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Her mother gave her the genes for a rare form of dementia, but a Minnesota woman is fighting back
Her mother gave her the genes for a rare form of dementia, but a Minnesota woman is fighting back

CBS News

time3 days ago

  • Health
  • CBS News

Her mother gave her the genes for a rare form of dementia, but a Minnesota woman is fighting back

In the United States, one in three people face memory loss or dementia. In life, you never know what cards you'll be dealt. Linde Jacobs lost her mother in 2022, which makes being a mother to two young daughters tough. She's struggled with how to properly grieve and cope. She's struggling with making sure her daughters see strength and resilience. There's also the fear. Unlike most people, Jacobs knows what cards are in her own future. "I was speechless in that appointment," Jacobs recalled. "I had never been delivered news like that before. It was something so shocking that I really didn't know how to grasp it and internalize it." Aside from years of love, Jacobs' mother had also given her a cruel gene that causes a condition nearly impossible to diagnose. "She was boundary-less" Alison Lee was a proud mother of three girls, a successful physical therapist and a doting grandmother. But when she turned 50, life turned upside down. "Some of her impulses would be to touch people in public, so if she saw someone, she would go pull some guy's pants up because she said, 'I can see your underwear.' She was boundary-less, she didn't realize the social norms we place on what is appropriate," Jacobs said. Linde Jacobs WCCO Jacobs, a nurse herself, pounded doctors for information. She was told it was depression but she knew there was more. Meanwhile Lee's bizarre behavior continued. She started shoplifting, and after dodging a traffic stop she ended up in jail. Jacobs' sister received a letter from a fellow inmate saying, "your mom doesn't belong here, I think she has dementia." "It was affirmation, first time we had somebody look into this from a third party perspective and say this is dementia," Jacobs said. It was a diagnosis no doctor had given. Lee hadn't lost her memory but she had lost the mind she once had, and something clicked with Jacobs. Turns out, that inmate known only as "Angie" was right. That was 2018, and Jacobs still marvels at the gesture. "The incredible kindness of a stranger to know that not only did she recognize this, but she recognized my mom as being vulnerable and then kept her sane," Jacobs said. Jacobs now had a clear path thanks to a to a stranger she'd never be able to thank. But with the context of dementia, Jacobs was able to figure out a lot. She recalled that her grandmother had similar impulsive behaviors. It was genetic — it was the mapT mutation of frontal dementia known as FTD. It's a disease that hits at 50, and instead of losing memories, patients often lose impulse control and self-awareness. Linde Jacobs and her mother, Alison Lee Linde Jacobs "Honestly, I had a lot of guilt that I was so intolerant to those symptoms when my mom would display them," said Jacobs. Jacobs watched her mom progress; one day Lee fell and hit her head. Because of the FTD, her brain couldn't take the swelling and she died at 62, leaving devastation and frustration. "I had that understanding level while she was alive, this is not her, she is not doing this to me, this is happening because this disease is causing this symptom," Jacobs said. But she says it was hard to separate her mom from those symptoms. Amidst the grief, she learned that she and her two sisters had the gene, too. Jacobs said immediately, her mind went to her little girls. "Truly, that I passed it on to my daughters," she said. Jacobs realized that there was very little information about MapT. She could barely Google the condition that she was most certainly going to have. Then, she and her husband happened to see a documentary on gene editing. "And so he just Google searched "FTD, CRISPR," and then we came across a physician that's based out of San Francisco, Dr. Claire Clelland," said Jacobs. "It's just a matter of time" In a busy laboratory on the other side of the country, Clelland received an email. "I get contacted from patients, particularly gene carriers from around the world, but I remember just replying that I would try to help in the best way that I could," she said. That was the start of a powerful friendship. Jacobs set out on an advocacy journey across the nation, speaking to the nation's top neurologists and making them better understand this tricky and brutal disease that effects 40,000 Americans, essentially putting FTD on the map. Clelland said Jacobs' personal touch has fueled the process. "And if you look at new therapies that make it through the pipeline and actually get to patients, often, they have patient supporters and champions that don't give up even when the work gets really hard," Clelland said. And that hard work landed Jacobs on the front page of the New York Times. From her frustration, to her grief, to that inmate's letter, she laid out her story for the world to see, giving her even more opportunity for revelations like the one she had in February inside a University of Minnesota research lab. It's there she saw a mouse with the frontal temporal dementia mutation she has. That mouse is a symbol of hope. It's part of promising research at the University of Minnesota. "Linde sent me an email, she's actually the first FTD patient I've ever met," said Dr. Michael Koob, who is leading a team of researchers. Koob and his students are getting promising results for a treatment for people who know they have the gene. "So, so for her, it's just a matter of time. This is going to happen. You know, at this point, I'm fairly confident that there will be an intervention that is going to work," said Koob. From the mice to the microscopes, things are looking up. WCCO followed Jacobs and her pursuit for two months. During that time, she had another breakthrough. It came at a coffee shop in River Falls, Wisconsin. A reunion After years, Jacobs finally found the inmate who had sent her the initial letter about her mom. She messaged her on Facebook, and the two set up a time to meet. When Jacobs met Angela Olson, the tears welled. "I have no idea what the Lord is doing. I think it's amazing that he brought our lives together. I never realized, even writing that letter, what it was doing, right? I just knew that your mom was a really great person and needed help," said Olson. Angela Olson meets Linde Jacobs. WCCO As they marveled at the letter, they marveled at the moment. "I think there's so many times in life that, like, people are brought into our lives, right, for a poor purpose, right, and a bigger purpose," said Jacobs. "Yeah, she's actually the beginning of my journey with sobriety," said Olson. Olson knew the ropes when it came to jail; she was 20 years into her addiction. "Never, all these years, my whole life, I never understood how to have, actually, emotions. It's like I was rejected in my life, betrayed by people, but yet understand how to have love or emotion, and just was so suppressed. And so then I ended up coming to Teen Challenge," Olson said. Now she's seven years sober and thriving as a manager at Minnesota Adult and Teen Challenge Recovery program. She spends her days sharing her story. Olson recalled that Lee "just kept repeating herself." As a nurse herself, she had some experience with dementia. She marveled at the New York Times article with her letter in it. "Just reading how Linde said, you know, she was easily diagnosed by inmates before any doctor diagnosed this condition. And I was just, thank you, Lord," Olson said. "Thank you that something that I did would help this woman." Now, Jacobs has another partner in her fight to honor her mother and protect her daughters. She recently was invited to a gala in New York, with Anna Wintour of Vogue helping to lead fundraising. They raised $1.9 million dollars for frontal temporal lobe dementia.

Two-time Solheim Cup player Alison Lee announces birth of her first child, a son
Two-time Solheim Cup player Alison Lee announces birth of her first child, a son

USA Today

time02-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • USA Today

Two-time Solheim Cup player Alison Lee announces birth of her first child, a son

Two-time Solheim Cup player Alison Lee announces birth of her first child, a son Two-time Solheim Cup player Alison Lee shared on Instagram that she and boyfriend Trey Kidd welcomed their first child, a son, born April 25. The 30-year-old Lee, a two-time winner on the Ladies European Tour, helped the U.S. defeat Europe in last year's Solheim Cup. Lee went viral at the event on Saturday after she holed a wedge shot and her caddie took off his shirt to settle a bet. Currently No. 47 in the world, Lee made her last start in November at the Aramco Team Series event in Saudi Arabia. The LPGA's maternity policy gives moms two years from the date of the baby's birth to return to playing. Lee told Golfweek last year she and Kidd were introduced by a mutual friend near the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic. Kidd, a former college player at Colorado State who now works in finance, played off a plus-3 handicap at the time. If Lee plays from the back tees, she doesn't give him any strokes.

Breathing in America Is Going to Get More Dangerous
Breathing in America Is Going to Get More Dangerous

Yahoo

time09-04-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Breathing in America Is Going to Get More Dangerous

When you inhale a microscopic speck of soot, its journey may go like this: The particle enters your nose and heads into your lungs, penetrating even the tiny air sacs that facilitate gas exchange. Next it may slip into your bloodstream and flow into your heart, or past the blood-brain barrier. Most of us inhale some of these tiny particles every day. But inhaling enough can turn the act of breathing into an existential hazard, prompting or worsening asthma, COPD, respiratory infections, and permanent lung damage. In the heart, the specks can trigger heart disease, heart attacks, and most of the cardiovascular disorders you can think of. Air pollution is also associated with depression and anxiety, and with higher rates of suicide. It can trigger strokes and is linked to dementia or—even at average levels in this country—Parkinson's disease. These particles can also cross the placenta, where they can reduce an infant's lung function before birth. A pre-polluted baby is also more likely to arrive prematurely, and at a lower weight. Exposure to bad air in utero is associated with a higher risk of autism, and exposure in childhood has been linked to behavioral and cognitive problems, including lower IQ. A person's lungs can develop until age 25, and as Alison Lee, a pulmonologist at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, put it to me, 'once you've lost lung function, you can't get it back.' Persistent exposure to air pollution can cause permanent harm, creating health problems for children and setting them up to become sicker adults. It's hard to picture a person dropping dead from air pollution, yet it happens all the time. In the United States, particulate matter is estimated to kill more than twice as many people as vehicular accidents do—in total, some 100,000 to 200,000 people a year, as an underlying factor of chronic disease or by way of heart attacks, asthma attacks, and other sudden events. Even as air quality in America has improved, researchers have found that relatively low concentrations of particulate matter can cause major hazards. All of this stems from a toxic and mostly invisible danger, largely the product of burning things for fuel and letting the remnant drift into the air and then into us—which is what happens unless the government regulates that process. The Trump administration, however, has shown little interest in doing so. Through new policies and aggressive cuts, the administration is taking steps that will encourage more pollution while muffling the science that shows the harms. The very air that Americans breathe will likely become less safe. So far, the EPA has announced that it will pursue a suite of rollbacks of environmental rules, among them a Joe Biden–era update to standards for particulate matter that were meant to be fully in force by 2032 and that the Biden EPA projected would, in that year alone, prevent up to 4,500 premature deaths and 800,000 cases of asthma, reaping up to $46 billion in health benefits. It also plans to reassess a rule limiting the amount of airborne mercury and arsenic that power plants can release. In a statement announcing one of these rollbacks, the EPA said that the U.S. has already made major gains in air quality, implying that these are enough. In response to a request for comment, an agency spokesperson told me that EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin's priority is 'clean air, land, and water for EVERY American.' The air in the U.S. certainly is cleaner than it was when industrial air pollution billowed into the skies unmitigated. Over the past 25 years alone, particulate air pollution in the country has dropped by more than 30 percent. Yet at least one in three Americans lives in a place where the air is still a health hazard. The particulate-matter standard that Zeldin intends to roll back is still nearly twice as high as the limit the World Health Organization recommends to protect health. Rolling back rules will take time, but America's air quality could worsen in the interim. The EPA told businesses last month that they can simply email the agency if they want an exemption from certain pollution regulations and that 'the president will make a decision.' However they address those pleas, this opens a back door. The recent cuts to EPA personnel almost certainly mean that enforcement will suffer too. Meanwhile, worsening wildfire seasons, fueled by climate warming, are reversing decades of air-quality progress in this country. And ignoring and even stoking climate change, as Donald Trump's administration is doing, will produce worse wildfire seasons. The country's slide back toward its more polluted past 'will become a steeper trajectory,' Joan Casey, an environmental epidemiologist at the University of Washington whose work helped expose the connection between wildfire smoke and dementia risk, told me. The administration's cuts to scientific research mean, too, that the impact of its deregulation may never be fully understood. In recent months, the government has pulled down some air-quality data and canceled grants; it also plans to dissolve a whole EPA division dedicated to studying how the environment affects public health. These actions create a sort of purposeful naivete: You can't regulate what you can't prove is harmful, and you can't prove harm without research. And you certainly can't solve for what you don't yet know is a problem. The EPA's newer findings about how air pollution may addle a body—by worsening mental health or triggering more cases of neurodegenerative disease, for example—haven't yet been included in its risk-benefit assessments of air-quality regulations, Casey added. 'I think often we're underestimating the true impact,' she said. When I called Marianthi-Anna Kioumourtzoglou, an epidemiologist at Columbia University, she had just learned that the Trump administration had canceled her grant to study how impacts of climate change, including air pollution, alter cognitive function in aging people. (Earlier this year, too, she was dismissed from her appointment to the EPA's Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee, along with the rest of the panel.) Even so, the basics on air pollution have been studied enough that Kioumourtzoglou knows how current rollbacks will affect Americans: There will be 'more heart attacks, more respiratory adverse health outcomes for sure,' she told me. 'Our cognitive functions are going to be worse—the progression of Alzheimer's, the progression of Parkinson's.' Pollution-related depression and anxiety may go up. Even slightly increasing the risk or rate of any of these at the population level can diminish quality of life and, ultimately, productivity, she said. A sicker country is a poorer one. Compared with smoking, for example, an individual's risk of inhaling a dangerous amount of air pollution and then having their health affected because of it is relatively small, she told me—but 'the problem is that few people smoke, and everybody breathes.' If a portion of the population's cognitive function is diminished, even a little bit, the overall impact is enormous. Kioumourtzoglou wonders, too, how much further the Trump administration will push the idea that air pollution should not be a concern to Americans. When the Heritage Foundation published a report in December that made the radical case that no definitive link exists between air pollution and poor public-health outcomes, she disregarded it. But after watching other Heritage Foundation goals be enacted, she is concerned that its rationale could be taken seriously by the current administration. The Heritage report attempts to cast doubt on the validity of decades of science by, in part, arguing that studies linking air pollution to health effects fail to prove causation, because they're not randomized or controlled. (The Heritage Foundation did not respond to requests for comment.) This is an attack not just on air-pollution research but on an entire scientific approach. Most public-health research is observational by necessity, because exposing people to air pollution in a lab setting to see how sick they get, say, wouldn't be ethical. Instead, scientists gather data from already-exposed populations and try to parse out how different variables affected people's health. Over decades, researchers have developed biostatistical methods to determine causal relationships from large groups of studies. When EPA scientists and regulators link a pollutant and a health outcome, 'they're not making that assessment on one or two or three studies. It's decades of scientific publications,' Corwin Zigler, a biostatistician at Brown University who served on an EPA scientific advisory panel on air pollution under the Biden administration, told me. He wasn't surprised by the logic behind the Heritage Foundation report: The leader of the previous Trump administration's air-pollution advisory panel had begun to sow doubt about basic air-pollution research. In response, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine undertook a major review of the way the EPA assesses causal relationships, and though it recommended that the EPA's process be more transparent, it found its methods scientifically robust. Zigler said he has no doubt that particulate matter is causing harm at current levels in the United States: 'That's the scientific consensus. That takes very seriously all of the limitations of any given scientific study.' Studies about how entire populations are harmed by air pollution are framed in probabilities and percentages, but they represent a multitude of individuals for whom daily living has been made tangibly worse. For Lee, the Mount Sinai pulmonologist, work became personal a few years ago, when her son, now 5, began having asthma attacks that would send him to the emergency room. Asthma is a common-enough ailment that an attack might seem like a routine and manageable health issue. But anyone who's had a severe one will tell you differently. Over years of reporting on air pollution, I've had asthma attacks described to me as feeling like someone is stepping with their full weight on your ribcage, or as though you are suddenly a fish out of water, suffocating on land. It's a traumatic event. Lee, knowing what she does about air pollution, decided to move her family from New York City to the suburbs a year and a half ago; they haven't been to the emergency room since. 'Clearly, we know that where you live determines your health,' Lee told me, but few people can make a choice like she did, to upend their life to breathe cleaner air. The Trump administration is also cutting the programs intended to address exactly these geographic disparities, while working to make the air worse for everyone. EPA Administrator Zeldin has said these rollbacks are part of the administration's plan to 'unleash the Golden Age of American prosperity.' But prosperity does not mean choking to death in one's own home or depriving a child of cognitive capacity. Whatever wealth is promised here is narrowly disbursed at others' expense. Article originally published at The Atlantic

Breathing in America Is Going to Get More Dangerous
Breathing in America Is Going to Get More Dangerous

Atlantic

time09-04-2025

  • Health
  • Atlantic

Breathing in America Is Going to Get More Dangerous

When you inhale a microscopic speck of soot, its journey may go like this: The particle enters your nose and heads into your lungs, penetrating even the tiny air sacs that facilitate gas exchange. Next it may slip into your bloodstream and flow into your heart, or past the blood-brain barrier. Most of us inhale some of these tiny particles every day. But inhaling enough can turn the act of breathing into an existential hazard, prompting or worsening asthma, COPD, respiratory infections, and permanent lung damage. In the heart, the specks can trigger heart disease, heart attacks, and most of the cardiovascular disorders you can think of. Air pollution is also associated with depression and anxiety, and with higher rates of suicide. It can trigger strokes and is linked to dementia or—even at average levels in this country— Parkinson's disease. These particles can also cross the placenta, where they can reduce an infant's lung function before birth. A pre-polluted baby is also more likely to arrive prematurely, and at a lower weight. Exposure to bad air in utero is associated with a higher risk of autism, and exposure in childhood has been linked to behavioral and cognitive problems, including lower IQ. A person's lungs can develop until age 25, and as Alison Lee, a pulmonologist at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, put it to me, 'once you've lost lung function, you can't get it back.' Persistent exposure to air pollution can cause permanent harm, creating health problems for children and setting them up to become sicker adults. It's hard to picture a person dropping dead from air pollution, yet it happens all the time. In the United States, particulate matter is estimated to kill more than twice as many people as vehicular accidents do—in total, some 100,000 to 200,000 people a year, as an underlying factor of chronic disease or by way of heart attacks, asthma attacks, and other sudden events. Even as air quality in America has improved, researchers have found that relatively low concentrations of particulate matter can cause major hazards. All of this stems from a toxic and mostly invisible danger, largely the product of burning things for fuel and letting the remnant drift into the air and then into us—which is what happens unless the government regulates that process. The Trump administration, however, has shown little interest in doing so. Through new policies and aggressive cuts, the administration is taking steps that will encourage more pollution while muffling the science that shows the harms. The very air that Americans breathe will likely become less safe. So far, the EPA has announced that it will pursue a suite of rollbacks of environmental rules, among them a Joe Biden–era update to standards for particulate matter that were meant to be fully in force by 2032 and that the Biden EPA projected would, in that year alone, prevent up to 4,500 premature deaths and 800,000 cases of asthma, reaping up to $46 billion in health benefits. It also plans to reassess a rule limiting the amount of airborne mercury and arsenic that power plants can release. In a statement announcing one of these rollbacks, the EPA said that the U.S. has already made major gains in air quality, implying that these are enough. In response to a request for comment, an agency spokesperson told me that EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin's priority is 'clean air, land, and water for EVERY American.' The air in the U.S. certainly is cleaner than it was when industrial air pollution billowed into the skies unmitigated. Over the past 25 years alone, particulate air pollution in the country has dropped by more than 30 percent. Yet at least one in three Americans lives in a place where the air is still a health hazard. The particulate-matter standard that Zeldin intends to roll back is still nearly twice as high as the limit the World Health Organization recommends to protect health. Rolling back rules will take time, but America's air quality could worsen in the interim. The EPA told businesses last month that they can simply email the agency if they want an exemption from certain pollution regulations and that 'the president will make a decision.' However they address those pleas, this opens a back door. The recent cuts to EPA personnel almost certainly mean that enforcement will suffer too. Meanwhile, worsening wildfire seasons, fueled by climate warming, are reversing decades of air-quality progress in this country. And ignoring and even stoking climate change, as Donald Trump's administration is doing, will produce worse wildfire seasons. The country's slide back toward its more polluted past 'will become a steeper trajectory,' Joan Casey, an environmental epidemiologist at the University of Washington whose work helped expose the connection between wildfire smoke and dementia risk, told me. The administration's cuts to scientific research mean, too, that the impact of its deregulation may never be fully understood. In recent months, the government has pulled down some air-quality data and canceled grants; it also plans to dissolve a whole EPA division dedicated to studying how the environment affects public health. These actions create a sort of purposeful naivete: You can't regulate what you can't prove is harmful, and you can't prove harm without research. And you certainly can't solve for what you don't yet know is a problem. The EPA's newer findings about how air pollution may addle a body—by worsening mental health or triggering more cases of neurodegenerative disease, for example—haven't yet been included in its risk-benefit assessments of air-quality regulations, Casey added. 'I think often we're underestimating the true impact,' she said. When I called Marianthi-Anna Kioumourtzoglou, an epidemiologist at Columbia University, she had just learned that the Trump administration had canceled her grant to study how impacts of climate change, including air pollution, alter cognitive function in aging people. (Earlier this year, too, she was dismissed from her appointment to the EPA's Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee, along with the rest of the panel.) Even so, the basics on air pollution have been studied enough that Kioumourtzoglou knows how current rollbacks will affect Americans: There will be 'more heart attacks, more respiratory adverse health outcomes for sure,' she told me. 'Our cognitive functions are going to be worse—the progression of Alzheimer's, the progression of Parkinson's.' Pollution-related depression and anxiety may go up. Even slightly increasing the risk or rate of any of these at the population level can diminish quality of life and, ultimately, productivity, she said. A sicker country is a poorer one. Compared with smoking, for example, an individual's risk of inhaling a dangerous amount of air pollution and then having their health affected because of it is relatively small, she told me—but 'the problem is that few people smoke, and everybody breathes.' If a portion of the population's cognitive function is diminished, even a little bit, the overall impact is enormous. Kioumourtzoglou wonders, too, how much further the Trump administration will push the idea that air pollution should not be a concern to Americans. When the Heritage Foundation published a report in December that made the radical case that no definitive link exists between air pollution and poor public-health outcomes, she disregarded it. But after watching other Heritage Foundation goals be enacted, she is concerned that its rationale could be taken seriously by the current administration. The Heritage report attempts to cast doubt on the validity of decades of science by, in part, arguing that studies linking air pollution to health effects fail to prove causation, because they're not randomized or controlled. (The Heritage Foundation did not respond to requests for comment.) This is an attack not just on air-pollution research but on an entire scientific approach. Most public-health research is observational by necessity, because exposing people to air pollution in a lab setting to see how sick they get, say, wouldn't be ethical. Instead, scientists gather data from already-exposed populations and try to parse out how different variables affected people's health. Over decades, researchers have developed biostatistical methods to determine causal relationships from large groups of studies. When EPA scientists and regulators link a pollutant and a health outcome, 'they're not making that assessment on one or two or three studies. It's decades of scientific publications,' Corwin Zigler, a biostatistician at Brown University who served on an EPA scientific advisory panel on air pollution under the Biden administration, told me. He wasn't surprised by the logic behind the Heritage Foundation report: The leader of the previous Trump administration's air-pollution advisory panel had begun to sow doubt about basic air-pollution research. In response, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine undertook a major review of the way the EPA assesses causal relationships, and though it recommended that the EPA's process be more transparent, it found its methods scientifically robust. Zigler said he has no doubt that particulate matter is causing harm at current levels in the United States: 'That's the scientific consensus. That takes very seriously all of the limitations of any given scientific study.' Studies about how entire populations are harmed by air pollution are framed in probabilities and percentages, but they represent a multitude of individuals for whom daily living has been made tangibly worse. For Lee, the Mount Sinai pulmonologist, work became personal a few years ago, when her son, now 5, began having asthma attacks that would send him to the emergency room. Asthma is a common-enough ailment that an attack might seem like a routine and manageable health issue. But anyone who's had a severe one will tell you differently. Over years of reporting on air pollution, I've had asthma attacks described to me as feeling like someone is stepping with their full weight on your ribcage, or as though you are suddenly a fish out of water, suffocating on land. It's a traumatic event. Lee, knowing what she does about air pollution, decided to move her family from New York City to the suburbs a year and a half ago; they haven't been to the emergency room since. 'Clearly, we know that where you live determines your health,' Lee told me, but few people can make a choice like she did, to upend their life to breathe cleaner air. The Trump administration is also cutting the programs intended to address exactly these geographic disparities, while working to make the air worse for everyone. EPA Administrator Zeldin has said these rollbacks are part of the administration's plan to 'unleash the Golden Age of American prosperity.' But prosperity does not mean choking to death in one's own home or depriving a child of cognitive capacity. Whatever wealth is promised here is narrowly disbursed at others' expense.

Two-time Solheim Cup player Alison Lee and boyfriend Trey Kidd are expecting a baby boy
Two-time Solheim Cup player Alison Lee and boyfriend Trey Kidd are expecting a baby boy

Yahoo

time07-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Two-time Solheim Cup player Alison Lee and boyfriend Trey Kidd are expecting a baby boy

Two-time Solheim Cup player Alison Lee and boyfriend Trey Kidd have announced the upcoming arrival of a baby boy. Lee shared the gorgeous photos on Instagram. Lee told Golfweek last year she and Kidd were introduced by a mutual friend near the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic. Kidd, a former college player at Colorado State who now works in finance, played off a plus-three handicap at the time. If Lee plays from the back tees, she doesn't have to give him any strokes. View this post on Instagram A post shared by alison (@thealisonlee) The 30-year-old Lee, a two-time winner on the Ladies European Tour, helped the U.S. defeat Europe in last year's Solheim Cup. Lee went viral at the event on Saturday after she holed a wedge shot and her caddie took off his shirt to settle a bet. Currently No. 37 in the world, Lee made her last start in November at the Aramco Team Series event in Saudi Arabia. The LPGA's maternity policy gives moms two years from the date of the baby's birth to return to playing. This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Two-time Solheim Cup player Alison Lee is expecting a baby boy

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