Larry King Live
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Larry King Live April 3,
2000

For Immediate Release
Contact: Thomas B. McCartney
(412) 361-5178
Transcript of Larry King
Live
Larry King Live
How Can Arthritis Pain Be
Alleviated?
Aired April 3, 2000 - 9:00
p.m. ET
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT.
THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
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Larry King Live
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Larry King
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Debbie Reynolds
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James Coburn
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Cyd Charisse
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Alan King
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Dr. Steve Salvatore
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Dr. Ron Lawrence
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Larry King Live
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LARRY KING, HOST: Tonight, he's an
Oscar-winning actor who says he's beating arthritis: James Coburn
joins us from Los Angeles. Also in L.A. with her arthritis story, the
wonderful actress Cyd Charisse. In New York, funnyman Alan King. He's
got arthritis too. Plus, Dr. Ronald Lawrence, co-author of "The
Miracle of MSM, the Natural Solution for Pain." And CNN medical
correspondent Dr. Steve Salvatore.
They're all next on LARRY KING LIVE.
Debbie Reynolds was also due to be
with us on tonight's show on arthritis. She had an automobile
accident. She will join us by phone in a little while during the
program. We'll be including your phone calls.
Our subject tonight is one of
America's most dreaded diseases, arthritis.
Let's start with Dr. Salvatore, our
own CNN medical correspondent in New York, with a definition. What is
arthritis?
DR. STEVE SALVATORE, CNN MEDICAL
CORRESPONDENT: Well, arthritis is a general term, Larry. There are
different types of arthritis, but when we think of arthritis, for the
most we think of osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis.
Osteoarthritis is the one that affects most of us as we age, and
that's the one people think of.
That's when the cartilage in our
joints breaks down and degenerates, and essentially the cartilage
works like a cushion in the joints so that when you walk or move your
fingers, the joints don't hurt.
But when that cartilage is degraded
or broken down, you get bone rubbing against bone, and the joints get
stiff and sore, and they really do hurt a lot. That's the one that
most people know about.
L. KING: And what's rheumatoid?
SALVATORE: Rheumatoid arthritis is
an arthritis that is caused by an abnormality of the immune system
where your body actually starts to destroy the lining of the joints.
And in rheumatoid arthritis, the treatment is somewhat different
because it's caused by that immune system problem, very different than
osteoarthritis. Osteoarthritis affects like 20 million people.
Rheumatoid affects about 2 million people.
L. KING: Can you die of arthritis?
SALVATORE: Well, you can die from
severe complications from rheumatoid arthritis. Rheumatoid arthritis
can cause systemic symptoms, and in many cases can cause an
inflammation of the heart sack, can cause problems with the lungs, the
liver, the kidneys. And it also affects children. And there are also
some other conditions that cause arthritis.
So in relation to those, you can.
But from osteoarthritis, you generally don't. It's really a chronic
disease.
L. KING: In a minute we'll find out
everybody's story. Of course, we have to find out first what we're
talking about.
Dr. Lawrence, are you a specialist
in this?
DR. RONALD LAWRENCE, CO-AUTHOR, "THE
MIRACLE OF MSM": Yes, I have been dealing for 50 years, I've been
practicing 50 years. And osteoarthritis is the wear and tear type of
arthritis, which I differ a little with the doctor, because when you
get that type of arthritis, you become so disabled that it sets you up
for heart disease, even cancer. We have studies, you know, in regard
to that.
I've been very interested in sports
medicine. So we do have those things, and stroke.
L. KING: No cure?
LAWRENCE: No cure, but we see things
happening now -- actually, arthritis, believe it or not, is
diminishing to some degree.
L. KING: I'll get to all of that.
And no prevention?
LAWRENCE: There is prevention, yes.
L. KING: There is a way to prevent
getting it.
LAWRENCE: There is a way of
preventing it.
L. KING: I'll get to that.
Cyd -- we'll start with ladies first
-- when did you get this? How long ago? When did you first notice?
CYD CHARISSE, ENTERTAINER: Well,
dancers are really under a lot of stress and strain, and of course,
all those joints get a working over, as the doctor knows. And that is
really what dancers have to face sooner or later.
I just -- at MGM one day, I was
doing a number coming down a big, big level thing, and I jumped once,
twice, and the third time, I heard something rip, and it was my knee.
Now, that was the beginning of my arthritis from that -- and of
course, I was in a cast from my hip to my ankle for two months. But
after that, you know, I was going: "What's the matter with my knee?
Oh, what's the matter here?" "Oh, a little arthritis."
L. KING: Does it get progressively
worse?
CHARISSE: Well, yes, I think the
older you get, you know, you notice it more and more.
L. KING: So you've had it for how
long?
CHARISSE: My lord, for years.
L. KING: Years and years.
CHARISSE: Very early
(UNINTELLIGIBLE) in my life because of the dancing so much.
L. KING: Alan -- and you have
osteoarthritis, right?
CHARISSE: Osteoarthritis.
L. KING: Alan King, when did you
first acquire this malady?
ALAN KING, COMEDIAN: Well, I have
Jewish arthritis...
(LAUGHTER)
... which is where you complain more
than it hurts.
(LAUGHTER)
L. KING: A common malady, yes.
A. KING: Yes.
L. KING: When did you...
A. KING: I come from a long line of
arthritics. My mother had arthritis, her father. My mother's cat had
arthritis, you know?
L. KING: When did you first notice
something?
A. KING: I started...
L. KING: I mean, what's the first
thing?
A. KING: Well, I was an athlete,
played a lot of tennis, a lot of golf. And when I started walking slow
-- you know, first, you get up in the morning after playing golf or
tennis, and you feel that the aches and pains are just because you
overdid it. And then the pain doesn't go away. It becomes constant,
and you realize that, oh, here it goes, my mother's curse, you know?
And it's -- it's not -- to say the
least, it's not pleasant. I make fun of it, because, you know, if I
didn't I would cry a lot.
L. KING: But it gets worse, right?
A. KING: Oh, yes, although I --
although I come from a family of doctors , I think there's a way of,
in a sense, beating it: not beating it but making it easier to live
with.
L. KING: But do you have pain every
day, Alan?
A. KING: Every day, every day. I get
up -- oh, when I get up in the morning -- my wife is so upset with me.
I couldn't get out of bed unless she kicked me out of bed.
(CROSSTALK)
A. KING: No, I have to -- hot
showers. You know, I have to do all those things.
L. KING: And Cyd, you have pain
every day?
CHARISSE: Yes, but I find the more I
exercise, the less pain I have. I feel that when you exercise with
arthritis it helps you a great deal.
L. KING: Now James, you have the
worst kind, right, rheumatoid?
JAMES COBURN, ACTOR: Rheumatoid
arthritis, yes.
L. KING: And I see your fingers
are...
COBURN: Yes. Well, see, that
happened because the tendons got shortened and it pulled, you know,
during the really bad part of my arthritis.
L. KING: What was the first thing
that happened?
COBURN: The first thing -- playing
tennis. My wrists -- not right when I was playing it, but two days
afterwards it would start stinging, really hurt. And I was just in
pain. And then I was getting a divorce and negative emotion set off a
-- what I assume is an Irish -- Scotch-Irish gene that's prevalent in
many arthritics throughout in America, because the Scotch-Irish and
the Irish -- they came through America, planted their seeds, and then
moved on where the Germans and the Dutch and everybody...
L. KING: So you think your
depression, that part of it, added to it?
COBURN: Well, you know, you become
depressed because of it. It doesn't start with that. It comes after
that.
L. KING: Let's pick up on this in a
minute. Our guests are Coburn, Charisse and King. They all have it.
Dr. Lawrence and Dr. Salvatore work and hopefully help people from
treating it -- hopefully not getting it. Debbie will be joining us on
the phone. Don't go away.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK) L. KING:
Arthritis refers to maybe a more than a hundred different diseases. It
affects the joints, sometimes the muscles and other tissues. There are
treatments. There's no known cure. Doctors still don't know what
triggers it. It's our suggest for the evening. We have two doctors and
four patients, one of them is joining us now by phone. She was due to
be with us for the whole hour on set, but she had an automobile
accident, so she'll be with us for a couple of segments.
The great Debbie Reynolds is with
us. What happened to you, Debbie?
DEBBIE REYNOLDS, ACTRESS: Oh, I just
started to get out of the car, and we have those gusts of wind here,
and it just blew the door back in with the glass part. And so it
sliced open my cheek, gave me a black eye,
I look terrific.
L. KING: Are you home and in bed,
one hopes?
REYNOLDS: I am. I'm sitting in bed
talking. I want to be there, and I apologize, but you wouldn't like
how I look.
L. KING: All right. Tell us about
your -- by the way, did this accident affect your arthritis at all?
REYNOLDS: No, my cheek doesn't have
arthritis.
(LAUGHTER)
L. KING: When did you first notice
that you had some problems?
REYNOLDS: Well, it always starts
like Cyd says. It's unexpected for a dancer, because we dance. We eat
right. Vegetarians. This happens, and overnight you suddenly -- you're
aching more than usual.
I think always dancers and athletes
just think it's pain from the job, and so for years I paid no
attention to any of it, because I just thought it came with showbiz,
dancing. And then I found out last year because of the bone density
tests I have osteoporosis with the arthritis. So now I am very...
(LAUGHTER)
... the MRI showed up the arthritis,
which is in the shoulders and in the lower spine.
L. KING: Are you in pain a lot?
REYNOLDS: I think everybody is that
has it, especially in the morning and sometimes during the night -- a
lot in the night. I know that everyone there experiences moving pain.
It's in your knee. It moves down to all different types of -- keeps
you up all night.
Do you all have that? L. KING: Do
you have that? Are you up all night a lot, Cyd?
CHARISSE: No, no, I really don't
stay up all night. I have a little liquid painkiller.
L. KING: Or you have your Arctic
Spray, right?
CHARISSE: Arctic Spray, and...
L. KING: You spray it on, and that
works for you?
CHARISSE: Spray it on, but it's very
cold, and it takes the swelling down and it gets you right off to
sleep.
L. KING: And you will be talking
about what MSM is, which you use, right?
COBURN: MSM is my savior. I mean,
have no pain. I go to sleep. I mean, the only pain I have sometimes is
in my head from, you know, thinking I'm so stupid not to have gone
with something like this really early, because I couldn't walk.
L. KING: Alan, do you sleep through
the night?
A. KING: Oh, I have to get up to
urinate. So, that's the exercise, walking back and forth five, six
times...
L. KING: I mean, do you get up from
pain?
A. KING: No, no, I don't. I have a
little scotch malt with due respect to the medical profession.
(LAUGHTER)
I've got a bartender that treats me.
I haven't had pain in years.
(LAUGHTER)
L. KING: Dr. Salvatore, we don't
know the cause of this, do we?
SALVATORE: No, they really don't
know...
L. KING: The root cause.
SALVATORE: ... exactly they don't
know the root cause of it. And that's what makes coming up with these
treatment so difficult, because if we really could nail down the
cause, we could have a better shot at coming up with better therapies.
But for osteoarthritis, for the most part, things are aimed at
relieving the pain and trying to block some of that inflammation that
goes in the joints. And there are some new things, though.
L. KING: Before we ask -- before we
ask about MSM...
(CROSSTALK) I'll get to those too.
Before we ask about MSM, Debbie, can you describe what the pain is
like?
REYNOLDS: Well, my particular pain,
after I exercise, diminishes. But during the evening as I sleep, it
will awaken me, because it seems to just start to live again, and it's
in the knees and in the calves, and it seems to just walk around and
visit each other.
So I have to -- I put hot --
hot-water bottles on it. I use Tiger Balm. I'm in the Epson salt baths
a lot. I take a number of baths at night to relieve it.
But I want to look in this MSM...
COBURN: Yes.
REYNOLDS: ... that James is talking
about.
L. KING: I'm going to ask about that
now. Dr. Lawrence, are we all going to get arthritis?
LAWRENCE: Eventually most of us will
get arthritis, degenerative arthritis.
L. KING: Problem of age.
LAWRENCE: It's a question of aging.
It's cartilage deterioration of the -- that is the common type of
arthritis.
L. KING: What is MSM?
LAWRENCE: MSM is a natural
anti-inflammatory substance.
L. KING: You buy it in health food
stores.
LAWRENCE: You do. Lignisul MSM,
which is the one that's used here in the United States in all these
different brands, is the natural stuff, and you can buy it anywhere.
And 3 1/2 million Americans take it, Larry.
L. KING: And what does it do?
LAWRENCE: It's been around for 38
years. Every veterinarian knows it because dogs get it, pussycats get
it.
COBURN: Horses got it.
LAWRENCE: Horses.
L. KING: What does it do? It takes
down inflammation. It actually is an anti-inflammatory. It works like
the NSAIDs, the non- steroidal anti-inflammatories, but without those
horrible side effects.
You know, 17,000 people died last
year in the United States from taking the NSAIDs unfortunately.
L. KING: Really?
LAWRENCE: 110,000 hospital
admissions.
L. KING: What's the most typical --
what's the most typical arthritis medicine? Advil? Stuff like that.
Tylenol.
LAWRENCE: Advil, Tylenol. Tylenol is
OK. That's not killing people, but of course you've heard that it
causes kidney damage.
L. KING: Now, Cyd, your Arctic Spray
cools it?
CHARISSE: Yes, it's very cool when
you spray it on, and ice is the best thing, you know, for swelling. So
naturally (UNINTELLIGIBLE) cool off the spot.
L. KING: What do you use, Debbie?
What do you take?
CHARISSE: I'll send you some of my
Arctic Spray.
L. KING: You ought to exchange all
these products. Debbie, what do you take now for the pain?
REYNOLDS: Oh, well, I just take
glucosamine and a (UNINTELLIGIBLE) -- that's sulfates, you know, that
is a natural health...
L. KING: And you -- and James, you
take only MSM?
COBURN: I take only MSM. I take a
lot of vitamins. I take, you know, lot of stuff. I work out every day.
LAWRENCE: Glucosamine is very good,
by the way, in supplementation. That's more for the degenerative
arthritis.
L. KING: Alan, without kidding
around what do you take?
A. KING: Well, first what I did was
I lost 25 pounds about a year ago, and I swear I felt the difference
in my body.
COBURN: Oh, yes.
L. KING: Really?
COBURN: Oh, yes.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Excellent.
A. KING: I did. I did. And then --
when I know this does is -- it may be -- I use magnets. I have certain
points that hurt, and I use these little magnets that are very
controversial, but they work for me. They really do.
L. KING: The doctor is wearing one.
LAWRENCE: I'm wearing a magnet. I
wrote a book on -- called magnet therapy, which has sold 175,000
copies.
L. KING: You're kidding?
LAWRENCE: Yes.
(LAUGHTER)
A. KING: Well, I don't read.
L. KING: Let me get -- let me get a
break here. We're all over the charts. We'll be right back. We'll hold
Debbie a little while longer, and continue with our panel. We'll
include your phone calls. Don't go away.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
L. KING: Before we ask about
magnets, Dr. Salvatore, why don't the strong painkillers like the
Vicodins work?
SALVATORE: Oh, well, they do work,
but the thing is that, you know, they're just a quick temporary fix.
They're not a solution in the long term to the problem. As soon as
your Vicodin wears off, you know, you need another one, and eventually
you develop a tolerance to those types of narcotics. So narcotics are
really frowned upon, because they do cause dependence and they really
don't help with the inflammation. They just block pain. So...
L. KING: What do you think of --
what do you think of MSM?
SALVATORE: Well, you know, MSM is,
according to the Arthritis Foundation, is an unproven therapy for
arthritis. Now, I know that there are people that take it. It's very
popular. Most of the evidence to support its use is anecdotal. And
according to most rheumatologists, most medical societies, there are
no really strong clinical studies, double-blind, randomized,
placebo-controlled studies that show that this compound works.
Now add to that fact the point that
these -- this compound is not regulated by the FDA and you run into a
problem, because you don't really know about the purity of the
compound you're getting.
Now, recently there were some
studies done looking at glucosamine, and when they studied that
compound they found that some -- some products didn't even have
glucosamine in them. So we've got two problems. We've got the fact
that this stuff isn't studied well enough, and then you don't have
enough regulation on the quality of the product.
L. KING: And doctor, how do you
respond to that, Dr. Lawrence?
LAWRENCE: Well, I published a study,
double-blind, on a small group of osteoarthritic patients. We had 82
percent effectivity after six weeks.
We this year -- the Lignisul people
have funded this year eight studies. We're going to have 200
osteoarthritic patients. I agree with Dr. Salvatore, I agree with the
foundation: There has to be more work.
The problem is MSM is very cheap,
very inexpensive. It isn't like the expensive drugs, and it's tough to
get...
L. KING: But if it's not regulated,
how do I know I'm getting it?
LAWRENCE: That's good. You have to
-- I head up a thing called the Council on National Nutrition,
nonprofit agency. We're trying to evaluate those things. Many of the
things that are on these labels -- this is a new industry.
L. KING: I know. Do you think the
FDA should control it?
COBURN: No, definitely not.
LAWRENCE: I believe no, that the FDA
should not control it.
COBURN: Absolutely not.
LAWRENCE: Definitely, James feels
strongly...
COBURN: No, no. They're interested
in pharmaceuticals because they can sell them and make a lot of bread
out of it.
L. KING: Obviously, it's helped you.
COBURN: Well, what? MSM? MSM helped
me in three days. It took the pain away in three days.
See, I can tell that because I am
speaking from experience. I don't need a double-blind, 9,000 people
taking the goddamn stuff. I took it, and I know exactly how it works.
(LAUGHTER)
L. KING: And it only works on...
COBURN: And I've given it to
everybody. And everybody that I've given it to works on them.
L. KING: It only works on rheumatoid
arthritis.
LAWRENCE: Oh, no, no, no.
(CROSSTALK)
L. KING: Debbie, would you try it?
REYNOLDS: Oh, absolutely, I'm going
to try it.
COBURN: You better, baby, because
it'll work for you, kid.
REYNOLDS: Well, I'm going to get the
number from James, because my brother goes into surgery on the 10th to
replace his complete knee, because he has all the cartilage, it's just
bone-on-bone now. And he has very severe arthritis. It runs in our
family. Again, we're Scotch-Irish.
COBURN: Scotch-Irish will do it to
you.
Cyd, would you try it?
CHARISSE: Sure.
REYNOLDS: Should have been born
Jewish.
CHARISSE: I just found myself a new
doctor.
(LAUGHTER)
L. KING: You put on your Arctic
Spray and you take your MSM.
CHARISSE: Well, they're two
different things.
L. KING: And Alan, I'm going to get
back to magnets. Would you try MSM?
A. KING: No.
COBURN: You're a doctor, that's why!
Now, come on.
A. KING: No, no, no. Wait a minute.
I'm not a doctor...
(LAUGHTER)
(CROSSTALK).
L. KING: One at a time.
A. KING: You've got to have...
COBURN: You have a good bartender.
A. KING: No, no. I have three
brothers that are doctors, and my father lived to be 96. And if he had
a cold, he went to a chiropractor.
(LAUGHTER)
COBURN: You're right. That's what
they should all do, man!
A. KING: So we're not -- we're not
doctor lovers. I wouldn't let my younger brother cut my nails.
COBURN: Yes, right.
A. KING: But I must say, I've tried,
you know, alternative medicine. I -- the magnets work for me. I don't
care if it works -- it works for me. I put them all -- when I go out
to play golf, the only problem is they can't get me off the locker.
I'm stuck to the locker for 15 minutes.
(LAUGHTER)
L. KING: Let me get a break. Hold
it. We'll come right back. You have got to look at all things
amusingly too.
More on arthritis, your phone calls
too. Don't go away.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
L. KING: Dr. Lawrence, do magnets
work?
LAWRENCE: Magnets work to a degree.
L. KING: How.
LAWRENCE: Increased flood flow. I
measured the blood flow increase in myself with a thing called
plethosmography (ph). I am a neurophysiologist. We know that magnets
do work.
Hey, R.E. Florsheim shoes now, one
of the greatest, puts magnets in their shoes, that they're selling a
whole line of shoes now. Why would a big company do that?
L. KING: Don't Dr. Salvatore -- am I
correct, there are a lot of charlatans in the arthritis game?
LAWRENCE: Yes.
SALVATORE: Oh, one of the biggest
industries that has charlatans is the arthritis game. And you know,
Larry...
COBURN: Mostly doctors.
(LAUGHTER)
SALVATORE: You have to understand
that we're not saying that these things do or don't work. The point is
that we need the scientific data. We can't just go by anecdote, and
that's what we're talking about here.
Mr. Coburn takes this medication. He
feels better. He says it works.
We've heard about this...
COBURN: I know it works!
SALVATORE: ... a hundred times.
I agree, and I'm sure that you feel
that it works...
COBURN: And I know everybody that
I've given it to -- no, I know that it -- it's not a question of
feeling that it works. I know it work, man. SALVATORE: Right, but in
order to set up a standard, medicine has to set a standard, and they
do that by doing studies. And the big thing about it is so many of
these products don't do studies and don't really step up to the plate
and put forth the guts to say, look, test my product against, you
know, the standard because they know it may not come through.
I'm not saying these products don't
work, but the studies are not strong enough. That's the problem.
LAWRENCE: How can they work -- how
can they do that if they're not making the kind of money that the drug
industry makes, which is $110 billion a year? This industry at max is
making 18 billion, and they've got 20,000 people in it. So getting the
money is hard.
L. KING: Do you trust alternative
medicine, Cyd?
CHARISSE: Yes. I'm willing to try it
any time.
L. KING: Someone in pain would try
anything, though, right?
CHARISSE: Yes, absolutely.
L. KING: So you're going to try to
alleviate the pain.
CHARISSE: Absolutely.
L. KING: Alan, wouldn't you try
anything to alleviate pain?
A. KING: Well, I want to say I have
never seen an arthritic patient more beautiful than Cyd Charisse.
(LAUGHTER)
CHARISSE: Oh, Alan, my dear, Alan.
L. KING: She's an advertisement for
arthritis.
A. KING: I mean, without, with
arthritis. I would -- I tell you -- we haven't mentioned it yet, but
I've had great success with Asian, you know, with...
COBURN: Herbal...
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: acupuncture.
A. KING: No, acupuncture. I've had
acupuncture, and I've had great success...
L. KING: Well, can we say...
A. KING: ... great success.
L. KING: Can we say, Debbie, that
whatever works for you works?
REYNOLDS: Well, I think you should
try it all, and if you have immediate results, as Jim did with his MSM
-- I'm going to try that next. And I have tried the glucosamine and
the chondroit, and sulfates, they work. And so why not use something
that's not going to knock you dizzy with being a heavy drug?
COBURN: Absolutely.
L. KING: The thing is we're not
definitive, right? We don't definitively know...
LAWRENCE: That's right.
L. KING: ... what brings this on.
LAWRENCE: If someone is not injured
or hurt by something, and it isn't costly, and it isn't costly...
L. KING: As long as they're not
fooled.
LAWRENCE: As long as they're not
fooled -- I'm against that, and basically tremendously against it. And
there are a lot of quack remedies in this area, as the doctor said,
because it's one that so many people suffer from. And you look -- you
seek relief. I know when I had an inpatient pain clinic years ago at
UCLA, the pain that these poor people went through...
L. KING: It's got to be terrible.
LAWRENCE: And if you can get rid of
that pain in any way that is safe, why not do it?
L. KING: Do your hands hurt, Jim?
COBURN: No.
L. KING: They don't hurt. They look
like they hurt.
COBURN: They look like they would
hurt. I mean, when I stretch them out, because of the tendons they
pull, they hurt. But a year ago, in order to move that arm out like
that, I would have to go like that, like...
I can do that now, man. I couldn't
do that. I couldn't even dance. I couldn't even stand up.
L. KING: Dr. Salvatore, you can't
argue with him if it works for him, right? I mean, if it works, it
works.
SALVATORE: You know, Larry,
interestingly two-thirds of people who have arthritis have tried an
alternative therapy. And if it does work...
COBURN: Maybe not this one.
SALVATORE: Well, if it does work, it
does work.
COBURN: Yes, right. SALVATORE: But
you have to consider what are the long-term risks associated with
taking this medication: Do you want to find out 10 years down the line
that this caused a problem with you? If you're willing to take that
chance and it works for you, go for it. There's no problem with that.
(CROSSTALK)
LAWRENCE: It's been around 38 years.
COBURN: And it's not toxic.
SALVATORE: Well, it's been around...
LAWRENCE: And has been used.
SALVATORE: Just because a drug has
been around 38 years doesn't mean it's been taken long term by people.
COBURN: It's not a drug. Not a drug.
SALVATORE: I mean a compound that's
present in the body.
COBURN: Not a drug! A nontoxic
element!
L. KING: All right, one at a time.
Alan King, don't you think to reduce pain you would take anything?
LAWRENCE: It has. It has been
tested.
COBURN: It has been tested.
LAWRENCE: I'll send you a copy of
the (UNINTELLIGIBLE), Steve.
L. KING: Alan.
A. KING: I found that you cannot
give in -- I know this sounds like a very broad -- you cannot give in
to the pain. Stretching -- I get up in the morning. I take a hot
shower, and then I start stretching: the legs. I do the towel, I do
all of these things I got from the sports medicine people. And I do
feel a great relief by stretching, by exercising, by walking.
You know, years ago, arthritis
patients, people were afflicted, would sit in wheelchairs, and now
they tell you go out and walk, go out and run, go out and hang, you
know, do -- I really believe that exercise is a great help in -- in
relieving arthritis.
REYNOLDS: Right.
L. KING: Hold, hold on, hold on one
second.
A. KING: Cyd, you...
L. KING: Hold on one second, Al.
Debbie, you're at a disadvantage on
the phone. Do you want to stay with us a little while?
REYNOLDS: Oh well, I just -- I agree
with the exercise, what Cyd is saying. I'm agreeing with everybody
there. And I'm doing what they're all saying to do, and therefore,
we're going to be better than we were.
You can't ignore it. You have to
exercise. I do every day, and otherwise I can't move and walk around.
L. KING: Take care of yourself,
Debbie. Thanks for being with us.
REYNOLDS: OK, no more car doors,
right.
(LAUGHTER)
L. KING: She said no more car doors.
REYNOLDS: No more cars. Thank you.
L. KING: We thank Debbie Reynolds.
Thank you, dear, for joining us.
COBURN: Get healthy, baby.
L. KING: We'll be right back with
James Coburn, Cyd Charisse, Alan King, Dr. Ronald Lawrence, and Dr.
Steve Salvatore on this edition of LARRY KING LIVE. Take your calls
next. Don't go away.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
L. KING: We're back on LARRY KING
LIVE. Our guests are James Coburn, who won the best supporting actor
award, Oscar last year for "Affliction."
Shhh! Everyone gets excited about
this.
Cyd Charisse, she has
osteoarthritis, a problem in her right knee, injured in an MGM movie
leap. Her mother also suffered from it. And she uses a product she's
involved with called Arctic Spray.
Alan King has osteoarthritis. The
disease runs in his family, as he said. He exercises, stretches, uses
magnets, works hard at this.
Dr. Ronald Lawrence is the personal
physician for James Coburn, dealing with arthritis, and co-author of
"The Miracle of MSM."
And Dr. Steve Salvatore in New York
is CNN's CNN medical correspondent.
And we go to Boston. Hello.
CALLER: Hello, Mr. Coburn, my mother
has rheumatoid arthritis and has taken MSM on your recommendation. But
what preventative measures can I take in my 30s? COBURN: The same.
Just take -- I mean, you have to kind of take -- I take the powder.
The powder seems to be the purist and there are some people that sell
it over the counter, at health food stores...
L. KING: She should take it as a
preventive?
COBURN: You take it absolutely as a
preventative.
L. KING: No harm at all?
COBURN: It makes your fingernails
grow, your hair grow. It helps your skin. It helps your digestion.
L. KING: You're making this a wonder
product.
COBURN: It is. It is. It truly is.
LAWRENCE: Well, I feel like
(UNINTELLIGIBLE) snake oil, and you start, you know -- God forbid. But
the fact is as people phone your program later or whatever they do,
they can get a number where they can get a generic kit, which has the
toxicological studies, $145,000 worth. And again, I come back to 38
years of...
L. KING: But now, your mother had
it, right, Cyd?
CHARISSE: My mother, yes, had very
bad arthritis.
L. KING: You couldn't do anything to
prevent getting it, could you?
CHARISSE: Well, not that I know
of...
L. KING: Does anyone know...
CHARISSE: ... and especially I being
a dancer, it's like an athlete. You just go with it, you know.
L. KING: Dr. Salvatore, if you know
your parents have it, can you in any way prevent getting it?
SALVATORE: There's no way that you
can a hundred percent prevent getting osteoarthritis or rheumatoid
arthritis, but there are things that you can do to help beat it or
make it less of an impact -- have less of an impact on your body. For
instance, if you exercise regularly; if you have a good diet; you
avoid certain things like omega six fatty acids, go with like omega 3
fatty acids; if you are not overweight -- obesity is a problem.
Overuse is a problem. This is why athletes and dancers have these
kinds of of things.
So there are certain things that you
can do to help avoid it, but really, if it's in the cards for you to
have rheumatoid arthritis, it's a genetic thing, you will probably
develop it.
L. KING: But osteo you can -- you
can prevent...
SALVATORE: Sure. LAWRENCE: That --
you do your yoga, which is a wonderful form of stretching, and you
take some of these supplements on a long-term bases.
L. KING: In other words, work your
muscles?
LAWRENCE: And exercise, exercise.
COBURN: Yes.
(CROSSTALK)
LAWRENCE: ... exercise.
L. KING: Brooklyn Park, Minnesota --
hold on. Go ahead. Who was saying something?
A. KING: I just wanted to ask that
acupuncture, it seemed to just go by the book, but I have found myself
and friends where this -- this acupuncture does relieve pain and help
on the long term with the...
(CROSSTALK)
LAWRENCE: Yes, I was one of the
first of the two doctors -- MDs in the United States to do
acupuncture. I have studied in China, et cetera. Acupuncture works,
but not in the preventative way, I don't think, but it works when you
have pain.
L. KING: Why? How does it work?
LAWRENCE: It works through the
autonomic nervous system, which is the third nervous system. It
affects that third nervous system, which we have. We have the motor,
sensory and then the autonomic system, which is the sympathetic in
there as well.
It works because acupuncture -- and
this has now been proven. You know, here in the United States it's
become so accepted, the FDA has approved acupuncture needles, believe
it or not, within the last year or so.
COBURN: Finally.
LAWRENCE: And the reason is because
it affects those nerves, those sympathetic nerves to increase blood
flow, and the yin and yang aspect of the way the Chinese look at it,
it helps to balance the system.
L. KING: Have you ever tried it, Cyd?
CHARISSE: No, I've never tried it,
but you're convincing me to...
L. KING: We're changing Cyd's whole
life here tonight.
COBURN: He's my acupuncturist. L.
KING: You do it, too.
COBURN: He's been treating me for 15
years.
L. KING: Brooklyn Park, Minnesota,
hello.
(CROSSTALK)
Hold it. Brooklyn Park, hello.
CALLER: Hi. I was wondering if this
is habit forming and are there any known side effects.
L. KING: MSM?
LAWRENCE: It is not habit forming,
but it does -- if you stop it, your pain will come back. And the only
side effects, very rare, skin rash, mostly with the Chinese MSM, I'm
sorry to say, the stuff that comes in from China, which has impurities
in it. But for the most part, some people get a little digestive
upset, which goes away if you take it with food.
So it's very, very safe.
L. KING: Any diet...
LAWRENCE: You can kill a rat faster
with water than you can with MSM.
L. KING: Can diet help?
LAWRENCE: Diet, yes.
COBURN: Yes, sure.
LAWRENCE: Yes.
L. KING: Overweight is bad? You've
never been overweight.
LAWRENCE: Diet is very important.
L. KING: Well, Alan King, you gave
an example. You lost 25 pounds and had less pain, right?
A. KING: Oh, absolutely. I could
feel -- I could feel relief in my -- I wasn't carrying around this
lump, you know, and so the bones were not under such stress.
L. KING: We'll take a break and be
back with more. We'll include more phone calls too. The subject is
arthritis. Don't go away.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
L. KING: We're back. Another call.
Kissimmee, Florida, hello. CALLER: Hi, Larry. I have a question that I
would like to address to the doctor. I have had arthritis for 20 years
now. I'm 44. And I finally have been on a medication, one of five
that's finally working, which is Enbril (ph), and it's extremely
expensive. It's a thousand dollars a month.
Right now, I'm very fortunate that
my husband works and I have insurance to cover that. But should the
day sometime that I don't have the insurance, what is going to happen?
I mean, it's just finally something that works.
L. KING: Ma'am -- ma'am, when you
say it works -- ma'am, the pain goes away?
CALLER: It improves a great deal. I
can't say that I'm pain- free, but I am able to do things that I have
not been able to to do in 20 years.
L. KING: And you've had it since you
were 24 years old?
CALLER: Yes, that's correct.
L. KING: Dr. Salvatore, is that
unusual, that early to have arthritis?
SALVATORE: Oh, no, arthritis can
affect young people. I mean, unusual, it's not the most common, but
many young people can suffer from arthritis.
L. KING: Do you know that drug that
she mentioned?
SALVATORE: Yes, it's one of the
brand-new drugs that's out there. That's probably why it's so
expensive. It's one of those new disease-modifying rheumatoid
arthritis drugs. And it holds a lot of promise.
And the problem with these new
drugs, as we all talked about, is that, you know, millions of dollars
are spent on research, and when these drug companies make a hit, the
-- you know, the prices are very, very high while it's still patented.
L. KING: But a poor person with
arthritis -- well, insurance covers it? I guess it would.
SALVATORE: Oh, sure. You know, it's
an FDA-approved drug and it's been shown to be effective. And it's one
of the more promising new drugs in the treatment of arthritis.
L. KING: Granite City, Illinois,
hello.
CALLER: Yes, Larry, my name is...
L. KING: I don't need your name.
What's the question?
CALLER: Sorry. I got my RA when I
was 15. And my question is for James Coburn. And I want to know if
he's ever had any hand surgeries for his deformities?
COBURN: No, I haven't. And I haven't
had it because I haven't really wanted it.
L. KING: Why?
COBURN: Because it was -- I mean, in
order to get my hands straightened out, they told me what it was. It
was like the implants have a lot of different kind of rubber knuckles
that go into the thing. And.
L. KING: Put your hand down again so
we can see this...
COBURN: My hand -- my hand would be
-- these would all be rubber knuckles. This would -- I would have no
more strength in it than I have now, and it's a plastic hand. And just
the recovery time for a right-handed person, that's just a drag.
L. KING: Does it affect your getting
roles?
COBURN: Well, I don't know. Maybe it
does.
L. KING: Must.
COBURN: Well...
L. KING: You would think it would.
COBURN: You would think it would.
Well, it doesn't affect me nearly as much as it did when I couldn't
walk.
(LAUGHTER)
L. KING: Is Arctic Spray available
everywhere?
CHARISSE: Yes, it is.
L. KING: At health food stores.
CHARISSE: And we have an 800 number.
L. KING: You do?
CHARISSE: Someplace, yes.
L. KING: OK. Pittsburgh, Hello.
CALLER: Hi. I've had RA for four
years. I'm 32, and I've tried everything there that you've mentioned.
But I wanted to know if anyone there has had a problem with certain
foods affecting their arthritis.
L. KING: Alan, have you had a food
that affects the arthritis?
A. KING: I never met a food I didn't
like. I'm kind of Will Rogers. (LAUGHTER)
L. KING: Dr. Lawrence, do we -- do
we know...
A. KING: No, I don't find -- do you
-- I don't think that -- I don't know or can even remember any food
that sort of brought on anymore pain.
LAWRENCE: Jim has avoided -- and he
can tell you -- he's avoided certain things, like the nightshades.
COBURN: Well, the nightshades --
when I first got this thing, I went on a long fast. I did colonics for
13, 15 days: every other day for 15 days I did it. And when I broke
the thing, I broke it with what I thought was really a very healthy
salad it. I broke out in hives. I became -- I found out that I was
allergic through a cytotoxic blood test that I had, which is, you
know, disclaimed by everybody else. But I found out that I was
allergic to 45 foods out of 70 that I was tested for, stopped eating
those foods, and immediately started getting better.
L. KING: You and Nick Nolte working
together must have been a riot.
COBURN: We had a ball.
L. KING: You did "Affliction." You
won an Academy Award. We had him on this thing. The two of you on
every break must have been...
(LAUGHTER)
COBURN: Well, he should have won...
L. KING: Have you taken your
colodnic corona (ph) yet? Have you taken your 63 pills?
(LAUGHTER)
You must have been a riot.
COBURN: Oh, no, we had a great time
together, man. He's a brilliant actor and I love him a lot. He's
great.
L. KING: Do you hope, Cyd -- I mean,
do you think you're going to get better?
CHARISSE: I always think I'm going
to get better.
L. KING: Because there is no cure,
right? We know that we can maintain, we can try to feel better. But...
CHARISSE: Well, I'm positive about
it. I'm positive about things like that. And I do like to try other
things that I haven't tried before.
L. KING: Dr. Salvatore, do we know
of anybody in the medical field who's gotten over it? Had arthritis,
doesn't have it?
SALVATORE: No. I mean, there -- as
far as I know, there are no cases of anyone...
L. KING: No miracles?
SALVATORE: ... that's been cured.
No, no miracles. And that's always a thing you have to look out for.
When someone says there is a miracle, or you know, a cure, you have to
be careful.
But you know, Larry, just jumping
back to diets, there have been some things with diets. For the most
part, the Arthritis Foundation recommends a well-balanced diet. But
they do think, though, diets that are rich in omega 3 fatty acids are
better than diets with omega 6 fatty acids, which you find in like
corn oil and safflower oil. You should maybe go with things like olive
oil instead. That might help some people.
L. KING: Salmon...
LAWRENCE: Salmon is excellent for
the omega 3s...
SALVATORE: Salmon.
LAWRENCE: ... and the cold fish.
L. KING: And everyone agrees
exercise?
COBURN: Oh, yes.
L. KING: But can some arthritic
patients can't exercise?
LAWRENCE: Yes, and it can make it
worse with exercise. You have to be careful. You do have to check with
your physician and make sure.
L. KING: But I man, what...
LAWRENCE: But yoga is particularly
-- I wish that I knew about yoga 40 years ago, and I've been just so
impressed...
L. KING: Can some people not
exercise though?
LAWRENCE: Some people cannot
exercise in that sense, but everybody can do something in the way of
exercise. Even people that are chair-bound, there are books written.
There are people that are chair-bound. I saw in the old-age homes, at
convalescent hospitals teaching people to exercise in the chair and
improvement shown.
Studies have shown that five minutes
a day will change the cardio respiratory status of a patient over a
period of as little as six weeks. So you've got to move. Movement is
life and life is movement. You have got to move.
L. KING: By the way, is it always
discernible, Dr. Salvatore? Can any physician pick up that you have
it? SALVATORE: Arthritis?
L. KING: Yes.
SALVATORE: Well, arthritis is
usually a diagnosis made with a bunch of different thing. They look at
exercises. They go by your history, things you complain about, things
like that. Rheumatoid is a little bit different. There are some blood
tests.
But osteoarthritis, pretty much is a
history and physical, and then with x-rays. So most doctors can tell
you if you have arthritis or not.
L. KING: We'll be back with more and
more phone calls, right after this.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
L. KING: Pleasant Grove, Utah,
hello.
CALLER: Yes, Larry, my question is
for the doctors. I have a 6- year-old son who was just recently
diagnosed with polyarticular juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. Does the
MSM also apply to children or is that just for adults?
He's currently on Natrosin (ph) and
Methotrexate but suffers severely with inflammation. And I'm just
wondering if there's anything else I can do to help it and to
prevent...
L. KING: Dr. Lawrence?
LAWRENCE: MSM can be taken safely
with the drugs. Always, by the way, check with your doctor. But being
such a severe disease, it would be worth -- of course don't take him
off the medications but add the MSM at half what the adult dosage is,
which is usually one gram, 3,000 a day.
So you can add in half of that
dosage into the situation.
If you have any difficulty, you can
always stop it. I don't know what difficulty you would have. But...
L. KING: Dr. Salvatore, 6-years-old
you could have this?
SALVATORE: Larry, I respectfully
disagree. And I don't think you'd find a rheumatologist in the country
that would recommend giving this to a child. I'm sorry.
L. KING: Why?
SALVATORE: There's just no evidence
to...
COBURN: There's evidence all over
the place.
SALVATORE: There's no strong
evidence anywhere. I can't debate it. COBURN: There's no written
evidence down there.
SALVATORE: I'm sorry. I just can't
recommend it. I wouldn't.
L. KING: A disagreement?
LAWRENCE: There is disagreement.
COBURN: I disagree.
L. KING: Grant, Nebraska, hello.
CALLER: Hello, yes.
L. KING: Go ahead.
CALLER: My question is if you
continue -- if you just take MSM, does it decrease the amount of
damage being done to the joint?
LAWRENCE: That's a good question. We
have a study now, and I can't -- we believe after six months of usage,
similar to the studies done with glucosamine, supposedly also a
chondroit, but certainly with glucosamine, that there appears to be a
sparing action on the cartilage. There have been some excellent papers
written with glucosamine.
We are now doing this study, which
we are using MRIs on before and after six months to see whether
there's any changes.
L. KING: And?
LAWRENCE: And we believe it may
be...
L. KING: Doctor...
(CROSSTALK)
Dr. Salvatore, are you saying you
would never -- you would never tell a patient to use MSM?
SALVATORE: You know, Larry, there's
something I learned in medical school, and that was you never be the
first or last to prescribe a drug. And I certainly don't feel
comfortable. You know, I have to go to sleep at night, and I can't
prescribe a medication to somebody that I don't feel is proven.
If it can cause -- if it can
potentially cause harm. If you're thinking of magnets, acupuncture,
things that, you know, they're relatively benign, they don't cause any
problem, that's one thing. But if you're talking about taking a
substance every day for the rest of your life, until it's proven --
and I'm telling you, I'm not saying it doesn't work. I'm just saying I
don't see strong enough evidence and I couldn't prescribe it.
COBURN: What would you prescribe?
SALVATORE: Well, I would just go by
the standard therapy that the American College of Rheumatologists is
prescribing.
COBURN: But what do they know about
it? They don't know about MSM. They don't even talk about it. What
they think about MSM, oh, well, maybe, maybe somewhere down the line
we'll look at -- well, a lot of people will stop suffering if they
take a little bit of it. There's no harm to it.
L. KING: My guess would be, if I
were in pain, I'd give it a shot.
COBURN: Absolutely. What have you
got to lose?
L. KING: Alan would not, right? You
would not give it a shot? In pain?
A. KING: No, I wouldn't. No, no.
(LAUGHTER)
L. KING: OK. We've got -- we've got
a split on the panel.
A. KING: Well, I'm really -- first
of all, I know more about arthritis than all the doctors put together
because my audiences now are all arthritic.
(LAUGHTER)
L. KING: We'll be back -- we'll be
back in our remaining moments with our panel. Get another phone call
or two in. Don't go away.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
L. KING: Dr. Salvatore, we've got
about 4 1/2 minutes left, so we'll get to each of you. Is the
Arthritis Foundation helpful?
SALVATORE: I think the Arthritis
Foundation is helpful. They have a lot of good information for people.
You can access all of their information on the Web site. They tell you
what you can do, you know, all of the things we mentioned: exercise,
diet, things like that. There have lots of other links that you can go
to get help, support groups and things like that, because, you know,
as we started saying early on in this discussion, arthritis can cause
people to be upset. It can cause them to be depressed. It's a disease
that's very difficult to live with. And Larry, one in six of us lives
with some form of arthritis. So I think the Arthritis Foundation is
helpful.
L. KING: Cyd, does the pain come and
go, or is it constant?
CHARISSE: Well, it depends. If I
exercise a lot, I really don't notice it nearly so much. I feel
exercise is very, very important.
L. KING: Did you have arthritis pain
today?
CHARISSE: Well, yes, I do. I have a
little problem with my foot right now.
L. KING: Right this minute.
CHARISSE: Yes.
L. KING: All right. What kind of
pain are you having?
CHARISSE: Well, it's a sensitive
thing that I have on the top of my foot that the doctor was explaining
to me, and it just creates, I guess...
LAWRENCE: She has arthritis in the
joint right at top, and when she wears a shoe or anything, it hurts,
because arthritis, there is a bursitis that goes along with...
L. KING: So if she weren't wearing
shoes, she wouldn't have the pain.
LAWRENCE: She'll have less pain if
she doesn't have the shoe rubbing over it.
CHARISSE: Have a shoe that happens
to be across it.
L. KING: Are you pain-free, James?
COBURN: I am indeed.
L. KING: Pain-free?
COBURN: Pain-free.
L. KING: No pain today.
COBURN: No pain today. I mean, if I
get up tomorrow morning and have a little pain, because I ran all
night long or I went for a long hike, I sometimes get stiff, but like
most people do get stiff a little bit. And...
L. KING: Alan, did you have any pain
today?
A. KING: No, I just have -- if I
may, I'm not Norman Cousins, but I think that what you can do not to
alleviate the pain, I think that mentally by lightning up -- I know
pain is difficult. I have lived with it a good part of my life. But
make fun of it, read, go out, do whatever you can rather than sit in
that chair, you know, and say, well, I'm crippled.
COBURN: Right.
A. KING: I think mentally, I think
you can do so much for your body by setting your mind to living with
it and then trying to alleviate it by joy, music, laughter. I -- it
really -- I know it works.
L. KING: Do you agree with that, Dr.
Salvatore?
SALVATORE: Oh, yes. I think --
studies have shown, Larry, that biofeedback, positive attitude,
imaging, hypnosis, all of these things -- getting up and fighting
things mentally -- help all kinds of illnesses. A positive attitude is
very important.
COBURN: Sure.
L. KING: The understanding of pain
-- in many cases, Dr. Lawrence, pain is very good, right? It indicates
trouble. Arthritis pain isn't good.
LAWRENCE: Acute pain is OK. Chronic
pain, no. And chronic pain, anything that exists beyond 30 days, it...
L. KING: Do you understand how
people live with it? I don't understand how people live with it. I
mean...
LAWRENCE: People -- you know, life
-- life is quite a task. I take it as -- I'm 74 years old, and as I go
on, you know, and see people my age -- it's a battle, but it's a
battle worth fighting. It's a wonderful, wonderful world. And even if
you're strapped into a chair and you can see something and see the
beauty of the Earth, you know, there are -- that's why there are so
many books out now on the mind. And many of the people that have been
recommending surgery and drugs, who are good writers -- and you've had
them on -- are now writing books about the mind and how...
L. KING: By the way, Wednesday
night, Wednesday night, Dr. Andrew Weil will be here.
LAWRENCE: Yes. Who believes a lot...
L. KING: Who believes a lot in
alternative medicine as well.
Cyd, are you very optimistic? Do you
stay up? Do you...
CHARISSE: Oh, I always do. It's the
only way to go.
L. KING: And the angry at times Mr.
Coburn...
COBURN: Yes.
L. KING: Yes.
COBURN: I'll fight for my right to
take MSM down to the last!
(LAUGHTER)
LAWRENCE: MSM (UNINTELLIGIBLE) to
the end.
A. KING: Larry.
L. KING: Thank you all very -- yes,
quickly.
A. KING: Larry, Larry...
L. KING: Yes.
A. KING: I just noticed, I think
growing a beard helps arthritis. (LAUGHTER)
L. KING: On that note, we'll leave
you. Stay tuned for CNN "NEWSSTAND."
I'm Larry King. For all of our
guests, stay well. Good night.