Sunday, September 16, 2018

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LONG ISLANDNASSAU

East Meadow fundraising walk spotlights rare, debilitating chronic pain condition

Three Long Island moms are raising awareness of Complex Regional Pain Syndrome, a little-known disease.


From left, Stacey Udell, Debbie O'Neal and Beth
From left, Stacey Udell, Debbie O'Neal and Beth Seickel in East Meadow on Saturday. Photo Credit: Howard Simmons 
Friends Debbie O’Neal, Beth Seickel and Stacey Udell share many things in common. Among them: motherhood, a passion for volunteerism and their experiences with debilitating pain.
On Saturday, the three women, all of whom are diagnosed with the chronic condition Complex Regional Pain Syndrome, hosted a walk at Eisenhower Park in East Meadow to raise funds and awareness about the rare disease.
The walk on a 1- or 2.5-kilometer path was the third annual fundraiser for the Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy Syndrome Association, a Connecticut-based national patient advocacy organization for children and adults affected by the syndrome. More than 500 people, some from Maryland, Massachusetts and Rhode Island, participated. Many wore T-shirts designed by Udell’s daughter, Jillian, 23, that read “CRPS gets on my nerves.” Some used wheelchairs because of their condition.
“It’s not so much about the walk,” said Udell, 51, of Melville. “It’s about unity, hope and education more than anything.”
The daylong event also featured live music, children’s crafts, food and raffles for theater and Paul Simon concert tickets. As of the close of the event, more than $53,000 had been raised, Udell said.




The neurological syndrome usually develops in an injured limb and causes severe physical pain. Its cause isn’t clearly understood, but doctors say it affects about 5,000 Long Islanders and more than 250,000 others nationwide. There is no cure and few effective treatments.
To say those with Complex Regional Pain Syndrome often experience intense and burning pain, sensitivity, sweating and swelling is an extreme understatement. On the McGill Pain Index, which ranks levels of pain on a scale from zero to 50, the disease rates a score of 42, higher than amputation without anesthesia, non-terminal cancer, fibromyalgia or childbirth.
Exposure to a brisk breeze or the brush of a blanket on the skin of those with the disease can cause crippling pain. Udell said not a week goes by without at least one doctor’s visit for the disabling disorder. 

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