subscribesubscriber servicescontact usabout ussite mapBuy a Classified
Mon, Nov 09 2009 

Published: December 22, 2007 11:28 pm    print this story  

Surgery ends eight years of suffering for woman

By Mannix Porterfield
REGISTER-HERALD REPORTER

Not every gift of the season is found in a brightly decorated box piled with others under an illuminated evergreen in the living room at Christmas.

For Frances Blackshire, the gift awaiting her was inside the operating room at St. Mary’s Hospital in Huntington.

Eight years of intense pain finally ended. At times, the suffering was so unbearable she couldn’t eat. Blackshire’s odyssey took her from one doctor to the next, only to find temporary respite offered by a pain killing tablet, or an injection, that only lasted a mere two or three hours.

“One session was so bad I was screaming for the whole time,” Blackshire recalled. “Hurt more than ever.”

One physician erroneously diagnosed her trouble as rheumatoid arthritis. Aware of the potential for total paralysis, two hospitals refused to accept her for the operation, once her misery was accurately identified.

Finally, husband Roger happened to read a Register-Herald story about a Cabell County legislator who faced the same affliction — damaged discs in the back.

Mindful of similar symptoms, Blackshire got in touch with Delegate Kelli Sobonya, R-Cabell, and a friendship was forged that led to Dr. Pamos Ignatiadus, a neurosurgeon in Huntington, and successful surgery was performed Dec. 4.

Sobonya went to St. Mary’s the day of Blackshire’s operation and has kept in touch.

“I could hear the pain in her voice,” Sobonya recalled of her initial conversation with the Sand Lick woman.

“We just hit it off from day one. We’re like kindred spirits. After she had been given the run-around with doctors in different places that wouldn’t take her insurance, she made an appointment with my neurosurgeon.”

But she was told it would take almost two months to see the doctor. Sobonya had a friend at the appointment desk and moved her date up within two hours.

“He found out she had pretty much the same problems as I did,” the delegate said.

Part of the procedure entails insertion of cadaver bone where the vertebrae has deteriorated and is rebuilt.

“I’m an organ donor, so hopefully one day I can do the same thing for somebody else,” Sobonya said.

Once the two met, Blackshire learned Sobonya had regained full motion in her neck, had no trouble operating a motor vehicle and seemed to have her life restored.

“It was such a relief to talk to someone about this horrible condition,” she said.

After the operation, which calls for an incision in her throat, Sobonya lost the use of her voice temporarily, a brief setback that prompted some good-natured kidding by Democratic lawmakers, who jokingly wished her silence would linger throughout the 2008 session.

“That just affects certain people,” the lawmaker said. “I’m not sure what causes it. Mine lasted almost two months. Frances was talking the day I went to visit her in the hospital. My voice is fully restored. I’m ready to start the session and be very vocal.”

Blackshire views Ignatiadus as “a healing instrument of the Lord,” and his surgical work on her as Heaven sent.

“I have received a miracle,” she said.

“I do not want, nor do I deserve, any credit for what happened. It was the Lord’s work, who had mercy on me, one of His children.”

Sobonya brightened up Blackshire’s recovery with Christmas flowers and a special pillow, all the while providing her with support in a shared medical problem.

“Kelly is a very special, caring person ...,” Blackshire said. “I know she is a God-fearing woman who is working her heart out for the people of Cabell County, yet she took time to direct, guide and support me through this time. She truly cares.”

The 55-year-old grandmother also praised fellow worshippers at Fairdale Freewill Baptist Church and a number of friends and relatives for seeing her through the ordeal.

Try as she did, Blackshire found it impossible to coax a smile out of her surgeon until the surgery was completed, and she remarked, in jest, how her husband wished she could be voiceless for at least three weeks.

“When he heard that, he finally smiled,” she said.

— E-mail:

mannix@register-herald.com

print this story  



autoconx

Premier Guide
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide

Find a job! Find a Home! Find a car!

Premium Jobs

SURFACE MINE ENGINEER
A coal company in southern West Virginia is seeking a Surface Mine Engineer. Summary: Reporting to the Chief Engineer an...>MORE

ELECTRICAL DIVISION POSITIONS
Taggart Global, LLC is an international design, engineering and construction company with expertise in turnkey design, s...>MORE

CERTIFIED NURSING ASSISTANT - MONTGOMERY GENERAL ELDERLY CARE
MONTGOMERY GENERAL ELDERLY CARE is accepting applications / resumes for Certified Nursing Assistants. Applicants may app...>MORE

NURSE PRACTITIONER - GREENBRIER CO.
Nurse Practitioner for busy medical office in western Greenbrier County. Must be able to work evenings and weekends. Ful...>MORE

EMT APPRENTICESHIP PROGRAM
Jan-Care Ambulance Service is currently accepting applications for our Emergency Medical Technician Academy and Field Ap...>MORE

LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSE - MONTGOMERY GENERAL ELDERLY CARE
MONTGOMERY GENERAL ELDERLY CARE is accepting applications / resumes for Licensed Practical Nurses. Qualified candidates ...>MORE

ACCOUNTANT / AUDITOR
Career Opportunity exists with Welch Community Hospital as a Patient Accounting Manager. Responsibilities will include t...>MORE

MEDICAL PROVIDER
The Military Entrance Processing Station (MEPS) is recruiting a Medical Provider (MD) for a part-time / on-call position...>MORE

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
LEWISBURG, WV - The Robert C. Byrd Clinic (RCBC) is currently seeking an Executive Director. Affiliated with the ...>MORE

LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES
Make a difference in the life of a veteran. Are you interested in working in a state-of-the-art, one-of-a-kind organizat...>MORE

See all ads

Premium Jobs

See all ads


 

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.CNHI Classified Advertising NetworkCNHI News Service
Associated Press content © 2009. All rights reserved. AP content may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Our site is powered by Zope and our Internet Yellow Pages site is powered by PremierGuide.
Some parts of our site may require you to download the Flash Player Plugin.
View our Privacy Policy
Advertiser index