Aug. 22, 2014
MEDICAL UNIVERSITY of SOUTH CAROLINA
Vol. 33, No. 1
SOLVING THE MYSTERY OF CHRONIC PAIN Public Relations
D
ebbie Talley was desperate. The 62–year–old Greenville woman had seen dentists, driven to Georgia for an appointment with a specialist and even had a tooth pulled to try to relieve her chronic pain. Nothing worked. “The pain in my gums affected my entire body. At night I was so tired I’d just break down in tears because the pain was all over. I told everyone I’m not depressed, but I feel like I’m going to die an early death,” Talley said. Then, a dentist told her about a specialist at MUSC. She ended up in the office of orofacial
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Haiti Outreach MUSC volunteers provide handson care to Haitians.
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I told everyone I’m not depressed, but I feel like I’m going to die an early death. Deborah Talley, describing pain that affected her whole body
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BY HELEN ADAMS
pain expert Theresa S. Gonzales, DMD and professor in the Department of Stomatology in the College of Dental Medicine.
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“She immediately knew what was wrong,” Talley said. “When I left there, it was like a weight had been lifted off my shoulders.” Gonzales, who was one of the speakers at MUSC’s recent scientific retreat on pain research, examined Talley carefully. She didn’t just focus on her gum pain. She asked Talley about her overall health, seeing the gum discomfort as part of a larger picture. They spent more than an hour discussing Talley’s pain, which began after she had two dental bridges put in and got worse after a tooth was pulled to try to ease that pain. The discomfort eventually spread to other parts of her body. Gonzales’s diagnosis involved something Talley
See Gonzales on page 8
Convocation Sets Tone
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Dental Impressions Day
‘Patients first’ was President David J. Cole’s message in speech.
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Meet Colleen
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Autism
READ THE CATALYST ONLINE - http://www.musc.edu/catalyst