Jamaica Gleaner

SHELTON TACKLES BIGGEST CHALLENGE

Striker battles chronic disease

- Rachid Parchment/Sports News Coordinato­r

Luton Shelton, in his career as a striker, came up against and overcame strong challenges from many defenders across the region and Europe. It resulted in 35 internatio­nal goals, making Shelton Jamaica’s all-time top-scorer. Now he faces his biggest challenge: amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis (ALS), more commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease.

ONE OF Jamaica’s most prolific goalscorer­s, Luton Shelton has been battling amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis (ALS), more commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease. At 32 years old, Shelton could still play football at the highest level, however, not much was seen of him since his return to his boyhood club Harbour View FC in the 2016-17 season of the Red Stripe Premier League.

His second stint at the club was a short-lived one owing to constant ailments and niggling injuries.

The Gleaner was invited into his upper St Andrew home where he resides with his wife Bobbette.

The couple, who has been together for 13 years, will celebrate their fifth year of marriage in December.

They have three young children aged nine, eight, and three. Despite his now slurred speech because of ALS, Shelton still tries to express himself to The Gleaner vocally and always with a smile. This deteriorat­ing speech, his father Luton Shelton, Sr, said, was one of the first signs that his health was seriously in decline. Because of the strain on his vocal chords and the difficulty for others not around him regularly to understand him, his father and wife interprete­d on his behalf.

“For about a year and a half or nearly two years, we thought, more or less, he had minor strokes,” Luton Sr said. “First, the voice slurred. We don’t know of him having high blood pressure because strokes are really associated with high blood pressure and that kind of thing.

“One of the times, I thought because he was in Denver (in Colorado) and it’s cold, he contracted a cold. It went on and on until the voice started to get worse. He did a series of tests as it got worse – tests to his voice box, MRIs, a series of bloodwork – and they didn’t find anything conclusive in terms of cancer, STIs (sexually transmitte­d diseases), or anything to associate with the cause. They were some expensive tests.

DISEASE MORE AGGRESSIVE

“I found a friend who had it and she came and talked to him to give him more hope. He felt more hopeful then, but it started to take a more aggressive form,” said Luton Sr.

He explained that ALS is not a sudden illness, but one that progressiv­ely worsens the afflicted’s condition. “It’s a progressiv­e illness that takes its toll stage by stage,” he said. “Stage by stage doesn’t mean in days or in months, but it can be over a period of time. We’re trying in terms of seeking medical advice. We have been doing it here (in Jamaica).” The former national striker’s father told The Gleaner that his son visited nutritioni­sts looking for a solution but didn’t see any improvemen­t. “That was for about six months, and we didn’t see a change. He was even diagnosed with milder symptoms. It’s still a multi-neuron disease – myasthenia gravis. We were taking the medication for it, which didn’t cure it but it kind of contained the sickness. This would have made him recover his voice, some of his strength. He was on steroids – Prednisone.” Prednisone is a drug used to treat auto-immune diseases such as ALS and myasthenia gravis. It is also used to suppress the immune system.

“I found a friend who had it, and she came and talked to him to give him more hope. He felt more hopeful then, but it started to take a more aggressive form,

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