Failing to find a doctor capable of treating their young son Lorenzo's rare disease, Augusto and Michaela Odone seek their own cure. They set out on a mission to find a treatment and save their child. In their quest for a treatment the Odones clash with doctors, scientists, and support groups, who are skeptical that anything could be done about ALD, much less by laypeople. But they persist, setting up camp in medical libraries, reviewing animal experiments, badgering researchers, questioning top doctors all over the world, and even organizing an international symposium about the disease. Despite dead ends of research, the horror of watching their son's health decline, and being surrounded by skeptics, they persist until they finally hit upon a therapy involving adding a certain kind of oil (actually olive oil with two specific long chain fatty acids removed) to their son's diet. They contact over 100 firms around the world until they find an elderly British chemist who is willing to take on the challenge of distilling the proper formula. It proves successful in normalizing the accumulation of the very long chain fatty acids in the brain that have been causing their son's steady decline, thereby halting the progression of the disease. There is still a great deal of neurological damage remaining which cannot be reversed until new treatments are found to regenerate the myelin sheath (a lipid insulator) around the nerves.
The film ends with Lorenzo at the age of 12 showing definite improvement (he can swallow for himself and answer yes or no questions by blinking) but indicating more medical research is still needed. Several healthy children are shown who, having followed a course of treatment with Lorenzo's oil, have remained symptom-free. We learn Lorenzo can communicate again via a modified sign language, and that Augusto Odone later received an honorary Ph.D. for his pioneering work in researching and discovering a significant treatment for ALD.
The oil has not yet been clinically proven to be effective against the progression of ALD, but has since been scientifically validated as something that "may help" if given to asymptomatic sufferers with ALD. Dr Hugo Moser, the world authority on ALD, has significant success in using the oil to prevent the onset of ALD in patients who carry the gene but have not yet manifested symptons. In a study of 120 such boys, 83 remained symptom-free at the finish. According to Dr. Moser, taking the oil reduced the chance of getting the disease by half. In another study which concluded in 2005, 89 boys who were taking daily doses were followed over the course of seven years, and at the end, 66 of them showed no sign of the disease. Dr. Moser described this as "pretty damned definitive." *
Michaela Odone, died of cancer in June 2000.
Lorenzo Odone is still alive, having lived far longer than his doctors predicted. He celebrated his 28th birthday on May 29 2006and as of August 2005, was living in Virginia with his father. He can no longer see, hear, speak, or move on his own, but can communicate by wiggling his fingers and blinking his eyes. He continues to be cared for by his friend Oumouri Hassane from the Comoros Islands.[http://carbon.cudenver.edu/~bstith/Lorenzoarticle.htm
Lorenzo Odone is the nephew of New York State Supreme Court Justice J. Emmett Murphy.
1992 films | Films featuring a Best Actress Academy Award nominated performance | Films based on actual events
El aceite de la vida | Lorenzo (film) | Olej Lorenza (film) | Масло Лоренцо (фильм)
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Lorenzo's Oil".
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