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Dustin
Kunnari
- - - Update
April 2008 - - -
We never thought Dustin would be here 14 years later!
He is now 17, only has one more year of high school left, 6 feet tall and
is a Certified Public Nurse! Wow! Thanks to Dr. Burzynski's treatment.
Dustin is planning on continuing his Nursing education to be a registered
Nurse. He is very active has no physical problems to speak of. He just had a
MRI in September of 2007 and everything looks great. He took a trip recently
to Big Sky, Montana to go snowboarding which he loves to do. He also plays
the guitar.
- - - Update
August 2004 - - -
Dustin is
now 13 years old Cancer free and doing great. He no longer needs
any medicine except vitamins. He loves to swim, bike, and play
baseball with his brother.
- - - Update
July 2003 - - -
Dustin was
able to take capsules to end his treatment for 2 years. He is
now 12 years old . He has been in remission since September 1995,
for 7 years. He is playing baseball, basketball, and he is doing
very well on his guitar. Nobody would ever know when meeting Dustin
that he ever had brain cancer. Thanks to the Burzynski's treatment
our son is healthy and normal. Dustin is pretty set in his mind
that someday he wants to be a fireman in New York . So he can
help our many people. Please feel free to call, write or e-mail
us. Kunnari@cpinternet.com Dustin is now 8 years old. In July
1999, Dustin was able to stop taking antineoplaston capsules.
4107 Bodas
Road
Eveleth, MN 55734
Dustin's parents,
Marianne and Jack, welcome your phone calls: 218-744-5853.
Updated
1997
Dustin is
an active, intelligent 6 year old. One year ago, he was hampered
only by a Hickman catheter implanted in his upper abdomen, with
IV tubing attached for periodic infusions throughout the day.
When asked, his parents need to point him out among his siblings
as "the one with cancer." This scenario is far different
from what was presented to Dustin's parents 2 years ago. It is
the result of much effort, sacrifice, and learning in the face
of pressure to get traditional treatment, skepticism of alternative
treatments, threats, and ridicule. These are the events as they
unfolded in the life of Dustin.
Christmas
and the beginning of 1994 were times of vomiting, crying with
bad headaches, and then walking difficulties for 2-1/2-year-old
Dusty. One February morning, his father Jack stepped out the door
to once again bring Dusty to the doctor. His mother Mariann stayed
behind with his siblings: Elana, aged 5, Sarah, 4, and Dereck,
8 months. Little did the family know that this day was the beginning
of a change in the course of their lives.
They had some
warning that something was wrong. Mariann had recently read an
article on brain tumors, and Jack could tell from the expression
in the nurse's eyes as the MRI was read that things were serious.
Nevertheless, the diagnosis of a brain tumor came as a shocking
reality. Still, there was hope that it was benign.
On February
28th, Jack and Mariann sat with family and friends in a lounge
outside the operating room waiting to see Dustin, waiting for
the surgeon to give his report. Dustin had medulloblastoma, a
highly aggressive form of cancer. The doctor had removed 75% of
the tumor but was unable to get the rest in the folds and crevices
of the brain without doing damage. Dusty would have to go to a
larger hospital for further treatment.
In the week
that followed, Dustin regained enough strength in his incised
neck muscles to turn his head and hold it without support. He
started walking again. Doctors and nurses were impressed with
the progress in his motor skills. However, as Dustin and his parents
left for the next hospital, the sober expression on the nurses'
faces showed their experience with patients having this diagnosis.
The prognosis was not good.
In the days
that followed, Jack and Mariann observed other children being
treated for cancer and learned what the doctors as this hospital
had to offer Dusty. Radiation would certainly cause mental retardation
and was not recommended at his age but would be done if chemotherapy
failed. They were given information on chemotherapy. Dusty could
be part of a study, with a computer picking the drug he would
be placed on. Among the risks involved were hearing loss, stunted
growth, learning disabilities, bladder and kidney damage, sterility,
and leukemia. There was a 20% to 40% chance the treatment would
work.
Jack questioned
the doctor as to how many patients had been helped by this treatment
and if there was anyone they could talk to who had been through
it. The doctor said he didn't know and he'd have to check the
records. This raised questions in the minds of Jack and Mariann.
Shouldn't a doctor know if the procedure he was using had good
results?
Jack and Mariann
also were given the case histories of seven patients studied by
the National Cancer Institute. These patients had been treated
with a nontoxic therapy called antineoplastons discovered by Dr.
Stanislaw Burzynski. Although all seven showed a reduction in
tumor size, Jack and Mariann were encouraged to continue with
the oncologist at this hospital because antineoplaston therapy
was not yet FDA-approved. When the Kunnari's hesitated to sign
the consent form, the success rate of the chemotherapy offered
by this hospital was increased from a possible 40% to 80%.
Jack and Mariann
left for home with an unsigned consent form amid threats that
court action to remove Dustin from their home would be taken if
they did not consent to treatment. Mariann's brother, a doctor,
told them the threat was not an empty one. He feared that their
other children could be taken as well.
As the weeks
passed, Jack and Mariann learned all they could about other treatments.
They were surprised at how many alternative treatments there were,
and how many cancer patients had been helped by them. The treatment
they decided to try was the nontoxic antineoplastons being studied
by researcher Dr. Stanislaw Burzynski. He had been having good
results with brain tumors and other forms of cancer using substances
that occur naturally in the human body. His credentials, laboratory
studies, and case histories were impressive.
April of 1994
found Dustin and his family in Houston, Texas, visiting the Burzynski
Clinic. Dusty was too young to be part of Dr. Burzynski's study.
However, in response to the pleas of Jack and Mariann, and out
of compassion, Dr. Burzynski agreed to treat Dusty. They were
all confident that this treatment had a good chance of helping
him.
Dustin was
equipped with an IV pump that he carries around in a back pack
while he receives the antineoplastons intravenously. Jack and
Mariann were taught how to program the pump for specific treatment
times and dosages. They learned sterile technique in the care
of the IV tubing and have learned how to deal with emergencies.
(Being a rough and tumble boy, Dusty's IV line has burst twice,
needing repair.)
When Dustin
started antineoplastons, Dr. Burzynski told the Kunnari's he would
stop the treatment if there were no positive results on the first
MRI, which would be taken after 6 weeks of treatment. To their
great joy, the 6-week MRI showed no evidence of tumor. Every 3
months, the Kunnari's make a trip to Houston for Dusty's checkup
and to get more medication. After 1 year on antineoplaston therapy,
a tumor once again was seen on a follow-up MRI, showing the aggressiveness
of medulloblastomas. Dusty's dosage was increased, and he continues
to have periodic lab tests and MRIs done.
Dusty has
few side effects; no hair loss, nausea, or weakness. He has had
occasional bouts of diarrhea as the tumors have broken up, and
has had lowered white blood cell counts. Dusty's parents have
found that when he drinks Essiac tea (Herbal Essence) regularly,
his white count increases.
As Dusty visits
the hospital where he had surgery and the Burzynski Clinic, he
is quick to greet old friends. Medical personnel continue to be
amazed with his robust health, energy, and outgoing personality.
He has been an inspiration to many who have come to know him.
Ellen Nygaard
(Dustin's Aunt)
Letter from
Anthony F. Novak, MD
Interstate
Medical Center, Affiliated with the University of Minnesota Health
System
January
5, 1996
RE: Stanislaw
Burzynski, MD
To Whom It
May Concern:
I am a physician
practicing medicine in southern Minnesota. Dustin Kunnari is my
nephew and has been under the care of Stanislaw Burzynski, MD,
since April of 1994. Dustin was diagnosed with a medulloblastoma
at the age of 3 years. This is a very rare and aggressive tumor,
with an extremely poor prognosis. In February of 1994, he underwent
surgical removal of the tumor. Some tumor remained, however, and
treatment with radiation and/or chemotherapy was advised. This
carried with it a significant morbidity and/or mortality. Following
surgery, Dustin had no evident neurologic deficits.
Against my
advice, my sister Marianne Kunnari and her husband Jack elected
to pursue treatment with Dr. Burzynski. Dustin was initiated on
therapy in April of 1994. Several months later, a repeat magnetic
resonance scan showed no evident tumor remaining. Both Dustin's
neurosurgeon and primary care doctor were amazed by the results
of the MRI scan. Dustin continued to do extremely well, suffering
no evident recurrence or neurological deficits. He is basically
a "normal" 3-and-a-half-year-old. In April of 1995,
however, there was recurrence of the tumor. Dr. Burzynski increased
the dose of medication; and the tumor subsequently, over the next
several months, regressed, again with minimal to no side effects.
As I understand,
Dr. Burzynski has come under investigation for his work with tumors
in humans. I also understand that Dustin's future treatment will
be determined by the court. I am requesting that Dr. Burzynski
be allowed to continue to treat Dustin in a compassionate manner.
Dustin has, as far as can be determined, significantly benefited
from this treatment and has remained a "normal" child
under Dr. Burzynski's treatment. If this treatment is discontinued,
the only alternative would be standard therapies, ie, chemotherapy
and radiation, both of which carry significant morbidity and mortality.
The physicians evaluating Dustin stated that he would certainly
experience considerable brain damage and may end up incapacitated
for a lifetime under these forms of treatments.
In summary,
to allow this treatment to continue may perhaps offer this vivacious
4-year-old a normal lifetime and victory over the insurmountable
enemy: brain cancer. This is offered as opposed to a possible
"cure of the tumor" but incapacitation of the child,
resulting in a lifetime of institutional care. This would be an
unforgivable and extremely unreasonable fate in this era of medical
"advancement." I am begging the court to give Dustin
this chance.
Thank you
for your consideration.
Sincerely,
Anthony F.
Novak, MD
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