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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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and further exacerbating the nervous and emotional crisis. This pattern of overstimulation<br />

of the mind, the pituitary, the thyroid, the mind, and so forth becomes a vicious, selffeeding<br />

cycle, which can be life threatening if it is not effectively treated.<br />

According to this Baltimore expert, the fact that <strong>Bush</strong> has experienced a pattern of atrial<br />

fibrillation is cause for concern not so much because of what it portends for <strong>Bush</strong>'s heart,<br />

but rather because it shows that <strong>Bush</strong>'s case of Basedow's disease is already well<br />

advanced, with a significant excess of thyroid hormone. <strong>The</strong> overproduction of thyroid<br />

hormone can theoretically be brought under control through the administration of<br />

radioactive iodine, but this does not mean that the disease itself is easy to treat or to bring<br />

under control with any finality. Precisely because Basedow's disease is emotionally<br />

triggered, a sudden increase in emotional stress can result in a renewal of erratic<br />

behavior.<br />

<strong>The</strong> good news, in the view of this expert, is that patients suffering from Basedow's<br />

disease do not have to be placed into a mental institution. <strong>The</strong>ir symptoms can be<br />

managed, although they will continue to have their ups and downs. But such management<br />

requires a stress-free environment. <strong>The</strong> implications for <strong>Bush</strong>'s further tenure in the<br />

White House are obvious enough: the Federal Aeronautics Administration will not grant<br />

a pilot's license of any kind to a person who has been diagnosed with Basedow's disease.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Baltimore specialist also pointed out that although samples of <strong>Bush</strong>'s blood, taken by<br />

his White House doctors and frozen over a period of months and years, might be tested<br />

for thyroid hormone in order to answer the all-important question of when <strong>Bush</strong>'s case of<br />

Basedow's disease actually began, these findings might be fragmentary because of the<br />

significant day-to-day variations in the level of thyroid hormone. If a sample had been<br />

taken after <strong>Bush</strong> heard the news that Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz had declined to<br />

accept <strong>Bush</strong>'s threatening letter handed to him by Secretary of State Baker, <strong>Bush</strong>'s level<br />

of thyroid hormone that day might have been high enough to warrant immediate<br />

hospitalization.<br />

In the opinion of this expert, these points all represent standard, well-known medical<br />

doctrine which is not subject to any controversy among physicians and specialists. <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

White House medical team must therefore be keenly aware of all of them.<br />

According to a California professor of radiology, hyperthyroidism is traditionally<br />

associated with patients who are irritable, restless, overactive, and emotionally labile.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y often lack the ability to concentrate, and have symptoms of anxiety. <strong>The</strong>y also<br />

exhibit impulsive behavior. In addition, there are outright psychiatric disorders which are<br />

associated with hyperthyroidism. This professor pointed to <strong>Bush</strong>'s decision to initiate<br />

hostilities against Iraq, in which he rejected the advice of eight out of nine secretaries of<br />

defense, three former chairmen of the joint chiefs of staff, and other prominent experts in<br />

order to wage war. Could this kind of decision-making process be associated with <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

hyperthyroidism? In this specialist's opinion it is difficult to say, because of the difficulty<br />

of determining with precision when <strong>Bush</strong>'s hyperthyroid condition began. <strong>Bush</strong>'s choice<br />

of Dan Quayle as a running mate might also fit into this type of pattern.

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