Betting on Seabiscuit
Laura Hillenbrand beat the odds to write the hit horse-racing saga while fighting chronic fatigue syndrome, a mysterious disorder starting to reveal its secrets
- By Larry Katzenstein
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2002, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 9)
Hillenbrand’s willingness to serve as the poster child for chronic fatigue syndrome coincides with other welcome developments, including new thinking about its causes. Though a cure for the syndrome does not exist, researchers have recently amassed evidence that counseling and supervised exercise therapy can often help patients. Perhaps most impressive, medical researchers at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta are working on the first test for screening and possibly diagnosing the syndrome. Says Dr. William Reeves, who directs chronic fatigue syndrome research at the CDC: “The field is progressing quite rapidly.”
It all began for Hillenbrand the evening of March 20, 1987. She was then a sophomore at KenyonCollege in Gambier, Ohio, a straight-A student with hopes of becoming a history professor. She had always been active, riding horses since age 5, swimming competitively (100-meter backstroke) in her suburban Maryland high school, biking and playing tennis in college. She’d eaten at a restaurant that day, and by nightfall was doubled over with pain—food poisoning, she figures. “I was so sick we called paramedics,” she says. For three weeks she was miserable, then awoke and couldn’t sit up. “Even if the building had been burning down, I wouldn’t have been able to get out of bed,” she says. She returned home to Bethesda, the Washington, D.C. suburb where she grew up, and spent the next two years virtually bedridden.
Frustration with medical practice is a frequent side effect of chronic fatigue syndrome, and Hillenbrand would see seven internists and numerous specialists who attributed her illness to Epstein-Barr virus infection, a sinus infection, bulimia and, though she was 20, the onset of puberty. Some said the problem was all in her head. “‘Couldn’t handle school so dropped out,’” she says one physician noted. Looking back, Hillenbrand says she doesn’t blame the doctors for not identifying her illness, given that so little was known about it at the time. “But I do blame them for making assumptions about my character and implying that I was somehow responsible for this illness.”
Finally, a physician at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore diagnosed her correctly. She recovered somewhat and started working as a freelance magazine writer, often covering horse racing. In some ways, her experience was typical: about half of chronic fatigue patients recover significantly within the first five years of succumbing, according to the CDC. Overall, though, Hillenbrand’s illness has been more severe than most cases, she says. In 1991, she had a relapse, becoming even sicker than before. “I spent two straight years lying in bed staring at the ceiling,” Hillenbrand says.
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