Medical Sleuth
To prosecutors, it was child abuse - an Amish baby covered in bruises, but Dr. D. Holmes Morton had other ideas
- By Tom Shachtman
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2006, Subscribe
It was every parent’s nightmare: a few days before Christmas 1999, Elizabeth and Samuel Glick, Old Order Amish dairy farmers in rural Dornsife, Pennsylvania, an hour’s drive north of Harrisburg, found their youngest child, 4-month-old Sara Lynn, gravely ill. They rushed her to a local hospital, from where she was soon transferred to the larger Geisinger Medical Center in the next county. There, a doctor noted a hemorrhage in her right eye and extensive bruising on her body, and suspected that her injuries were caused by child abuse.
Alerted to the doctor’s suspicion, the police and officials from the Northumberland County Children and Youth Services descended on the Glicks’ farm during the evening milking, and took away the couple’s seven other children, all boys, ranging in age from 5 to 15. The boys were separated and placed in non-Amish foster homes. Sara died the next day, and when the county coroner found blood in her brain, he declared her death a homicide.
At Sara’s funeral, on Christmas Eve, Elizabeth and Samuel were not permitted to speak privately with their sons. By that time Samuel had already contacted the Clinic for Special Children in Lancaster County, and pleaded with its director, pediatrician D. Holmes Morton—the world’s leading authority on genetic-based diseases of the Amish and Mennonite peoples—to find the cause of his daughter’s death.
The Amish are Anabaptists, Protestants whose forefathers were invited by William Penn himself to settle in Pennsylvania. Today there are almost 200,000 Amish in the United States, of whom 25,000 live in Lancaster County, in southeastern Pennsylvania between Philadelphia and Harrisburg. Some of their customs and religious values have changed little over the past century.
Most people know that the Amish wear conservative clothing, travel mainly by horse and buggy, eschew most modern technologies, and refuse to use electricity from the common grid. The Amish also remove their children from formal schooling after the eighth grade, do not participate in Social Security or Medicare, and in many other ways maintain their sect’s separateness from mainstream America.
But most people don’t know that the Amish, and their spiritual cousins the Mennonites, experience an inordinately high incidence of certain genetic-based diseases, most of which affect very young children. Many of these afflictions are fatal or disabling, but some, if diagnosed and properly treated in time, can be managed, enabling the children to survive and lead productive lives.
That possibility—of proper diagnosis and intervention to save children’s lives—was what intrigued Morton, then a recently minted M.D. on a postdoctoral fellowship. A colleague at Children’s Hospital in Philadelphia asked him one evening in 1988 to analyze a urine sample from a 6-year-old Amish boy, Danny Lapp, who was mentally alert but wheelchair-bound because he had no control over his limbs—perhaps from cerebral palsy.
But when Morton analyzed the urine, he saw no evidence of cerebral palsy. Rather, in a diagnosis that must have seemed to others like the amazing deductions of Sherlock Holmes, he recognized the footprint of a genetic-based disease so rare that it had been identified in only eight cases in the world, none of them in Lancaster County. Morton’s was an educated guess: he was able to recognize the disease, a metabolic disorder known as glutaric aciduria type 1, or GA-1, because it fit the pattern of diseases he had been studying for almost four years, those that lay dormant in a child’s body until triggered into action.
Typically, a child with GA-1 shows no sign of the disorder until he or she comes down with an ordinary childhood respiratory infection. Then, perhaps prompted by the body’s immune response, the GA-1 flares up, making the child unable to properly metabolize protein-building amino acids, which in turn causes a buildup in the brain of glutarate, a toxic chemical compound that affects the basal ganglia, the part of the brain that controls the tone and position of the limbs. The result, permanent paralysis of the arms and legs, can resemble cerebral palsy.
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Related topics: Genetics Disease and Illnesses Religion
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Comments (3)
Thank you for giving credit to Dr. Holmes Morton and his dedication to the "backward" Amish culture and their unusual medical manifestations. I have studied the Amish culture for 20 years now, and became an advocate for them by observing them, researching, living with them overnight, written five non-fiction books to inform a misinformed public filled with fiction and myths, leading tours to four Amish and Mennonite settlements in Wisconsin, and giving talks to groups. Best of all, I heard Dr. Morton at the Amish Diversity Conference in June 2007 at Elizabethtown College in Pennsylvania organized by Donald B. Kraybill at the Young Center. This May I will make a presentation to medical staff at Children's Hospital in Milwaukee, Wisconsin to clarify the "riddles" of the Amish lifestyle.
Posted by Richard Lee Dawley on April 8,2008 | 09:17 PM
Wonderful story. Very interesting and not something you typically hear about. I will visit this place when I return to Lancaster this summer.
Posted by Michael Confoy on February 8,2008 | 07:59 PM
Dr. Morton is a treasure. Without his work and dedication my wife and I would not be celebrating my son’s 11th birthday today. When Chris was 9 months old, he fell ill and was about to be taken from us under suspicion of abuse. The work of a gifted medical student led to a diagnosis of GA-1 and internet research led us to Dr. Morton. His treatment protocols allowed us to protect Chris during his most vulnerable years. Chris is now an active and happy 11 year-old. Looking into my son’s eyes, I am reminded constantly that miracles are real and that the Lord makes them happen through people like Dr. Morton and so many others like him.
Posted by Bill Watson on February 1,2008 | 05:12 PM