‘You can get your life back’

Graves’ condition overcome, Dixon woman now counsels others

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Kim Neisewander of Dixon underwent a series of surgeries to deal with Graves’ disease, an autoimmune disorder that causes the thyroid to produce excessive hormones and sends every function of the body into overdrive. Several years later, she's a strong, confident and grateful woman who wants to bring awareness to Graves' disease and help people find their life after illness. (Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com)
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DIXON – Several years ago, Kim Neisewander could have had a role in a horror movie.

Her voice was deep and raspy. Her skin hung off her bones, and her hair was thin and brittle. Her eyes bulged out of their sockets.

“I was ugly,” she said. “I felt fine, and I thought I looked fine until I looked in the mirror. I was not myself.”

Neisewander was diagnosed with Graves’ disease, an autoimmune disorder that causes the thyroid to produce excessive hormones and sends every function of the body into overdrive.

She suffered from a number of debilitating symptoms for years until she met a team of doctors at University of Wisconsin Hospital in Madison and underwent a series of surgeries to restore her life to normal.

Today, Neisewander, 52, of Dixon, is a strong, confident and grateful woman who wants to bring awareness to Graves’ disease and help people find their life after illness.

‘Something was wrong’

In late 2003 and early 2004, Neisewander experienced a bewildering onslaught of strange and serious health problems: heart palpitations, high blood pressure, extreme weight loss, irregular menstrual periods, and vision problems.

“My body was shaking from the inside out,” she recalls. “I weighed 98 pounds. I couldn’t stop moving, and I wasn’t sleeping well, but I could just shut off in a second.

“I could feel something was wrong with me, but I wasn’t sick,” she said. “My husband would say, ‘Honey, are you all right?’ and I would say, ‘Yeah, I’m fine, but I’m not all right. Something’s not right. Something’s happening in my body.’”

Friends noticed. Family noticed. But Neisewander shrugged off their concerns — until her son confronted her about it.

Neisewander finally went to an endocrinologist in Rockford who diagnosed her with Graves’ disease.

“He was 99.9 percent sure it was Graves’ disease – and a very severe case at that,” she said. “I was near a thyroid storm – a total-body shutdown. I had no choice but to kill the thyroid before it killed me. ... I decided I was going to put my big-girl pants on and fight like hell.”

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