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Life takes deserved turn for better.


Byline: Tim Christie The Register-Guard

SPRINGFIELD - Ordinarily, when someone gets a driver's license, it doesn't make the newspaper.

But Becky Willis' story is anything but ordinary.

Until she passed her driving test Friday, Willis, 45, had never been licensed to drive. That's because since age 5, she's had epilepsy. Three to five times a month, her body would convulse con·vulse
v.
To affect or be affected with irregular and involuntary muscular contractions; throw or be thrown into convulsions.
 in seizure.

Epilepsy is a disease that can make everyday activities - taking a shower or crossing the street - a peril, and make driving a car downright impossible.

"I could kill somebody," she said.

But now Willis considers herself cured of the disease, thanks to a second opinion and an old surgical procedure that's gaining new favor as a way to treat people with a certain kind of epilepsy. Epilepsy is a general term that describes a variety of conditions that cause seizures. Seizures occur when nerve cells in the brain rapidly fire electrical impulses, causing sort of an electrical storm electrical storm Cardiology A cardiac event defined as multiple recurrent episodes of ventricular fibrillation, or hemodynamically destabilizing ventricular tachycardia, with a very poor prognosis; ES is most common in older men with CAD, often in a background of  in the brain.

Until four years ago, Willis had more or less resigned herself to living with epilepsy and to taking medications that helped her, a little bit anyway, manage the disease. Her regular seizures, brought on by stress, "built character," she said.

"It has never slowed her down," said her husband, Richard.

One day in 2000, when she was working as an educational assistant at Thurston High School Thurston High School is located in Springfield, Oregon in Lane County. Their mascot is a black colt. Shooting
On May 20, 1998, student Kipland "Kip" Kinkel killed his parents, William and Faith, both Spanish teachers at local high schools.
, she had a seizure in a classroom. School officials asked her to get a second opinion on her disease, and she went to see Eugene neurologist Alexandre Lockfeld, who she had seen three years prior.

Lockfeld told her he had good news: Images of her brain showed she had scar tissue scar tissue
n.
Dense, fibrous connective tissue that forms over a healed wound or cut.
 on her temporal lobe temporal lobe
n.
The lowest of the major subdivisions of the cortical mantle of the brain, containing the sensory center for hearing and forming the rear two thirds of the ventral surface of the cerebral hemisphere.
, just above the ear, and if she had it removed, it might lessen the number and severity of her seizures. He referred her to the Seizure Disorder Center at UCLA Medical Center UCLA Medical Center is a hospital located on the campus of the University of California, Los Angeles in Los Angeles, California. It is rated as one of the top three hospitals in the United States and is the top hospital on the West Coast according to US News & World Report. .

Surgery is not a new treatment for epilepsy - it's been used for at least 100 years - in recent years doctors and researchers have concluded it can cure a certain type of the disease 80 percent of the time, said Sandra Dewar, clinical nurse specialist clinical nurse specialist
n.
A nurse who has advanced knowledge and competence in a particular area of nursing practice, such as in cardiology, oncology, or psychiatry.
 at the UCLA UCLA University of California at Los Angeles
UCLA University Center for Learning Assistance (Illinois State University)
UCLA University of Carrollton, TX and Lower Addison, TX
 seizure center.

"Certain types of the disease do not respond well to medications but do respond well to surgery," she said.

The type of epilepsy that surgery can fix is called mesial mesial /me·si·al/ (me´ze-al) nearer the center of the dental arch.

me·si·al
adj.
1. Of, in, near, or toward the middle.

2.
 temporal lobe epilepsy temporal lobe epilepsy
n.
See psychomotor epilepsy.
. It affects the deep structures within the temporal lobe, the brain region above the ear that is mostly responsible for memory. Of the 1.5 million people living with epilepsy, about 150,000 have mesial temporal lobe epilepsy, including Willis, and are candidates for surgery.

"The surgery we know works for these patients," Dewar said. "The big research questions is how soon should it be offered."

Most patients treated at UCLA have been living with the disease for many years, she said. So researchers at UCLA are conducting a large clinical trial called ERSET (for Early Randomized ran·dom·ize  
tr.v. ran·dom·ized, ran·dom·iz·ing, ran·dom·iz·es
To make random in arrangement, especially in order to control the variables in an experiment.
 Surgical Epilepsy Trial), which compares one group of epilepsy patients, treated early on with surgery, to another group treated aggressively with drugs.

Researchers are hoping to show that by treating epilepsy patients early in life with surgery, they can avoid a lifetime of disability, she said.

Willis and her husband went to UCLA Medical Center in July 2000. On the morning of her surgery, as she was getting out of the shower, she had what turned out to be her last seizure. Later that day, Dr. Itzhak Fried removed a piece of scar tissue, about 1-inch-by-1-inch, from the temporal lobe of her brain.

Willis stopped having seizures after that, but she stayed on her medications for another two years. In 2002, she quit her medications, and hasn't looked back since.

"I can hold my grandson for the first time without fear of hurting a baby," she said. "I can ride my bike and swim without fear of drowning "Fear of Drowning" was British Sea Power's very first release. It was a self-financed single issued on their own Golden Chariot label, and mainly sold at concerts. Only 1,000 CD copies were pressed and these became the most collectable, and thus valuable, release in the band's back  or having a bike accident."

Driving a car took a little more time. She passed her written driving exam and got a learner's permit in 2002, and finally this year, after much practice with her husband, she decided she was ready to try for her driver's license.

On Friday morning, she showed up at the Springfield office of the Department of Motor Vehicles In the United States of America, Department of Motor Vehicles (or DMV) is a commonly used name of the government agency of a U.S. state which administers the registration of automobiles (e.g., by issuing license plates), and/or the licensing of drivers (e.g. , accompanied by her husband, her youngest daughter, Sarah, and her two sisters, Rene Zwart of Tangent and Kathy Brower of Roseburg.

They chatted with reporters and took pictures and video. Shortly after 10 a.m., office manager and examiner John McBeath walked out to the parking lot and climbed into the passenger's seat next to Willis.

She pulled out of the parking lot (knocking over a safety cone as she backed out) and drove around Springfield with McBeath at her side. Fifteen minutes later, she was back with a big smile on her face. She'd passed, scoring 90 out of 100.

"It feels great to know the state of Oregon has confidence in me," she said. "It's like I'm getting my wings here on Earth."

WHOM TO CONTACT

For more information on mesial temporal lobe epilepsy and the ERSET clinical trial, contact: Becky Willis of Springfield at 746-1998 or at barnab6280@aol.com or the Seizure Disorder Center at UCLA Medical Center at (310) 267-2880 or www.erset.net

CAPTION(S):

Becky Willis (right) is congratulated Friday by sister Rene Zwart after getting her driver's license at the DMV DMV
abbr.
Department of Motor Vehicles
 in Springfield. Willis underwent corrective surgery for mesial temporal lobe epilepsy in July 2000, after which she stopped having seizures and two years later ceased taking medication. Willis listens to instructions from DMV driving examiner John McBeath.
COPYRIGHT 2004 The Register Guard
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Health; Surgically cured of epilepsy, Becky Willis fearlessly earns her driver's license - at 45
Publication:The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)
Date:Oct 9, 2004
Words:941
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