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Thriving With Parkinson's Disease Through Hope, Optimism, and Perseverance

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When John Alexander was diagnosed with a degenerative disease, he decided to take control of his health and mindset by finding ways to motivate himself and others with Parkinson's.  John became a distance cyclist and triathlete after discovering that staying active is one of the best ways to combat the effects of the disease. John maintains his upbeat attitude by seeking inspiration from the Parkinson's community. He stays involved in helping transform other peoples' lives as a dedicated ambassador for numerous organizations and a sought-after inspirational speaker. Available from Amazon . I am paid a commission on sales made using via my Amazon Associate link.

World Parkinson's Day

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Parkinson's is a defined as a movement disorder but the very long list of issues goes way beyond movement and shaking. here are a few more that people added: Low voice or whisper, tiny handwriting, constipation.

April is Parkinson's Disease Awareness Month

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Parkinson's Awareness Month is observed in April. Parkinson's Awareness Month is an opportunity to increase awareness about the ailment and its symptoms, as well as to support victims.

Meds Adjusted and actually feeling a bit better, for now

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A few meds changed or added seem to be helping me.  Never follow my medical scribblings, consult your doctor before changing or stopping any medications. Changed first dosage of the day of carbidopa/levodopa (C/L), here's what I'm doing... instead of one and a half pills at 9am, I ramp up with 1/2 a pill at 8:45am and half at 9:15. My analogy of taking 1 1/2 pills at once is a tsunami pulls the tide out (stiffness and freezing) then the wave hits me (a brief on time) before receding back into the sea (wearing off).  Splitting the dose is more subtle of a wake up for my brain-like the tides. Yes my meds are still wearing off and I still get dose failures but somehow they seem a little less intense. Last night I met up with one of my friends from Miami for dinner, then to go hear music! Dose failure and I'm sure it was totally due to taking C/L during my protein filled meal (hard to time this right). So nobody got to see my signature bad dancing at the show–but my next dosage...

DBS? Courage. A second chance to live

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DBS is on my mind. I am slowly inching towards the deep brain stimulation. Everyone I speak with has encouraging words.  I MAY BE SCARED. I MAY HAVE ANXIETY. It's freakin' brain surgery. Who wouldn't have anxiety or be afraid? I have anxiety getting my teeth cleaned in the dentist office. This is MY CHANCE TO LIVE AGAIN. I want to explore places and experience things I have been thinking about since Parkinson's put my life on hold.  I know DBS is not a cure and does not slow down progression. I'm still hoping for a cure, and reversal of damage, a repair of dopamine receptors and transmitters and I don't want to sit in a pool of my own urine waiting for my demise.  This sure seems like a lifeline and I'm ready to live, again. It's funny the things that go on in the brain, recently I met up with a red tail hawk and had a sudden boost in courage. Is the hawk my spirit animal? Maybe. Did I have the courage all along and was my brain filled with so much nois...

DBS? Scared out of my mind

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 I'm almost 10 years since my diagnosis with Parkinson's Disease.  At first Sinemet was the magic fix. One tablet 25/100 brought me back. Then mixing, matching, optimizing meds for the next 10+ years, like playing a carnival game. Where's the neuron. Transmitter or Receptor? Guess the med, win a prize. Failed doses and off times are my norm. My "on times" are rare and brief. Stiffness, slowness, freezing all the time. Quality of life sucks. This illness and I destroyed my spouse, which hurts me most. DBS. Deep Brain Stimulation.   Is this the final solution? Freakin' drill holes in my skull and poke some leads into my brain. Twice. Then a third surgery for batteries. Flip switch and, who knows. Surgeries every few years for new batteries. Praying to die instead of this modern twist on a medieval technique. Sure it's been fine tuned with super high resolution cameras and imaging but it's still probing around and see how the patient responds. It's br...

Robin Williams' Son Zak Says His Dad Was 'Very Uncomfortable' and 'Frustrated' Due to Misdiagnosis

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Robin Williams' son Zak got candid about the effect of his father's misdiagnosis and how he dealt with the trauma after the actor's death in 2014. Zak, a mental health advocate, spoke with host Max Lugavere on his podcast The Genius Life to discuss Williams' "frustration" and discomfort before his death. The episode was released on what would have been Robin Williams' 70th birthday.   Zak talks of the frustrations faced by his father, Robin Williams, as he struggled to cope with the symptoms of Lewy body dementia after being misdiagnosed with Parkinson's disease—and a completely different set of expectations and treatments.