RSD (reflex sympathetic
dystrophy) is a nervous system disorder that causes agonizing pain, burning, swelling in
the joints, and may result in a progressive softening of the bones, muscles, and tendons.
Dustin Mackie was a high-powered, Harvard-trained health industry executive who was
afflicted with RSD in her late forties. As the illness progressed, she was advised by five
different doctors in five different specialties that a spinal morphine pump was the only
intervention available to help manage the pain and that there was no way to stop the bone
and muscle deterioration.
Within months of her RSD diagnosis, she had been forced to abandon her highly successful
career and was in a wheel chair, primarily homebound, and facing unyielding pain,
involuntary contractions of her tendons, and marked muscle atrophy. Sometimes the pain
would become so intense that she would need to call an ambulance to be brought to the
emergency room for epidural anesthesia, although she said, at some of those times it would
be so excruciating that she couldnt even dial 911.
She was brought, in her wheel chair, to one of our Conference Works weekend classes. She
purchased Donnas book and 6-hour DVD program and went to work on herself. Within two
months of beginning the basic exercises found in the Five Minute Daily Energy Routine, her
pain was substantially reduced in frequency and severity. She was no longer homebound and
resumed modest social activities. She was able to begin to use her arms for activities of
daily living such as opening doors. Three years later, she is in Year 2 of our
Certification Program. She says, "This has been a miracle for me." While she
still uses her wheel chair, she is able to walk short distances. She can drive short
distances. She says, "From two to four days a week, I can have a fairly normal life.
I could have done none of this before."
Because the RSD spread from Dustins arms to her lower extremities, she has had a
series of surgeries on her right foot. During one of them, her surgeon found that the bone
in a two inch by three inch area at the top of her foot had "turned into mush."
A steel plate was inserted into the area. At the CP class held in January 2008, Dustin
asked Donna if there was anything she could do to strengthen bone growth. She was given a
very basic exercise by Donna and one of the EEM faculty members, Julie Lapin. Dustin said,
"It seemed simple and silly, but I did it, though not religiously." Three months
later, she was scheduled for another foot surgery, this time to replace the metal screws
that were holding down the steel plate with fasteners made of cadaver bone. When her foot
was opened, the surgeon was shocked. She now had strong healthy bone growing in the area.
Not only was the cadaver bone not needed, the steel plate was no longer necessary and was
removed. That "simple and silly exercise," she noted, "was the only thing
that had changed."
Another incident followed that surgery. It typically takes a person with RSD two to three
times as long to recover from surgery as would normally be expected. Her first physical
therapy visit, a couple of months after surgery, showed almost no range of motion in her
foot. Four hours later, one of her colleagues from the Certification Program came and did
the Brazilian Toe Technique for her (taught in the CP and other basic energy medicine
classes). By the end of this half-hour procedure, Dustin was able to move her foot in
circles and up and down. Her foot had gone from twice its normal size to 1-1/4 its normal
size. Subsequently her surgeon informed her she was a full month ahead of her expected
schedule in terms of her healing process.
Given Dustins background in the health field, she has been amazed. "I have been
given such hope. At my doctors offices I keep running into patients I knew three
years ago. It is so sad to see them, doped up on opiates but still in terrible pain,
barely able to move or function mentally. I am grateful beyond words to Donna Eden and the
wonderful teachers in the Certification Program."
Dustin may be contacted by .
(Compiled by David Feinstein, Ph.D., May
2008) |