Kathleen Ford of Solano County was a nurse for more than 20 years, until one day she squatted down to help a patient and, hobbled by terrible joint pain, couldn’t stand up.
Then in her 60s, Ford had been diagnosed with lupus years earlier. It’s a mysterious autoimmune disease that drives inflammation as the body’s own immune system fights tissue and organs instead of foreign intruders like viruses and bacteria. Symptoms are a rollercoaster, from hair loss to joint pain that afflicted Ford so badly hat she had to quit the job she loved. Strange rashes also broke out on her legs — then quickly disappeared.
Related Articles
About 1.5 million Americans have lupus and almost all — 90% — are women There is no cure. Treatments may relieve symptoms, but the troubling side effects can include os

The Mercury News

Associated Press US News
AlterNet
The Conversation
People Top Story
Fortune
CBS News