side effects. They are accustomed to small steps and wrong turns, to failure after failure   until, in a moment, with hard work, brainpower and a lot of luck, all those little failures turn into one big success.

For Darryle D. Schoepp, that moment came one evening in October 2006, while he was seated at his desk in Indianapolis.

At the time, he was overseeing early-stage neuroscience research at Eli Lilly & Company and colleagues had just given him the results from a human trial of a new schizophrenia drug that worked differently than all other treatments. From the start, their work had been a long shot. Schizophrenia is notoriously difficult to treat, and Lillys drug   known only as LY2140023   relied on a promising but unproved theory about how to combat the disorder.

When Dr. Schoepp saw the results, he leapt up in excitement. The drug had reduced schizophrenic symptoms, validating the efforts of hundreds of scientists, inside and outside of Lilly, who had labored together for almost two decades trying to unravel the disorders biological underpinnings.

The trial results were a major breakthrough in neuroscience, says Dr. Thomas R. Insel, director of the National Institute of Mental Health. For 50 years, all medicines for the disease had worked the same way   until Dr. Schoepp and other scientists took a different path.

This drug really looks like its quite a different animal, Dr. Insel says. This is actually pretty innovative.

Dr. Schoepp and other scientists had focused their attention on the way that glutamate, a powerful neurotransmitter, tied together the brains most complex circuits. Every other schizophrenia drug now on the market aims at a different neurotransmitter, dopamine.

The Lilly results have fueled a wave of pharmaceutical industry research into glutamate. Companies are searching for new treatments, not just for schizophrenia, but also for depression and Alzheimers disease and other unseen demons of the brain that torment tens of millions of people worldwide.

Driving the industrys interest is the huge market for drugs for brain and psychiatric diseases. Worldwide sales total almost $50 billion annually, even though existing medicines have moderate efficacy and have side effects that range from reduced libido to diabetes.

The glutamate researchers warn that their quest for new treatments for schizophrenia is far from complete. The results of the Lilly trial covered only 196 patients and must be validated by much larger trials, the last of which may not be finished until at least 2011. Other glutamate drugs are even further away from approval. And even if the drugs win that approval, they may be viewed skeptically by doctors who have been disappointed by side effects in other drugs that were once been hailed as breakthroughs.

Still, for Dr. Schoepp, the drugs progress so far is cause for celebration   and relief.

I dont think people appreciate how much money, time and good technical research goes into what we do, he says. Sometimes, people think the idea is the thing. I think the idea can be the easy part.

LILLY continues to develop LY2140023 and has begun a trial of 870 patients that is scheduled to be completed in January 2009. But Dr. Schoepp is no longer involved in its development. He left Lilly in April to become senior vice president and head of neuroscience research at Merck, where he oversees a division of 300 researchers and support staff members.

Dr. Schoepps new base is a modest office on the top floor of a four-story Merck building here in North Wales, north of Philadelphia. He has a view of the buildings big front lawn and a busy two-lane road called the Sumneytown Pike. The huge Merck research complex called West Point, where 4,000 scientists and support staff members work, is less than a mile to the north.

For Dr. Schoepp, 52, the Merck job is the latest stop in a research career that began at Osco Drugs store No. 807 in downtown Bismarck, N.D. He grew up in Bismarck in a working-class family; at 16, he started working at the Osco, which has since closed. He quickly decided to become a scientist.

I just found it fascinating, he says. I was hungry for science. While reading a magazine for pharmacists, he noticed an ad for a free pamphlet published by Merck called Pharmacists in Industry. He wrote away for the pamphlet, which convinced him that he could have a career developing medicines.

He applied to North Dakota State University, where he focused on psychopharmacology, a discipline that studies the way chemicals affect the brain. I was really interested in psychiatric disorders, he says. I fell in love with dopamine.

His love affair was so consuming that his wife joked that dopamine would be his daughters first word.

Although scientists sometimes decide to study a disease because of problems it has caused among family members, Dr. Schoepp says his fascination with mental illness has been purely academic. My family has more heart disease than anything else, he says.

After graduating from North Dakota State, he received a scholarship to a doctoral program in pharmacology and toxicology at West Virginia University. He graduated in 1982. Nearly five years later, he joined Lilly, which was about to introduce Prozac, the first modern antidepressant   a drug that changed both psychiatry and the public perception of depression and mental illness.

Prozac became a blockbuster almost instantly after Lilly introduced it in 1987, making the company one of the most visible players in Big Pharma and giving it room to invest in long-shot scientific research. Ray Fuller, a Lilly scientist who was a co-discoverer of Prozac, encouraged Dr. Schoepp to focus his attention on glutamate.

Glutamate is a pivotal transmitter in the brain, the crucial link in circuits involved in memory, learning and perception. Too much glutamate leads to seizures and the death of brain cells. Excessive glutamate release is also one of the main reasons that people have brain damage after strokes. Too little glutamate can cause psychosis, coma and death.

The main thoroughfare of communication in the brain is glutamate, says Dr. John Krystal, a psychiatry professor at Yale and a research scientist with the VA Connecticut Health Care System.

Along with Bita Moghaddam, a neuroscientist who was at Yale and is now at the University of Pittsburgh, Dr. Krystal has been responsible for some of the fundamental research into how glutamate works in the brain and how it may be implicated in schizophrenia.

Schizophrenia affects about 2.5 million Americans, about 1 percent of the adult population, and it usually develops in the late teens or early to mid-20s. It is believed to result from a mix of causes, including genetic and environmental triggers that cause the brain to develop abnormally.

The first schizophrenia medicines were developed accidentally about a half-century ago, when Henri Laborit, a French military surgeon, noticed that an antinausea drug called chlorpromazine helped to control hallucinations in psychotic patients. Chlorpromazine, sold under the brand name Thorazine, blocks the brains dopamine receptors. That led the way in the 1960s for drug companies to introduce other medicines that worked the same way.

The medicines, called antipsychotics, gave many patients relief from the worst of their hallucinations and delusions. But they also can cause shaking, stiffness and facial tics, and did not help the cognitive problems or the so-called negative symptoms like social withdrawal associated with schizophrenia.

In the 1980s, drug companies looked for new ways to treat the disease with fewer side effects. By the mid-1990s, they had introduced several new schizophrenia medicines, including Zyprexa, from Lilly, and Risperdal, from Johnson & Johnson. At the time, the new medicines were hailed as a major advance   and the companies marketed them that way to doctors and patients.

In fact, the new medicines, called second-generation antipsychotics, had much in common with the older drugs. Both worked mainly by blocking dopamine and had little effect on negative or cognitive symptoms. The newer medicines caused fewer movement disorders, but had side effects of their own, including huge weight gain for many patients. Many doctors now complain that the companies oversold the second-generation compounds and that new treatments are badly needed.

People say that there are drugs to treat schizophrenia, says Dr. Carol A. Tamminga, professor of psychiatry at the University of Texas Southwestern, in Dallas. In fact, the treatment for schizophrenia is at best partial and inadequate. You have a cadre of cognitively impaired people who cant fit in.

WHILE most of the industry focused on second-generation medicines during the 1980s and 1990s, a handful of academic and industry researchers found intriguing hints that glutamate might provide an alternative treatment pathway.

Psychiatrists and neuroscientists have wondered about a possible connection between glutamate and schizophrenia since the early 80s, when they first learned that phencyclidine, the street drug commonly called PCP, blocks the release of glutamate.

People who use PCP often have the hallucinations, delusions, cognitive problems and emotional flatness that are characteristic of schizophrenia. Psychiatrists noted PCPs side effects as early as the late 1950s. But they lacked the tools to determine how PCP affected the brain until 1979, when they found that it blocked a glutamate receptor, called the NMDA receptor, that is at the center of the transmission of nerve impulses in the brain.

The PCP finding led a few scientists to begin researching glutamates role in psychosis and other brain disorders. By the early 1990s, they discovered that besides triggering the primary glutamate receptors   NMDA and AMPA   glutamate also triggered several other receptors.

They called these newly found receptors metabotropic, because the receptors modified the amount of glutamate that cells released rather than simply turning circuits on or off. Because glutamate is so central to the brains activity, directly blocking or triggering the NMDA and AMPA receptors can be very dangerous. The metabotropic receptors appeared to be better targets for drug treatment.

Rather than acting as an all-or-nothing signal, they fine-tune that signal and modulate that signal, said P. Jeffrey Conn, director of a Vanderbilt University drug research program. Its really an attempt to be very subtle in the way that you regulate the system.

During the 1990s, molecular biologists discovered genes for eight metabotropic glutamate receptors, which were located at different places inside nerve cells and had different structures. The finding allowed for the possibility that drug companies could create chemicals to turn them on and off selectively, rather than hitting all of them at once.

For Dr. Schoepp and others, finding the receptors was only the first part of the struggle. They also had to find chemicals that would either block or trigger the receptors selectively. At the same time, the chemicals had to be relatively easy to formulate and capable of crossing the blood-brain barrier, which protects the brain from being easily penetrated by outside agents.

The work was arduous, but the Lilly scientists made slow progress. In 1999, Dr. Schoepp and two other scientists published a 46-page research paper that detailed scores of different chemicals that produced reactions at the glutamate sites.

At about the same time, scientists at Yale, led by Dr. Moghaddam, were demonstrating that activating metabotropic glutamate receptors in rats could reverse the effects of PCP   a seminal finding, providing the first proof that altering the path of glutamate transmission in the brain might help relieve the symptoms of psychosis.

Although the finding in rats was promising, developing animal models for schizophrenia and other brain diseases is extremely difficult, said Paul Greengard, professor of molecular and cellular neuroscience at Rockefeller University.

Even when compared with diseases like cancer, brain disorders are notoriously complex. Scientists have only a limited understanding of the chemistry of consciousness, or of how problems in the brains electrical circuitry affect the ability to form memories, learn or think.

We do not know with any of these neuropsychiatric disorders what the ultimate basis is, Dr. Greengard says. Lets say you could find that too much of protein X was involved in schizophrenia. Would you then know what schizophrenia is? You would not.

Nonetheless, the findings in rats were promising. Those studies, as well as Dr. Krystals tests in 2001 of volunteers given ketamine, a drug that has effects similar to PCP, hinted that the glutamate drugs might help to treat the cognitive and negative symptoms of schizophrenia. Drugs currently on the market do little to treat those symptoms.

Even before the findings at Yale, Lilly had put its first metabotropic glutamate receptor compound into human testing. Researchers initially tested the drug on patients with panic disorder, and it showed some positive results. But Lilly stopped human testing of the drug in 2001 when long-term testing in animals showed that it caused seizures.

Even so, Lilly decided that it had enough evidence to justify tests of another chemical compound, LY404039, that affected the same receptors.

They had to take a risk on letting these drugs be tested on models or for disorders that were justified purely on pretty basic science, Dr. Krystal says. There is nothing with these drugs that is straightforward or makes developing them a basic path.

When it tried to test LY404039 in humans, the company ran into yet another hurdle. The human body didnt easily absorb it. So Lilly created a drug that the body could absorb, LY2140023, which is metabolized into LY404039 in the body.

Bingo. LY2140023 was the drug that got Dr. Schoepp jumping out of his office chair in 2006, nearly three years after the first trials in humans began. In the Lilly test, the drug was slightly less effective over all than Zyprexa, which is considered the most effective among the widely used schizophrenia treatments.

But LY2140023 also appeared to have fewer side effects than Zyprexa, which can cause severe weight gain and diabetes. The new drug also appeared to improve cognition, something that existing treatments dont do, said Dr. Insel of the National Institute of Mental Health.

IF Lillys new round of tests confirms the drugs efficacy by early next year, the company is likely to move ahead to an even larger clinical trial, involving thousands of patients, that could lead to federal approval for the compound. Still, approval is at least three to four years away, and other big drug makers are already scrambling to compete with Lilly.

In January, Pfizer agreed to pay Taisho Pharmaceutical, a Japanese company, $22 million for the rights to develop Taishos glutamate drug for schizophrenia. Taisho will receive more payments if the drug moves forward in development.

Since it hired Dr. Schoepp, Merck has also been moving aggressively. It has struck two deals since December to work with Addex Pharmaceuticals, a Swiss company, to develop glutamate drugs for schizophrenia, Parkinsons and other diseases. Merck has paid Addex $25 million so far, with more payments to come if the drugs move forward.

Another glutamate drug, meanwhile, has been shown in preclinical studies to reverse mental retardation in adult rats, a finding that previously appeared impossible, Dr. Insel said.

Dr. Steven M. Paul, the president of Lilly Research Laboratories, says Lilly expects competition in glutamate research to intensify. Wed like to believe we have a head start here, and hopefully a good head start, he says. But this area will heat up here; this will be an area where there will be a lot of investment.

For Dr. Schoepp, the sudden interest in glutamate is exciting, and he acknowledges that he eagerly awaits the results of the large Lilly trial early next year. And what if the drug fails in that trial, after all the work that he and scientists around the world have put in?

I would probably go out and have a beer, he says. You have to define failure. If you collect information and it tells you what you need to know, youre not a failure.

Bipolar disorder shatters family, ends in death

By Joel Currier
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
02/26/2008

WELDON SPRING — The veins in Marshall Fink's neck bulged with fury as he pumped his fist, telling his parents they should stick a shotgun in their mouths and pull the trigger.

His mother and stepfather begged Fink, 26, to take his medication and calm down.

That set him off.

Fink put his fingers to his head, pretending to have a gun, then pointed at his parents. He chest-bumped his mother into the garage, snarling and telling her she should die.

Shirlee and John Gentles called 911 several times the night of Jan. 11.

The police were on their way, but by the time they arrived John Gentles had fatally shot his stepson.

In a little over two years, Fink's satisfying career in the Navy dissolved into a struggle with bipolar disorder that tormented him and ripped apart his family. His psychiatrist says the stress of the Navy career he loved contributed to the disease.

CHAOTIC NIGHT

"Please, Marshall, you're hurting me and I love you," said Shirlee Gentles, 52. "You're scaring me, and I just want you to get help."

She ran outside to the driveway. But Fink dragged her back inside. He had punched holes in the garage drywall.

"You're not going anywhere," he yelled.

Gentles grabbed her 12-year-old son, James, and managed to run to a neighbor's house.

Meanwhile, her husband took his 9 mm pistol out of the closet and showed it to his stepson, who did not have a weapon.

"Marshall, this is loaded and you're going to listen to us," said Gentles, 62. "You need to go to the hospital."

Fink lunged and got within an arm's length of his stepfather when Gentles fired one shot into Fink's stomach. He bled to death on the kitchen floor.

Police arrested Gentles, a dentist, questioned him and released him the next day. Prosecutors said he killed Fink in self-defense, and no charges were filed.

A HAPPY CHILDHOOD

Shirlee Gentles remarried and moved to the St. Louis area when Fink was 5 years old. He grew up with two stepsisters, Heather, now 28, and Allison, now 23, and his half brother, James.

Fink's family said he and his stepfather had a good relationship, but that Fink was closer to his father, Richard "Dick" Fink, who lived near Chicago. Together, they restored classic cars and motorcycles, and spent many weekends attending swap meets and auto shows.

"He was just a fanatic about cars," said Heather Gentles. "He and Dick shared that passion."

Jonathan Coffin, one of Fink's best friends in high school, said they often stayed up all night restoring Fink's light blue, rare Mustang and cruising.

Coffin, 26, of St. Peters, also said Fink was a talented guitarist who loved jamming to his favorite songs by the Doors, Metallica and the Grateful Dead.

Fifteen months after graduating from Francis Howell High School, Fink enlisted in the Navy, inspired by the Sept. 11 attacks to serve his country.

ILLNESS TAKES HOLD

Fink was stationed at the Naval base in San Diego as a mechanic aboard the Peleliu assault ship.

"It was a natural fit that he would go and work on engines," Shirlee Gentles said.

For more than two years, his service record was clean; his superiors even wrote him several letters of commendation. Fink wanted a career in the Navy, but a conflict of highs and lows was escalating inside his head.

"Something happened to him in the Navy," Heather Gentles said. "He just was never going to be the same."

Fink's illness developed quickly and was brought on in part by stress and lack of sleep, said his psychiatrist in St. Charles, Dr. Greg Mattingly. Fink's condition emerged about the same age as most bipolar patients, Mattingly said, and was not spurred by any specific traumatic incident.

"With bipolar, you can go from pretty much normal one day, to the next day being very, very, very sick," Mattingly said.

Fink mouthed off to his commanders, stopped eating regularly and lost 20 pounds. He grew increasingly paranoid, and in September 2005, doctors at the Naval Medical Center in San Diego diagnosed his condition as bipolar disorder, which often results in episodes of severe depression and mania. It affects more than 5 million Americans.

Most people who develop the disorder are genetically predisposed to it, Mattingly said. Along with stress and sleep deprivation, he said, substance abuse is another common trigger. Fink had begun taking legal stimulants as part of a body-building regimen.

Because of Fink's diagnosis, the Navy started discharge proceedings.

Fink challenged the diagnosis. He wanted the chance to return to active duty, but the Navy considered him unfit to serve.

Devastated, Fink went AWOL, hoping it would somehow delay his discharge.

Fink made plans to come home for Christmas. His mother drove to the airport on Christmas Day, but he hadn't boarded his flight. Meanwhile, the Navy declared Fink a deserter.

His mother looked for him for almost two months. She made dozens of phone calls to Navy commanders, comrades and congressmen seeking their help.

Thinking her son could have been kidnapped or killed, she called police in San Diego to report him missing.

Detectives checked bank records and found an ATM transaction in Yuma, Ariz., where police tracked him to a motel.

Officers returned him to base to face a trial by court martial. Fink accepted a discharge classified as "other than honorable" in lieu of a trial. His mother is still fighting to have his discharge changed to honorable.

BACK TO ST. CHARLES COUNTY

In September 2006, Fink packed up a U-Haul and drove from San Diego to Weldon Spring in two days, hardly stopping.

As soon as he got home, he closed all the window blinds because he believed people were watching him.

Fink became a night owl. He rarely slept. He paced at night and slammed doors when he'd go outside to smoke. Once, at 2 a.m., he grabbed a pitchfork and began turning mulch in the yard.

Fink stopped eating because he thought his parents were trying to poison him. Instead of food, he took ephedrine pills, caffeine powder and drank his parents' liquor. He hid the empty bottles in his room, where he spent hours sitting alone in the dark.

"When I came home last year, something was off. It just wasn't him," his stepsister said. "Somehow, Marshall was locked away."

Fink became delusional. He thought Nazis were coming after him and talked of holding down his little brother to give him a tattoo of a swastika because he thought he was a Nazi.

Shirlee Gentles says she saw more than a dozen doctors to treat her own medical problems caused by anxiety over her son.

The loaded revolver she found under her son's bed pillows compounded her fears.

"Every night for two years, I slept with one eye open because I thought he was going to kill us," she said. "The stress was killing me."

GETTING HELP

Three months after he came home, his parents had him committed to St. Joseph Health Center in St. Charles, where he was put on suicide watch. During treatment, Fink attacked a doctor and was put in restraints.

After almost a month, he felt well enough to come home, thanks to new medication.

Fink found a job as a mechanic at a boat dealership and repair shop in St. Charles. His co-workers said he was funny, polite and reliable.

Fink even wanted to buy a house and took his grandmother, Hazel Nyquist, with him to look at homes for sale in St. Louis.

"Just the week before (the shooting) I was saying, 'It's a good thing Marshall's feeling so good,'" said Nyquist, 86, of St. Peters. "I thought things were really moving along. Apparently, they weren't."

In the weeks before his death, Fink confided in a co-worker that he felt lonely and depressed.

Meanwhile, the family struggled to help Fink get better. This past Christmas, Fink attended a family gathering in the Chicago area where he saw his father.

"It was a real joy to have him be with us," said Richard Fink, 56, of Dundee, Ill. "He seemed good."

But he said his son complained of frequent headaches brought on by medication. So Fink stopped taking it.

THE FINAL DAYS

Fink further isolated himself in the last days of his life. He stayed in his room most of the time. He called in sick to work. On days he did work, his co-workers said, he was distracted, spending at least 10 hours on tasks that should have taken two hours.

At one point, Fink called his stepfather to the computer to show him a video on the Internet of an execution-style killing.

Shirlee and John Gentles suspected he had stopped taking his medication, and his mother began arrangements to have him committed again.

On the night of his death, Shirlee Gentles said, Fink was tormented by anger she had never seen. "There's no way to explain what happened that day," she said.

Fink's father has questioned the shooting, wondering why John Gentles grabbed his gun instead of leaving the house to wait for police to arrive.

"If he didn't have this weapon, what would have happened? A black eye?" Richard Fink said.

When police told Gentles that Fink had died, he gasped and buried his face in his hands.

"I didn't want to kill him," Gentles told detectives. "I just wanted to stop him because I thought he was going to kill us."

Shirlee Gentles said her husband is still too distraught to discuss with anyone the night he killed his stepson.

FINDING PEACE

The Gentleses' home is calm again. There is no more pacing in the dark. No more slamming doors. No more screaming.

And for the first time in more than two years, Shirlee Gentles says, she can sleep through the night without worrying.

She doesn't blame her husband for killing their son. She blames the disorder for destroying the person he used to be.

"This illness robbed us of a beautiful, beautiful son," she says. "On the one hand, I would do anything to have him back. On the other, we have peace of mind."

jcurrier@post-dispatch.com | 636-255-7210

 

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