Springfield Dentist’s Generosity
Terminally ill woman gets dentures, dignity thanks to Springfield dentist’s generosity
State Journal Register, Oct 14, 2017
By David Blanchette, Correspondent
Photos by Ted Schurter
Megan Rhoades doesn’t have many smiles left, but thanks to a Springfield dentist, her remaining smiles will be brilliant ones.
The 47-year-old Rhoades, who is under hospice care in the Jacksonville home she shares with her mother, has had severe dental problems since last year, when she fell and knocked out several teeth.
An old work colleague, Dr. Keith Cummins, has been treating Rhoades for the last few months. On Wednesday, he put temporary dentures in Rhoades’ mouth; more permanent dentures will be placed in four months. The dental work, which Cummins said he’s providing free of charge, gave Rhoades a full set of teeth for the first time in more than a year.
“These look great,” she said after Cummins put in the dentures in his Magna Dental office on South Sixth Street in Springfield. “I didn’t want Chiclets or Mister Ed teeth. I might actually get to have some dignity and quality of the little bit of life that I have left.”
A tough road
Rhoades’ story began several years ago with an infection in her stomach that couldn’t be controlled and contributed to her developing an auto-immune disease. She said surgeons removed her stomach, which caused her to develop malabsorption, a condition that limits her body’s ability to absorb nutrients from food. Rhoades also has degenerative disc disease and has suffered a stroke. Doctors say her combination of maladies is terminal, she said.
Rhoades also has osteoporosis, severe pain and numbness in her extremities, and she’s losing her vision. This causes clumsiness when she tries to move and severe consequences when she bumps into things. In just the past year, Rhoades has broken her left elbow, left shoulder, right hip and nose, she said.
But it was an injury to her mouth in June 2016 that proved to be Rhoades’ most vexing problem.
“I tried to get up from my hospital bed and fell forward, and it knocked out my bottom front four teeth,” Rhoades said. “Because of the malabsorption, it set into motion that the rest of my teeth started losing enamel. With the enamel coming off, the infection in my mouth was going septic.
“I was already a hospice patient because of my other illnesses, but I didn’t want to die from being septic because of the infection in my teeth,” Rhoades said.
Rhoades was referred to a dentist in Jacksonville to pull her teeth before the infection could take hold. But the dentist’s office was reluctant because they feared Rhoades would not awaken from the general anesthesia they wanted to use for the procedure. Plus they wanted co-payment money up front, something that Rhoades did not have.
A phone call
Then Rhoades saw a television commercial for Magna Dental and recognized her old colleague, Cummins. The two worked together at the Sangamon County Jail. She was a nurse. He provided periodic dental care to inmates. She decided to call and ask his advice on how to proceed.
“We laughed for almost an hour just remembering things, to where we couldn’t stop laughing and our ribs were hurting,” Rhoades said. “And at the end of the conversation I gave him a short scenario of what I was going through and asked him if he had any ideas of what I could do.”
“He said, ‘I want you to come over here and let me take care of you. End of story,’” Rhoades said.
“I think about her all the time. I don’t know if I could be as positive as she is,” Cummins said. “You couldn’t ask for a better kid. Here she is on death’s door, and she’s still a trouper.”
Cummins removed all 24 of Rhoades’ teeth in several sessions starting this past June using a local anesthetic. He did not charge Rhoades for any of the procedures. But Cummins wanted to do more.
“I told Bob Nation at Nation Dental Lab (in Springfield) the story, and he said ‘I’m in,’” Cummins said. “So I surprised her at the end and told her she was getting new teeth. She just wanted her teeth out, and I told her, ‘No, you’re getting your teeth back.’”
Rhoades was overwhelmed by the gesture.
“I felt so blessed that he allowed me to stay on this earth longer than I would have. I would have been gone by now if he didn’t take my teeth out,” Rhoades said. “I never even thought about the possibility of having dentures, especially because I knew I was failing.”
‘A miracle’
Rhoades is 72-year-old Marilyn Pessina’s only child.
“I feel it’s a miracle, and it’s going to make me cry out of happiness,” Pessina said. “She needs something good happening in her life, because right now there’s not a whole lot.”
Pessina was the first to react on Wednesday when her daughter flashed her new smile for the first time.
“Look there! She’s got teeth again!” Pessina said. “You’ll have to learn to talk again with teeth.”
Rhoades’ best friend for 35 years, Mary Rogers, also was there as the dentures were fitted.
“It melts my heart,” Rogers said. “She really deserves this, the pain she has gone through, and to find somebody to finally help her, it’s amazing.”
“She’s a giving person. She would give the shirt off of her back if she had to; she’s helped so many people throughout the years,” Rogers said. “Even now, if she could, she would help anybody.”
As he was fitting the dentures in Rhoades’ mouth on Wednesday, Cummins assured her the discomfort she felt was only temporary.
“It’ll get better soon. You are used to having nothing in your mouth at all,” Cummins said. “You will be biting your tongue because it’s been used to having no teeth, so you’ll be cussing me for a while.”
Satisfied that the dentures fit properly and were comfortable, Cummins presented Rhoades with a container for her teeth and inquired, “You don’t have a dog at home, do you? Dogs love to chew these dentures up.”
Rhoades didn’t answer. She was busy admiring her new teeth in the mirror.
“I took care of my teeth religiously as a kid because I was scared to go to the dentist,” Rhoades said. “But I can’t be scared with Keith. God crossed our paths for a reason.”
“Nobody is promised tomorrow. I’ve always said I don’t have an expiration date stamped on my bottom, but I am on hospice, so time is limited,” Rhoades said. “I just want my two adult children to see me smile again.”