11-R077

2011 -- H 5421

Enacted 02/16/11

 

 

H O U S E R E S O L U T I O N

PROCLAIMING APRIL 25, 2011, AS MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY AWARENESS DAY IN THE STATE OF RHODE ISLAND

     

 

   

     Introduced By: Representatives Chippendale, Petrarca, Keable, Costa, and Watson

     Date Introduced: February 16, 2011

 

 

 

     WHEREAS, In support of the Rhode Island Muscular Dystrophy Clinic and Muscular

Dystrophy Awareness, we hereby declare April 25, 2011, to be Muscular Dystrophy Awareness

Day in the State of Rhode Island; and

     WHEREAS, The term Muscular Dystrophy refers to a group of genetic diseases marked

by progressive weakness and degeneration of the skeletal, or voluntary, muscles which control

movement. The muscles of the heart and some other involuntary muscles are also affected by

some forms of muscular dystrophy, and a few forms involve other organs, as well; and

     WHEREAS, Muscular Dystrophy can affect people of all ages. While some forms first

become apparent in infancy or childhood, others may not appear until middle age or later. With

improved medical care, particularly of problems affecting the heart and lungs, children with

muscular dystrophy are living further into adulthood than ever before; and

     WHEREAS, The major forms of muscular dystrophy are myotonic, Duchenne, Becker,

limb girdle, facioscapulohumeral, congenital, oculopharyngeal, distal, and Emery-Dreifuss; and

     WHEREAS, The major forms of muscular dystrophy differ in severity, age of onset,

muscles first and most often affected, the rate at which systems progress, and the way the

disorders are inherited; and

     WHEREAS, Flaws in muscular protein genes cause muscular dystrophies. Each cell in

our bodies contains tens of thousands of genes. Each gene is a string of the chemical DNA and is

the “code” for a protein. If the code for a protein is wrong, the protein is made wrong, or in the

wrong amount, or sometimes not at all; and

     WHEREAS, Muscular Dystrophies are generally inherited, but in some cases no family

history of the disease may exist and, consequently, muscular dystrophies can be inherited. It is

important for a doctor to know if anyone in the family ever had a similar disorder and a doctor

makes a diagnosis by evaluating the patient’s medical history and by performing a thorough

physical examination that may include costly DNA testing; and

     WHEREAS, There is no cure for muscular dystrophy and its incidence varies, as some

forms are more common than others. Its most common forms in children, Duchenne and Becker

muscular dystrophy, alone affect approximately 1 in every 3,500 to 5,000 boys, or between 400

and 600 live male births each year in the United States; now, therefore be it

     RESOLVED, That this House of Representatives of the State of Rhode Island and

Providence Plantations hereby extends our support and gratitude to the Rhode Island Muscular

Dystrophy Clinic and its Director, James Gilchrist, M.D., for caring for and offering hope to all

Southern New Englanders with Muscular Dystrophy; and be it further

      RESOLVED, That April 25, 2011, be declared Rhode Island Muscular Dystrophy Day;

and be it further

     RESOLVED, That the Secretary of State be and he hereby is authorized and directed to

transmit a duly certified copy of this resolution to Dr. James Gilchrist, Director of the MDA clinic

located at Rhode Island Hospital.

     

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LC01335

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