Mandela battled lung infection, a chronic ailment

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
A worshipper prays at the Regina Mundi Church in Soweto, South Africa, prior to early morning Mass on Tuesday, Dec. 11, 2012. Calls for prayer have been made for former president Nelson Mandela who was admitted to the hospital. (AP Photo/Denis Farrell)
Buy Sauk Valley Media Photos »

Mandela has a history with lung problems. He fell ill with tuberculosis in 1988 toward the tail-end of his prison years, after he had been moved from the notorious Robben Island and to another jail to ease the apartheid government's efforts to negotiate with him about a possible release. At first, doctors were uncertain why Mandela had a persistent cough that ultimately caused him to collapse during a meeting with his lawyer. After being taken to a Cape Town hospital, a doctor told him he had water in his lungs.

Mandela initially refused to believe the doctor, he wrote in his autobiography "Long Walk to Freedom."

"With a hint of annoyance, (the doctor) said, 'Mandela, take a look at your chest,'" Mandela recounted. "He pointed out that one side of my chest was actually larger than the other."

Surgeons immediately cut into Mandela's chest and removed two liters (half a gallon) of liquid from his lungs, which tested positive for tuberculosis. Doctors at the time suggested Mandela contracted the disease from his damp prison cell.

About 1.4 million people worldwide die each year from tuberculosis, a bacterial infection which can stay dormant for years. It also can cause permanent lung damage, though in his autobiography Mandela says doctors caught it in time. However, tuberculosis can return to trouble those previously infected, properly treated or not, and previous damage could have been missed, Openshaw said.

Openshaw, who has not seen Mandela's medical records and spoke generally about treating patients, said pneumonia is the most likely respiratory illness to affect an elderly person, though others can strike as well. Doctors typically use antibiotics to treat such infections, though there needed to be care made in deciding how much of a dose to give an older patient.

And there's the challenge of treating a patient that a nation and many around the world remain anxiously worried about.

"It's particularly difficult if it's in a special patient, where you really have to be very careful to try not to overreact, but just to treat them as if they were any other patient," Openshaw said.

But the doctor later acknowledged the obvious: "It's very hard to the balance right (for) a special, special patient."

Comments

Blogs

» Out Here
Out Here

Wise saw collapse in support

Last week, Sterling Alderwoman Amy Viering attended her last meeting as a city official. She gave the usual praise one hears at such departures. But one compliment stuck out. At the end of her speech, she turned to City Administrator Scott Shumard and said, "You're awesome."
» Out Here
Out Here

On pensions, Bivins and GOP far apart

Sen. Tim Bivins, R-Dixon, joined with many of his fellow Senate Republicans this week to reject a pension bill sponsored by Democratic Senate President John Cullerton of Chicago. The measure passed 40-16. Bivins had a different reason for his no vote.

Reader Poll

How concerned are you that the IRS targeted conservative political groups for additional and often burdensome scrutiny?

Very concerned
Somewhat concerned
Not very concerned
Not concerned at all