All Episodes

December 24, 2024 32 mins

Just when Trent starts to believe the worst is behind him, an unexpected twist turns his world upside down. He’s forced to confront new challenges that test his resilience and make decisions that could change the course of life for him and his family forever.

We want to hear from you! Share your own medical mystery or tell us about the episode you connected with the most at Symptomatic@iheartmedia.com or drop us a voice note at https://www.speakpipe.com/symptomatic.

DISCLAIMER: By submitting your voice note using the link provided, you acknowledge that we have permission to potentially include that audio in future content.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
Really previously on symptomatic. Trent Fielder, a successful and vibrant
insurance assessor, suddenly faced a life threatening battle out of nowhere.
He began losing feeling in his arms and legs. The
condition spread quickly, leaving him wheelchair bound with no sensation

(00:24):
below the waist. Things worsened rapidly when his lungs began
to fail, landing him in the ICU with a daunting diagnosis,
gyond Beret syndrome GBS, an autoimmune disorder that attacks the
nervous system.

Speaker 2 (00:40):
I was overwhelmed. I could not get my heart to
slow down. The only things that I could think about
were the negative things. My focus was on what I lost.
You know, it was am I going to be able
to go back to what I used to do? Not
like this? But it was very much wrapped up in
the I can't do this anymore.

Speaker 3 (00:59):
They said that this was progressive and that he wasn't
going to make it. How do you process that?

Speaker 1 (01:05):
Even though Trent stabilized enough to return home to his wife,
Nicole and their young twins, the doctors couldn't restore much
of the mobility or feeling he'd lost overnight, despite trying
every treatment protocol. Then out of nowhere, another flare struck,
landing him back in the er fighting for his life.

Speaker 2 (01:26):
The pain was immense. The spasticity was just out of control.
The spasitos were so bad. At some point in my
neck my neck would try to snap itself. I couldn't
keep it in control. My jaw would pop. It was
very painful. So as the pain continued, the depression kicks in.
The beer kicks in.

Speaker 1 (01:48):
With his symptoms lingering longer than expected, Trent received a
new diagnosis, Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy CIDP, a progressive autoimmune
disease causing long term muscle weakness and fatigue. After exhausting
treatment options with little improvement to his mobility, Trent made

(02:08):
the tough decision to try a suggested spinal surgery, but
unfortunately the outcomes were more devastating than hopeful.

Speaker 2 (02:17):
So in the surgery there were some decisions made by
the surgeon that went against protocol for what you would
do with that implant, and he ended up cutting into
my t ten vertebra.

Speaker 1 (02:36):
How terrifying would it be to fight an unknown enemy,
one you didn't recognize and didn't see coming what if
that enemy was coming from within a disease that even
doctors couldn't identify. Nearly half of all Americans suffered from
some chronic illness, and many struggle for an accurate diagnosis.

(02:59):
These are their stories, and Lauren write the CHECKO and
this is symptomatic. Before we pick up with Trent's story,

(03:21):
a quick warning. This episode mentions thoughts of suicide. Please
proceed with care. Two years after Trent's symptoms first began,
he was dealing with the aftermath of a failed spinal
surgery meant to be a last ditch effort to restore
some mobility. Through the darkest moments, Trent drew strength from

(03:43):
his family, including his loyal service dog, Gunner, who never
left his side. With his t ten vertebrae severed, he
faced the risk of being paralyzed from the waist down forever.

Speaker 2 (03:57):
It wasn't until January twenty third, two thousand four where
I realized just how bad of a mistake he had made.
And that was when I ended up having two embolisms
back to back. And I was at home at the
time for the first one at least, but I realized
at the time I had a full breath in, and
with that full breath, I heard a calm, very peaceful

(04:21):
voice that said not yet. And immediately I became aware
of the fact that, Okay, I'm about to go through something,
but I'm not going to do it alone, and I'm
going to be okay.

Speaker 1 (04:32):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (04:34):
But I had a full breath then, and I realized
that that was my last breath. I've had the opportunity
to talk to people about what that last breath looks like.
And it was like seeing the world through a stained
glass window. It was absolutely remarkable. And when Nicole again
Nicole is stunningly gorgeous, but when she came in the
room for me to show her my phone, she was listening.

(04:57):
You know. It was kind of like seeing the ocean
off the sunrise. And so Nicole came in and I
had my phone and I'd put on there I cannot breathe,
Please stay call nine one one. She did two of
the three, the staying calm parts. She can't of skipped
that part. She went into full action. We had just
put the babies to bed, so she called nine one one.

Speaker 3 (05:20):
I got like really nervous, and thank god, the ambulance
had like a bogus phone call kind of nearby, because
they were at the house fairly quickly, and they got.

Speaker 2 (05:31):
To us within two minutes.

Speaker 1 (05:33):
Wow that I mean that in the voice that sounds
like divine intervention.

Speaker 2 (05:39):
Yeah, there were a lot of things that had to
happen and they can't all be circumstanced and for me
to be able to calmly get through that time. So
they got there right as I was finishing that last breath.
They gave me a shot of something in my neck
and then started taking me to the hospital. And at
that point Nicole broken down. So she came over to

(05:59):
the aim and you know, she sees tubes and everything else,
and it was more than she had ever seen before.
But I reached over and grabbed her hand and I said,
we're not going anywhere. It's going to be okay. I
was told it was going to be okay, So it's
gonna be okay. Then I got to the hospital and
the second one happened, and you flatlined a flat line,

(06:21):
and I wasn't gone very long.

Speaker 1 (06:25):
Due to its inflammatory nature and the resulting lack of mobility,
CIDP presents a higher risk for blood clotting issues like embolisms.
After everything Trent had been through. He and his family
faced his most severe reaction yet, pushing him to the
edge of death.

Speaker 2 (06:45):
And so I woke up being angry. I didn't really
know what I was angry at, but I wasn't angry
because of the condition. I wasn't angry at a doctor
or anything in particular. They put me in the ICU
and I was in there for a lot long time.
This is probably a few days into it. I was
down to about eighteen percent of my lungs. I could

(07:07):
really just barely breathe on my own.

Speaker 3 (07:09):
That was kind of scary, and it's kind of like, well,
if you're a lung scamp function I can put two
or two together. That means you can't breathe, and then
if you can't breathe, you're not going to be living.

Speaker 2 (07:22):
And there were these three doctors that came in. They
are the ones that looked me over while I was
in there, and they sat down and they said they
needed to talk to me, and you know, that's never
a good starting point to a conversation when it's a doctor.
And they said, there's not anything more that we can
do for you. So there's nothing more we can do
to reverse the effects, sort of make this better. So

(07:44):
they had come to a conclusion that they were going
to send me home and that they would set me
up on hospice at home.

Speaker 3 (07:52):
His doctors were all telling him that he was going
to die. What kind of patient wants to hear that?
That's crazy and nobody can predict the future, and he
was like, I have too much to live for. He's
just like, get on board or get out of here.

Speaker 1 (08:06):
Being sent home for hospice, Trent refused to accept that
this was the end of his fate. However, having deteriorated
so much physically, proving the doctor's wrong would not come
without its challenges. So on top of all the health issues,
what was your greatest fear at that point?

Speaker 3 (08:29):
That he would have killed himself and then I would
like walk into a body in blood on the floor.
That crazy, but yeah, I've thought of that once and twice.

Speaker 2 (08:43):
My doctor was right. I was not prepared for the
flood of emotions, and you know, it was like seeing
the events that had happened to me, like America around
It was just and I couldn't make it stop. And
so there were times when the emotions were really too
overwhelming and there was one particular time where I'd considered
an almost carried out, taking my own life back home.

Speaker 1 (09:04):
Trent sank into the depths of his desperation, but it
would be his faithful service dog, Gunner, who would prove
that there was a reason for hope.

Speaker 2 (09:15):
I planned it enough out where no family was going
to be around, nobody was going to be around me.
I'd be able to just cut the story short. Essentially,
there was a gun that was next to me and
a bag, and I reached over to grab the gun
and it wasn't there anymore. And I looked back and
Gunner had He had jumped up on the bed where

(09:37):
I couldn't hear him, and he had crawled to it
and took it away. And I looked right at him,
and he had it in his mouth. There was no
risk or anything to him, but he never lost eye
contact with me. He constantly looked at me while he
had this in there. His tail was not wagging. It
wasn't a game to him. He knew that this didn't fit.

(09:59):
So I tried to reach back further for him, and
he took steps back. And I tried to reach further back,
and he'd take steps back but never lost that contact.
He just kept backing up. And I eventually reached a
point where I was just exhausted mentally and physically, and
I just fell down to the ground. And at that

(10:20):
point I was crying, and he knew that that was
what needed to happen, and he came up to me
and nestled up against me, and he never left me.
They just stayed right there.

Speaker 1 (10:39):
What a beautiful story. Trend's condition had reached its lowest point,
with his lung capacity now at life threatening levels and
no treatment options left to counter the degeneration. He knew
he needed a fresh perspective from a new medical team.

(11:00):
If things were going to get better, it would be
up to him to dig deep and find a strength
he hadn't found before.

Speaker 2 (11:08):
I think that the anger of allowing a disease to
take control of my mindset, to take control of my heart,
my future as a husband, as a father, as a
friend of a son, that was where I was like,
I've allowed it to control me for too long, and
so that has to stop.

Speaker 1 (11:30):
We'll be right back with Symptomatic, a Medical Mystery Podcast.
Now back to Symptomatic a Medical Mystery Podcast. Trent had
followed all the doctor's orders, trying every possible medicine and
physical therapy approach, but only seeing temporary relief and minor

(11:55):
recovery from his pain and partial paralysis. After a failed
spinal surgery and two embolisms that caused him to flatline,
Trent still refused to accept defeat and was determined to
find a path to recovery. This turning point started with
the guidance and support of his mother's primary care physician,

(12:15):
who helped carve out a possible treatment plan, paving the
way for a different approach to physical therapy.

Speaker 2 (12:29):
She is an incredible woman. She is an amazing heart,
a giving person. She has gone far and above what
I thought any other doctor would do to help me.
She's coordinated my care. You know, she's kept the other
doctors honest, I guess, is what I would say. So
she's kept him in line to make sure that everybody
is talking and on the same page about my care.

(12:50):
When you think of an advocate patient advocate, she is
absolutely at the top of the list of the best
ones out there, and that never so that's exactly who
she is and who she'll always be. It is just
it's just her heart.

Speaker 1 (13:06):
First on Trend's list was rebuilding his lung capacity. To
do that, he turned to an unexpected life saving tool music.
It helped him retrain his lungs and find his breathing rhythm.
It also gave him a way to block out everything
else going on around him.

Speaker 2 (13:24):
Music had always been very important to me and helped
me get through some difficult times in my life. And
I realized that I can use that music to retrain
my lungs on a gradual basis to make them stronger.

Speaker 1 (13:38):
So you decided, I'm not accepting this and that's not
the way it's going to be. I'm going to train
myself to breathe again. I'm going to train myself period.
So what does that process look like and what kind
of advances do you start seeing?

Speaker 2 (13:57):
As I grew stronger in that, I was developing these
kind of mental programming to find out the best ways
to rehabilitate what I could rehabilitate my side, what I
had control over, whether I thought about it at the time,
I was empowering myself to improve and take control again

(14:18):
of the situation that was completely spiraling out of control.
So I focused on that. So the pain is still
there by using the music to guide my way through
the pain, to breathe and to cope and function at
a higher level.

Speaker 1 (14:37):
Trent worked diligently to increase his lung capacity to thirty
one percent, a significant step forward, but he didn't stop there.
He was already focusing on his next physical therapy goal,
setting the bar even higher. That mindset of always pushing
for more has been a constant in his recovery.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
Decision that I wanted to go beyond just functioning. I
wanted to excel and how am I going to do
that with a body that's attacking itself. I'm fortunate that
I follow kind of both sides of the traditional medicine
has been very supportive, but I push it to its
limits with what I do. Because I decided to go
through a program which is the Adaptive Training Foundation, and

(15:23):
I was invited to be a part of their class
with a number of people that are a lot of
wounded vets and first responders, people that have had traumatic
injuries that they've gone through or been born with certain conditions.
And it was such an incredible blessing to be given
that opportunity.

Speaker 3 (15:42):
After he went to ATF, because you know, he had
friends but he didn't really have like a good set
of people around him and stuff, and so he calls
them his tribe and they have like a whole big
tribe mentality of this is your people, we got your back,
and so that was really the turning point for him.

Speaker 1 (16:03):
At the Adoptive Training Foundation or atf Trent found a
supportive community of people facing similar challenges and working through
their own recoveries. It was there he met his new trainer,
Sean Fitzmorris, who would play a crucial role in helping
him take the next steps in his recovery.

Speaker 4 (16:24):
A lot of doctors, they are dealers of reality and
what science has shown them, our studies have shown them,
and they just rely on those soul things. And I
think that doctors do not want to be responsible for
if they were to say, hey, yes you'll walk again,
or hey, yes you're going to get this back and
you're going to be able to do these things in life,
because I don't think they want to over promise things

(16:45):
to them, you know. I think they want to be
as real as possible, which I think it can work
both ways, right, So they need to face the reality
and really looking in the eye and say this is
my truth right now. But my thing is that your
truth in a moment, maybe at that time, but it's
not your truth for your entire future. You're going to
create your own path, You're going to create your own truth.
You're going to create your own destiny with your own

(17:07):
unique abilities.

Speaker 2 (17:09):
We all meet people that are able to bring things
out in us and help show things in us that
make us stronger. Jean, he has that ability to bring
things out on you in the moment when you need
it most, when you're about ready to quit, right when
you're exhausted and think you can't do one more thing,
Sean finds a way to get under your skin so

(17:31):
that you're going to persevere through it.

Speaker 1 (17:38):
Still paralyzed from the waist down, Trent had been searching
for someone to help him believe there was more to
his life and mobility than what he'd come to accept
over the past few years. Sean stepped in and began
showing him the possibilities, but they both knew they had
to start with the small things first. Did he have
any specific goal or did you you have an initial

(18:01):
goal for him when you first started to work together.

Speaker 2 (18:05):
Well, his goal he wanted to walk.

Speaker 4 (18:07):
He had had some sea braces made that provided like
an electrical impulse when he walked, to get that feedback
through his legs. But he wanted to be able to
walk without the braces. And the thing is with the
braces too, it creates atrophies. So then those muscles really
aren't firing on their own. You know, they've got so
much stability and support from the braces that they can't

(18:27):
do the job they need to do.

Speaker 1 (18:29):
So the brace has become a crutch.

Speaker 4 (18:30):
Literally, they become a crutch.

Speaker 2 (18:32):
Literally.

Speaker 4 (18:33):
He was like a baby deer, but even like a
baby deer in a frozen pond, and we stayed very
very close to him. He was just the fear of following.
His legs were super atropheed but also super weak. They
weren't stable. But we started with foundational movements, a lot
of things. You know, you can't just go right from
being in a wheelchair to now, let's stand up and walk.

(18:55):
There's so many more things we had to work on,
just ground based stuff, you know, getting them all fours,
getting even quadruped, working on his core, working on a
lot of the small things, working on crawling, working on balance.
A lot of times people get so focused on the
end goal, and they get frustrated with the small things
we need to do along the way to get them there.

Speaker 1 (19:17):
More than five years after his sudden paralysis, Trent finally
found a like minded community and an approach that began
to show real progress. By shifting his mindset beyond his
original prognosis and finding the right support system to guide
his training, he was determined to meet his goal of
walking again.

Speaker 2 (19:40):
We figured out how to get me up on my
feet and doing it very unconventionally with golf balls, PBC,
pipe and cape. We kind of out scienced the science
because I couldn't feel my legs. It's like, okay, well
your legs are basically shock ofs orbers for your spine,
and so I needed to find a way to take
how the shot dissipates, and I needed not to dissipate.

(20:02):
I needed to go up to my hips where I
could feel. We're just trapping all this stuff together. I mean,
it was kind of a guyver for rehabilitation.

Speaker 3 (20:10):
So they're kind of like bracing him and then he
asks like crutches, and I'm just walking home, kind of
amazed that he's using the crutches. He's upright, he's walking forward.

Speaker 2 (20:18):
I was taking not big steps, smaller steps, but I
was making sure that my feet would pound on the
ground as best I could. But I could feel my hips.
It's like a pattern, and I could follow. And I
reached the end of the street and then turned around
and Fitz was there, and Ari was one of my
other trainers. Since she was there, I can't hear anything

(20:39):
that they're saying because I have the headphones on and
the music going. I have no concept of how loud
I am. And as we start going back, I was
just like, you know what, I'm gonna fall. I'm gonna fall.
So I dropped one of.

Speaker 3 (20:54):
The crutches and then he like, he goes ahead and
he drops the other crutch and just kind of like,
what is this guy doing?

Speaker 2 (21:03):
So again, I can't feel my legs. I've got no
appropriate perception, so I have to look down. I have
to look at my legs, and that's what I was doing.
And there, I guess it is screaming at me essentially
in the background, and I can't hear anything.

Speaker 3 (21:17):
And then he pushes his trainers away and then he
freaking takes steps and walks towards me and gives me
a great big hug. You know, Like I said, he
is one determined son of a gun. Do you tell
him now, He's going to be like, oh yeah, you
just wait.

Speaker 2 (21:33):
And I think it was probably another twelve or thirteen
steps before I realized and I looked at him. Shawn's
just right there.

Speaker 4 (21:43):
And you know, it's kind of like forced up when
he starts running. His braces are flat off.

Speaker 2 (21:47):
And he just said, you're doing it, man, You're doing it.
You're doing it. And I read his lips and I
looked at it and I just fell apart. I just collapsed,
and he caught me and I'd done it, and there
were people well to celebrate the whole thing. I just cried.

Speaker 4 (22:03):
It was a very emotional moment looking on and it's
still you get the happy tears going when you see it.
It was a powerful moment and it's just a huge
milestone for him to reach on that day.

Speaker 2 (22:14):
Oh gosh, five years, ten months, twenty five days, and
five and a half hours, I'm never going to forget
that minute.

Speaker 1 (22:28):
You talked about he had lost his purpose for a
period of time, and you'd said that life for a
while was kind of like a shit show, and so
would you say that once he found atf he found
a new purpose.

Speaker 3 (22:45):
I think I think he was surrounded by a lot
of people who encouraged him. And it's so easy to
say you can't do this, or you won't do this,
or this is never going to happen, and it's like,
if you hear it so often, even if it's not
the truth, that becomes the truth. So when you have
people speaking positivity into your life, saying, hey, it doesn't

(23:07):
matter X, Y or Z, you can do this, you
can fight, you can push.

Speaker 5 (23:12):
So I just think that was just a really.

Speaker 3 (23:15):
Good group of people to continually speak positivity and to
kind of get him in the right mindset to make
positive changes and believe in himself and keep on going
from there.

Speaker 1 (23:33):
In typical Trent fashion, just walking wasn't enough. With a
renewed sense of hope, he set his sights on an
even bigger goal, completing a half iron Man. While his
training team suggested waiting twelve to eighteen months, Trent had
other plans. He signed up for the first race he
could find just a few months away. So, for those

(23:57):
not familiar, tell me what a half iron man intail?

Speaker 2 (24:00):
Else, half iron man is a seventy point three mile distance,
which is one point two miles swim, it's a fifty
six mile bike, and then a thirteen point one mile run,
or in my case at the time, it was a
racing chair. That makes up for the fact because I
couldn't run, and I did pretty well in the swim.

(24:20):
On the bike, I was seventeen miles in. It's a
very interesting picture contrast at miles sixteen, I'm like on
top of the world. Mile seventeen you could see it
runt in my face because I had actually torn both
my rotator cuffs and.

Speaker 1 (24:32):
Biceps before you even get to the running chair.

Speaker 2 (24:36):
Right before I give the runna chair, before I was
even a third of the way through the bike.

Speaker 1 (24:41):
How did you keep going?

Speaker 2 (24:43):
I think one of the most important things of life,
in this case, certainly, but in every case, is to
know your why. And when you know your why in life,
then you really become a force of nature. You can
be unstoppable. And I knew why I was there. There
was no way that I could quit, no matter how
much it hurt, because the bike is a hand cycle,

(25:04):
so I'm using my arms the whole time. But I
had to be able to keep going because I was
doing it for Hope. I made it to the very end,
about point two miles out, and that was when I
felt the calling. And it was when I heard the
voice was the rise and walk. I'm like, oh, I
was like, are you sure, God, because I could just
coast him. But I ended up getting up. I gets

(25:25):
some help and I was able to not just walk
across the finish line. I had a small jog.

Speaker 3 (25:31):
He said he heard God tell him get up, and
so he physically got up out of that thing, and
then he ended up walking and then running the last
like tenth of a mile.

Speaker 2 (25:41):
And I did it. I had my headphones on, I
was looking straight down the whole time. I collapsed as
soon as I got across the finish.

Speaker 5 (25:47):
Line, and everybody was like what this paralyzed too.

Speaker 3 (25:51):
Just got up and ran across the finish line and
my dad caught him and our friend Adam, and it
was pretty amazing.

Speaker 5 (25:58):
And then in the video and Abia's like, go.

Speaker 3 (26:00):
Daddy go, go Daddy go, and.

Speaker 2 (26:05):
It started something. People were videoing it and posting it
and sharing it because they just couldn't believe what they
were seeing. And probably about thirty five forty minutes from
the time I got my medal to getting to the car.
By the time I got to the car, I had
almost eleven hundred messages on Facebook, and I had probably

(26:25):
about half that in friend requests, and the majority of
them being vets and first responders and people just needing hope.
And it just continued to grow. And that's how I
spent the last years doing what I'm doing, never doing
it for myself. This can't ever be about me. If
it is, i'd find a reason to quit. And the

(26:46):
mission has always been hope. So I've done half iron Man,
iron Man, I've done USA Triathlon, I've won national championships
that way.

Speaker 1 (26:57):
Trent has since completed multiple endurance events, including representing Team
USA as the only para athlete in last Summer's Triathlon
World Championships in Australia. He doesn't push himself for accolades
or medals which he gives away to others. He does
it to physically pass on his message of hope wherever

(27:18):
he goes. His loving kids, Logan and Nevayah understand this
more than anyone. Why is your dad different from other dads?

Speaker 6 (27:29):
He has been paralyzed from the waist down for a
long time, and that he wants to give people hope
and he runs iron Man's and gives his metals away
to other people.

Speaker 1 (27:44):
What are you most proud of when you think of
your dad?

Speaker 7 (27:48):
Probably him being able to do all these things while
having treatments and surgeries and taking care of stuff around
the house as well, like being able to do iron
mans and all these races, and like still being able
to be there for us, like as a dad. You know,
him being able to walk after people told him he
wouldn't be able to is like probably the most aspiring thing.

Speaker 1 (28:12):
And Nicole, what do you hope people take away from
hearing Trent's story?

Speaker 3 (28:17):
Hopelessness is such a disease, and it's kind of like,
if you don't have hope, what do you have? Whatever
the situation is, there's always light at the end of
the tunnel, regardless of how dark it may seem.

Speaker 2 (28:30):
Now, if people can understand that, there are going to
be moments in our life that generate suffering, but the
question is what do we do with it? What are
we able to do with it? If it's too difficult
or it feels too overbearing to make a change in
our life, then do it a different way by making
a change in somebody else's, by impacting somebody else's. And

(28:53):
I could have never imagined the things that have occurred
with me. I mean, how can I imagine going from
the guy to flatlines on a table to a go
medalist in ten years? And people constantly they'll ask you, Rocker,
what did it feel like to hold the metal? I'm like,
the metal is not the message. Help is the message.
And I think that's what I would like people to
best understand, whether it's through this podcast or through my life,

(29:16):
is that no matter what, and no matter how long
of a road that it took, I chose hope, and
I choose that for everybody.

Speaker 1 (29:32):
Always looking to pay it forward. Trent gave his gold
medal from this Summer's Triathlon World Championships to his wife, Nicole,
who has been his steadfast supporter from the beginning. You
can also be a part of his message of hope
and keep up with his next adventure at Trentfielder dot com.
Special thanks to Chive Charities for the work they do

(29:54):
with veterans and those living with rare diseases and the
impact they've had on Trent's story. If you know someone
who might benefit from hearing his story or other stories
in this season of Symptomatic, we encourage you to share
it with them. And knowing that health struggles can often
be a marathon instead of a sprint, if you want
to help others cross the finish line, consider paying it

(30:16):
forward like Trent has by donating to his nonprofit at
Trhope dot org. That's trii Hope dot org or Chive
Charities at chive Charities dot org.

Speaker 2 (30:29):
My name is Trent Fielder. I was diagnosed with Giambore
syndrome in twenty eleven and in twenty twelve I was
diagnosed with chronic inflammatory demolinating polyueropathy. I went from flat
lining on an emergency room table to eventually working to
train myself how to breathe, how to walk. Eventually took

(30:50):
on a mission to compete, and that competition led me
from flat line to finish line. And that finish line
was gold medal at the World Championships this past year
with Team USA.

Speaker 1 (31:01):
As we close out the season of Symptomatic, we want
to take a moment and say thank you to all
our dedicated listeners. We've had the privilege of telling some
very special stories this year, from a doctor turned rare
disease patient and cutting edge cancer care to every story
of determination this season. It's been so heartwarming seeing your

(31:22):
reactions and humbling being able to share your stories. So
if you have a medical mystery, don't hesitate to reach
out to us. It's Symptomatic at iHeartMedia dot com and now,
for the first time, you can also leave us a
voicemail by using the link at the end of the
show notes who knows you or someone you know could
be at the center of the next episode or spark

(31:45):
thoughtful conversation in an upcoming house calls. Until next time,
be Well. Symptomatic is a production of Ruby Studio from iHeartMedia.
Our show is hosted by me Lauren breg Pacheco. Executive
producers are Matt Rema and myself. Our EP of Post
production is James Foster. Our supervising producer is Cierra Kaiser.

(32:07):
Our writers are John Irwin and Diana Davis, and our
editor is Sierra Spreen, with additional help from Matt Stillo.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

40s and Free Agents: NFL Draft Season
Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Ding dong! Join your culture consultants, Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang, on an unforgettable journey into the beating heart of CULTURE. Alongside sizzling special guests, they GET INTO the hottest pop-culture moments of the day and the formative cultural experiences that turned them into Culturistas. Produced by the Big Money Players Network and iHeartRadio.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.