High Desert Advocate publisher Howard Copelan

was released from hospital Monday night after receiving life saving emergency transfusion of hemoglobin.

Copelan was in Israel with wife Corinne visiting their daughter Anna who recently gave birth to their first grandchild.

“I thought I had the flu so I went to doctor for some antibiotics,” the publisher said. “Instead he sent me to the emergency room. My hemoglobin level was at 4.5, normal is 12-14 for adult men. Fatal low can be anything under 5.0”

Copelan is a sufferer of Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia. HHT is a genetic disorder of the blood vessels, which affects approximately 1 in 5,000 people. It affects males and females from all racial and ethnic groups. The disorder is also sometimes referred to as Osler-Weber-Rendu (OWR) after several doctors who studied HHT about 100 years ago. In 1896 Dr. Rendu first described HHT as a hereditary disorder involving nosebleeds and characteristic red spots that was distinctly different from hemophilia.

Before Dr. Rendu’s work, doctors did not understand that individuals with what we now call HHT have abnormalities of their blood vessels, not a clotting problem in the blood itself. Drs. Weber and Osler reported on additional features of HHT in the early 1900s. More than one hundred years later, HHT is still often misdiagnosed in affected individuals and many doctors do not understand all of its manifestations.

“It really is an insidious problem,” Copelan explained. “My doctor explained that my daily nose bleeds were not dangerous one at a time but over a year or so taken all together I was losing more blood and hemoglobin than I replaced. I was bleeding to death in slow motion.”

While it is relatively widespread HHT often goes undetected or is misdiagnosed sometimes with fatal consequences. the easiest way to tell if one has HHT is a history of severe nose bleeds in the family.

According to survey’s HHT is the leading cause of fatal brain strokes in persons under 30.

the major center for treating HHT is the University of Utah in Salt Lake City.