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Jayne Kerns holds her daughter, Catherine,
and son, Brian,
at their home
in Spotsylvania County. Kerns is determined to raise awareness
of Cushing's disease,
an uncommon hormonal disorder that often leads to fatigue, weight gain, high blood pressure and other problems.

After years, mystery ills diagnosed

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Chance meeting leads to diagnosis and treatment that alters woman's life A local woman finds out what's wrong, gets help after chance encounter


Date published: 4/3/2005

On the day her life changed for the better, Laura Zastrow was exhausted. So much so that she almost didn't go to the Quantico commissary, as she'd planned.

For years, Zastrow had felt run down without knowing why. One doctor chalked it up to depression. But that afternoon at Quantico, a stranger offered another diagnosis: Cushing's disease.

Rare and often misdiagnosed, Cushing's causes fatigue, weight gain, hair growth, mood swings, high blood pressure and other ills, all familiar to Zastrow.

The stranger, Jayne Kerns, recognized her own puffy face and hairy arms in Zastrow.

"I said, 'I feel like I'm looking in the mirror,'" Kerns said.

Kerns encouraged Zastrow to check out a Cushing's Web site, which Zastrow did. Every symptom listed matched her condition. Her doctor ran some tests, and the results confirmed Zastrow had Cushing's, a hormonal disorder often brought on by a tumor.

The chance meeting in September 2003 transformed Zastrow's life. In the months since, she's had surgery to remove a large tumor on her pituitary gland and rediscovered her old, healthier self.

"My energy is coming back," said Zastrow, of Locust Grove. "I've lost a lot of weight. I feel good. I don't feel like I'm in a fog anymore."

Kerns, of Spotsylvania County, has made it a mission to raise as much awareness as possible of Cushing's since being diagnosed with the disease in 2000. She's written President Bush asking him to declare a National Cushing's Awareness Day in April.

Her meeting with Zastrow was first described in a Free Lance-Star profile of Kerns in 2004. At the time, nobody yet knew just how life-altering that meeting would be.

It emboldened Kerns to keep reaching out to people she thinks have the disease. And it gave Zastrow hope for a healthier, more energetic future.

"I was at the point where I was deteriorating so fast that if Jayne wouldn't have approached me, I honestly don't know what would have happened," Zastrow said recently. "Obviously, I didn't know anything about [Cushing's], and neither did my doctors."

For those with the disease, April 8 is the unofficial day to recognize it and the man--Dr. Harvey Cushing--who first put a name to it.


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Date published: 4/3/2005