October 4, 2012 Current Issue

Page 1

The Suburban Newspaper for Mountain Brook, Homewood, Vestavia Hills, Hoover and North Shelby County

OVER THE MOUNTAIN

INSIDE

JOU RNAL OTMJ.COM

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 2012

VOL. 22 #19

STAYING STRONG

A Alex Hitz brings Beverly Hills style to BBG

ABOUT TOWN PAGE 3

Vestavia Hills family brings home life lessons from mission trip to Africa LIFE PAGE 16

ZooGala raises money for Birmingham Zoo

SOCIAL PAGE 18

Karen Burton, left, a breast cancer survivor, and Kelly Bannister of Susan G. Komen of North Central Alabama, get ready for the Oct. 20 Race for the Cure Journal photo by Lee Walls Jr. in Linn Park in downtown Birmingham.

Breast Cancer Survivor Aims to Educate, Comfort Others

K

BY KEYSHA DREXEL

JOURNAL EDITOR

aren Burton, 48, of Hoover thought she was doing everything right to take care of her health. Karen lost her mother to breast cancer, and so she started getting mammograms when she was just 26 years old to make sure any potential problems were detected early. Despite her vigilance, Karen was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2009. “I thought I was doing the right thing with the early mammograms, but no one ever told me that for women with dense breast tissue, MRIs are better for making an early diagnosis,” Karen said.

MAKING A DIFFERENCE

Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure details, page 15 Vestavia and Hoover firefighters team up with T-shirt idea, page 15

Karen was diagnosed with stage 2 breast cancer and was told the disease had not spread to her lymph nodes. She had a lumpectomy and was released from medical care. Karen had genetic testing done after the lumpectomy and found she does not carry the gene for breast cancer. “I thought everything was fine at that point, that the surgery had removed it all and that I was on my way back,” she said.

But through the insistence of her friends, Karen decided to get a second opinion. “I just wanted to be extra-careful, and there was a little voice inside me telling me to seek a second opinion,” she said. When she was tested by doctors at another hospital, she was told she would need a double mastectomy to fight the breast cancer. The news from the doctors did not improve from there, Karen said. “I woke up from having a double mastectomy to learn that the cancer had spread to my lymph nodes,” she said. “I couldn’t believe it.” After six weeks of chemotherapy and 33 radiation treatments, Karen’s breast cancer is in remission. She has scans every six months. See STRONG, page 14

Virginia Samford Theatre celebrates 10 years

SOCIAL PAGE 20

Mountain Brook father, son aim to draw awareness to dyslexia SCHOOLS PAGE 29

SUE MURPHY ON HEALTHCARE P. 2•BLUFF PARK ART SHOW RETURNS P. 4•OTM SCHOOLS APPROVE BUDGETS P. 10•NATIONAL MERIT SCHOLAR SEMIFINALISTS P. 31


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