Submit your comments on this article | |
Israel-Palestine | |
Arafat's personal physician sez he had AIDS (but he died of astroke, really) | |
2005-09-08 | |
Wasn't it Ion Pacepa who reported that the east-european handlers of Arafish back in the olden days used to record his bodyguards-based homosexual orgies? Or shrugged with disgust when the "rais" sent his security men to bring him back young boys? Or did I see that in a "Queer eye for the straight guy" episode?![]() The medical dossier initially was obtained by the New York Times and two Israeli media outlets, which conducted separate reviews of the information, resulting in different explanations for the cause of the stroke and deepening the puzzle. "The mystery around Yasser Arafat will only grow bigger and bigger after reading this report," said Avi Isacharoff, the Israel Radio reporter who obtained the medical records with the Israeli daily Haaretz. He shared the contents of the dossier with AP. Palestinian Foreign Minister Nasser al-Kidwa, an Arafat nephew and one of the few people who had access to the leader and his French doctors, also said the revealed reports shed no new light and the cause of death remains unknown. Arafat fell ill in his compound in the West Bank town of Ramallah — where he had been confined by the Israelis for three years — a month before he died. He spent his last two weeks at the Percy Military Training Hospital in Clamart, France. Arafat's wife, Suha, and Palestinian officials have never given a definitive cause of death and kept Arafat's medical records a closely guarded secret. Mrs. Arafat also rejected calls for an autopsy. The Israeli reporters got the records from an unidentified senior Palestinian official, then shared the information with the Times, which conducted its own review. Israeli and American medical experts were consulted. According to the French report, Arafat suffered a digestive ailment about 30 days before his death. He also had an "acute" case of a blood disorder, disseminated intravascular coagulation, or D.I.C. The report was signed by Bruno Pats, a senior doctor at the hospital. The Times reported that Arafat's stroke was caused by D.I.C. stemming from an unidentified infection, though it rejected AIDS or poisoning. The newspaper cited an unidentified Israeli infectious-diseases expert as criticizing the French medical team for not testing for AIDS. But the expert said after studying the records, AIDS was unlikely due to the sudden onset of an intestinal illness. The Haaretz report, however, quoted Dr. Gil Lugassi, president of the Israel Hematologists Association, as saying the symptoms described could be typical of AIDS. "What is simply unacceptable and seems very perplexing is the absolute disregard for the possibility of AIDS," Lugassi, one of the doctors to review the records, was quoted as saying. Contacted by AP, Lugassi declined to comment. Dr. Ashraf al-Kurdi, Arafat's personal physician, asserted that Arafat had the AIDS virus in his blood. "It was given to him Israeli officials reject accusations of poisoning from senior Palestinians, and the Times review said poisoning was highly unlikely. It noted that toxicology reports conducted by the French doctors were negative.
A senior Palestinian official, Saeb Erekat, suggested Arafat's family ask the French doctors to publicize the records and "put an end to all these allegations and rumors." The biggest unknown was the nature of an infection that appears to have led to the blood disorder D.I.C., which was never controlled and led to his death. The Times medical experts, like the French doctors, could not determine where in Arafat's bowel the infection was located and what microbes caused it. It said one possibility might have been food contamination. Arafat became ill with nausea, abdominal pain and diarrhea after eating dinner in his compound last Oct. 12. The symptoms continued for more than two weeks before he was evacuated to France. He died Nov. 11. | |
Posted by:anonymous5089 |
#4 Sepsis would suggest my prayers were answered. |
Posted by: Fred 2005-09-08 18:33 |
#3 AIDS would explain the tremors and dementia that surfaced towards the end. |
Posted by: Rory B. Bellows 2005-09-08 15:18 |
#2 Or, from http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/000573.htm comes these tidbits: DIC is when your body's blood clotting mechanisms are activated throughout the body instead of being localized to an area of injury. Small blood clots form throughout the body, and eventually the blood clotting factors are used up and not available to form clots at sites of real tissue injury. Clot dissolving mechanisms are also increased. This disorder has variable effects, and can result in either clotting symptoms or, more often, bleeding. Bleeding can be severe. DIC may be stimulated by many factors. These include infection in the blood by bacteria or fungus, severe tissue injury (as in burns and head injury), cancer, reactions to blood transfusions, and obstetrical complications (such as retained placenta after delivery). Risk factors are recent sepsis, recent injury or trauma, recent surgery or anesthesia, complications of labor and delivery, leukemia or disseminated cancer, recent blood transfusion reaction, and severe liver disease. |
Posted by: Bobby 2005-09-08 14:57 |
#1 A Google search turned up seval discussions. This one - http://rnbob.tripod.com/dic.htm - offered the following tidbits: Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC) is always a secondary disease and is a consequence of many other primary problems. Trauma patients are at increased risk for DIC. Widespread areas of tissue damage (particularly the brain), sepsis and multiple organ failure. Sepsis may occur in about 40% of trauma patients and is an important primary cause of DIC in all patients. Fibrin deposition in DIC may lead to further organ dysfunction. DIC is a major cause of acute renal failure and it also contributes to multiple system organ failure. The converse is also true with damaged organs contributing to DIC. |
Posted by: Bobby 2005-09-08 14:55 |