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  • Family races for cure to deadly disease

    Family races for cure to deadly disease

    News 14 Carolina (Charlotte, NC)
    2/28/2005

    By: Martie Salt, News 14 Carolina

    On the field, famed Notre Dame coach Ara Parseghian
    was a winner. But there was one fight he couldn't win
    -- three of his four grandchildren were diagnosed with
    a deadly disease.

    One of those children, Marcia, has a fatal disease
    that will kill her. She knows because it killed her
    older brother and her little sister.

    Not knowing how to deal with their daughter's looming
    death, Mike and Cindy Parseghian created a foundation
    to help other families dealing with similar
    situations.

    "We were hoping it would have a big impact on our
    children's lives," Cindy said about the organization.

    Niemann-Pick Type C disease usually affects children
    of school age by interfering with their ability to
    metabolize cholesterol.

    The Parseghians know that time has run out to save
    Marcia from the genetic disease Niemann-Pick Type C,
    which is also known as NPC. It has destroyed her
    ability to metabolize cholesterol, robbed her of her
    ability to walk, talk and even move her eyes.

    NPC is fatal -- a diagnosis Cindy first heard for her
    son Michael.

    "He just couldn't quite keep up with the other kids on
    the playground," she said.

    After a year of tests, doctors finally found out what
    was wrong.

    "All of a sudden … we have not just Michael that is
    seriously ill, but we have the potential for having
    the two girls (who are sick)," Cindy said.

    All three tested positive for NPC.

    "We screamed, we yelled," Cindy said. "I'm not
    embarrassed to say that I cursed God."

    Then Cindy and Mike turned their anger into something
    positive and started a foundation. Although research
    did not help their children, the gene that causes it
    has been discovered. Now the race is on for a cure.

    "You see this one little toddler, of 1 year old, that
    we know has the disease, yet is not showing signs, and
    I have a real strong belief that we can make an impact
    on that child's life," she said.

    She and her husband say they pray other children will
    be saved because of their work and the resulting
    research.

    Ara Parseghian Medical Research Foundation, a
    volunteer, nonprofit corporation, funds research
    projects that will lead to a treatment and cure for
    Niemann-Pick Type C disease.


    Web Journalist: Megan Butler

    On the Net: Ara Parseghian Medical Research Foundation
    http://www.parseghian.org/

    http://www.news14charlotte.com/content/top_stories/default.asp?ArID=87785

    --Boundary_(ID_fYTR87cL11yb2iT8/0aSog)--
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