• Welcome 2021!!

    Happy New Year!!  I don’t know about you but I have never been so happy to leave a year behind.  It has been a year of trials and tribulations and wrinkled hands from so much washing.  We have averaged  5 – 7 books per week since March, lived through almost 3 months with no tennis and discovered Zoom can be used for just about everything from exercise classes to family gatherings.  

    We have survived not eating out unless we can eat outside, wearing a mask everywhere you go, and not hugging.  We go nowhere except to the grocery store and the tennis court which has reduced gasoline use and carbon in the air.  

    I could go on and on about what we will not miss about 2020 but we did learn some lesson from 2020. I received this list from a good friend and reader of this blog  and I thought I would pass it along to you all.  

    It has been about 5 months since  my last post but with the COVID-19 restrictions there is very little news to report.   As noted above, we have been playing tennis with a small group (our pod) and the ever resourceful Pedaling for PD instructor Kathy has been teaching classes 3 days a week via Zoom.  I purchased a spin bike for home in order to keep up with the exercise as much a possible.

    I finally had a face to face visit with my neurologist in October which went well with no changes to medications or routines.  I also met with a speech pathologist and we decided the Speak Out! program would be beneficial as my voice has been getting softer and softer requiring me to repeat myself often.

    Speak Out! is a program where you meet one on one  with the speech pathologists three times  a week for four weeks  and learn to speak with intent!  The sessions were very focused on improving the volume of my voice using breathing exercises, visualising projecting my voice and practicing going from low to high and back while saying ahhhh.  In addition to the voice exercises, they also have cognitive drills for each lesson and a reading aloud exercise.  I found the program to be very beneficial and I have continued to work at speaking with intent everyday. 

    We spent the holidays at home with no family visitors for the first time that we can remember.  Hopefully next year we can return to normal as the vaccine is rolled out.

    Speaking of the vaccine, through a combination of serendipitous events, Mara and I received the first Moderna shot last week and are scheduled for the second shot in early February.  Sarasota county opened appointments for persons 65 and over using an online reservation system.  Because I had signed up for text messages from the county back in March, I received a text message that they were taking appointments and was able to schedule both of us before they were filled up.  The process worked very smoothly when we arrived at the County Health Department.  While there was a long line, it turned out they were people without an appointment hoping to get the vaccine  by waiting. 

    Since we had an appointment, we went to the head of the line and were in and out in approximately an hour including a 15 – 20 minute observation period after the shot.  So far we have had no major complications beyond some pain at the injection site.  I will update you when we get the second shot as I have heard that is when they expect more minor complications will occur since your body has been making antibodies to fight the virus.

    A reminder – if you haven’t already joined PD Avengers, please click here and add your name to the list of supporters.  We are hoping for 1 million supporters by 2022 and together we are fighting to END PARKINSON’S!

    I hope this post finds you healthy and not totally bored out of your mind.  Please mask up, practice social distancing and stay safe! 

    “It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.” – Confucius

     

      

     

  • Join PD Avengers & Let’s End PD!

    Last  month  marked the 7th anniversary of my official “you have Parkinson’s Disease” diagnosis from my first neurologist.   During the past 7 years  I’ve become very knowledgeable about PD, discovered tennis, turned into an exercise junkie to help slow the progression of my PD,  and moved to Florida.

    Meanwhile, after 200 + years Levadopa/Carbidopa, discovered 50 years ago, continues to be the main treatment for the symptoms of PD.  A lot of research has been done trying to identify the cause of PD and a number of new medications have been developed to deal with the symptoms of PD but the cure remains elusive.  The recent book “Ending Parkinson’s Disease” pointed out that PD is fast becoming  pandemic and action needs to be taken to end PD. You can read my blog post about the book here.

    Inspired by the book and it’s proposed PACT (Prevent,Advocate, Care, Treat)  a worldwide group of PD advocates have formed PD Avengers to advocate for ending Parkinson’s.  They want to unite 50 million voices world wide to prove PD matters and to build a sense of urgency to end Parkinson’s.  I have added my voice and have become a PD Avenger and I hope you will too!  You can find out more information and add your voice at PDAdvengers.com.  Together we can END PARKINSON’S!!

  • Sample Posts #4

    Gravida dictum fusce

    Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Gravida dictum fusce ut placerat. Convallis aenean et tortor at. Mauris sit amet massa vitae. A condimentum vitae sapien pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et. Malesuada nunc vel risus commodo viverra maecenas accumsan lacus. Magnis dis parturient montes nascetur ridiculus. Volutpat sed cras ornare arcu dui vivamus arcu felis. Neque sodales ut etiam sit amet nisl purus in. Elit ut aliquam purus sit amet luctus venenatis lectus. At volutpat diam ut venenatis tellus in metus vulputate.

    Fermentum et sollicitudin ac orci phasellus egestas tellus. Amet dictum sit amet justo donec enim. Iaculis nunc sed augue lacus viverra vitae. Pharetra pharetra massa massa ultricies mi quis hendrerit dolor magna. Vel fringilla est ullamcorper eget nulla facilisi etiam dignissim diam. Nisi porta lorem mollis aliquam ut porttitor. Vel turpis nunc eget lorem dolor. Lacinia quis vel eros donec ac odio tempor orci dapibus. Mi sit amet mauris commodo quis imperdiet. Porta nibh venenatis cras sed felis. Phasellus faucibus scelerisque eleifend donec pretium vulputate sapien nec sagittis. Volutpat ac tincidunt vitae semper quis lectus nulla.

    At tellus at urna condimentum mattis pellentesque. Arcu non sodales neque sodales. Tincidunt ornare massa eget egestas. Ut tortor pretium viverra suspendisse potenti nullam ac tortor vitae. Vestibulum rhoncus est pellentesque elit ullamcorper dignissim. Donec adipiscing tristique risus nec feugiat in. Ut ornare lectus sit amet. Hendrerit dolor magna eget est lorem. Ipsum suspendisse ultrices gravida dictum fusce. Ultricies leo integer malesuada nunc vel risus commodo viverra. Mauris in aliquam sem fringilla. Fermentum odio eu feugiat pretium.

    Tellus in metus vulputate eu scelerisque felis imperdiet proin. Eu ultrices vitae auctor eu augue ut lectus. Enim sed faucibus turpis in eu. Hac habitasse platea dictumst quisque sagittis purus. Justo laoreet sit amet cursus. Lobortis mattis aliquam faucibus purus in massa tempor nec feugiat. Mauris pharetra et ultrices neque ornare aenean euismod elementum nisi. Lectus sit amet est placerat. Vulputate enim nulla aliquet porttitor lacus luctus accumsan. Odio pellentesque diam volutpat commodo sed egestas. Sapien eget mi proin sed libero. Ut placerat orci nulla pellentesque. Mi quis hendrerit dolor magna eget est. Nunc scelerisque viverra mauris in aliquam. Sapien faucibus et molestie ac feugiat sed lectus vestibulum mattis. Odio ut enim blandit volutpat maecenas volutpat blandit. Cras sed felis eget velit aliquet sagittis id consectetur purus. Porta nibh venenatis cras sed felis eget velit. Imperdiet proin fermentum leo vel. Tempus egestas sed sed risus pretium quam vulputate dignissim suspendisse.

    Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipiscing elit duis tristique. Nunc consequat interdum varius sit amet mattis vulputate enim. Faucibus et molestie ac feugiat sed lectus vestibulum mattis. Massa sed elementum tempus egestas sed sed. Nunc consequat interdum varius sit amet. Neque vitae tempus quam pellentesque nec. Cursus metus aliquam eleifend mi. Eu scelerisque felis imperdiet proin fermentum leo vel orci. Quam elementum pulvinar etiam non quam lacus suspendisse faucibus interdum. Non enim praesent elementum facilisis leo vel fringilla. Nisi vitae suscipit tellus mauris a diam maecenas sed. Lorem sed risus ultricies tristique nulla. Elementum facilisis leo vel fringilla. Ut tortor pretium viverra suspendisse potenti. Diam in arcu cursus euismod quis viverra. Mattis vulputate enim nulla aliquet porttitor. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipiscing. Libero id faucibus nisl tincidunt eget nullam non. Libero nunc consequat interdum varius.

Latest Research News

Well, setting a goal of publishing a new post within two weeks of my last post didn’t quite work. Despite my best intentions and adding a reminder to my calendar, I still missed the date by, oh let’s say 2 (OK 3) weeks.  Back in the days before retirement, I used a system called the Franklin Planner to plan out everyday, so maybe I need to do something similar now – NOT!  While it was an interesting (and expensive) planning system complete with training on how to use, fancy binders and custom calendar pages, I still missed a goal or two and I was quite happy to discard the entire system upon retirement.  But enough excuses, I’ll just chalk this one up as a learning experience and remember to not promise any deliverables.😀

What I did promise last post was that this post would cover some of the latest news about PD and I will stick to that deliverable.  One of the new blogs that I now follow is The Science of Parkinson’s .  If you haven’t already discovered this site, click on the link to view the site and sign up for posts.  This site is the first I’ve found that does a superb job of taking the latest scientific publications and breaking it down to plain, understandable english.   The author is Simon Stott, and he has been working in the field of Parkinson’s disease research for over 15 years (both in academia and biotech). 

Each month, he publishes a Monthly Research Review in addition to his posts about a single research topic.  You can view the June 2018 review here.  This month there have been several great posts about the latest research and all in a readable and understandable format.  The top story this month has been the report that researchers have found that graphene dots may prevent alpha synuclein from clumping, and even better, they appear to cause the clumps already formed to break up and disappear!    I realize I threw out some new scientific words but if you go to the article here, you will get a full description of alpha synuclein and graphene dots and more.  (At least I didn’t use the actual title of the research report – Graphene Quantum Dots Appear to Prevent α-synucleinopathy in Parkinson’s disease)

So it appears these graphene dots stop the clumping of alpha synuclein and break up the existing clumps in the mouse model of PD which is a great step forward.  As always though, we have to hope the research results are the same (or better) when they conduct clinical trials on current patients.

And speaking of clinical trials, if you haven’t signed up for the Fox Insight study, please go here and join us in the largest longitudinal study of PD and the impact it has on each patient.  If you didn’t see the Micheal J Fox interview with Jane Pauly regarding the Fox Insight study a few weeks ago, you can view it here.

In the other news category, the Parkinson’s Foundation has released it’s Parkinson’s Prevalence Project results which predicts there will be over 930,000 PD patients in the US and Canada by 2020 and 1.2 million by 2030.  They also show the prevalence by state along with many other statistics.  You can view the summary study here.  Interesting findings and this study will hopefully help our efforts for more funding for PD research.

And finally, when I contacted Simon Stott about his website, he recommended some other sites that I found interesting so I have updated my blog list page with those sites, Simon’s site and a new category of sites, PD News Aggregators. 

As always,thanks for reading.

“It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.” – Confucius

 

 

 

 

 

 

Latest Research News

Well, setting a goal of publishing a new post within two weeks of my last post didn’t quite work. Despite my best intentions and adding a reminder to my calendar, I still missed the date by, oh let’s say 2 (OK 3) weeks.  Back in the days before retirement, I used a system called the Franklin Planner to plan out everyday, so maybe I need to do something similar now – NOT!  While it was an interesting (and expensive) planning system complete with training on how to use, fancy binders and custom calendar pages, I still missed a goal or two and I was quite happy to discard the entire system upon retirement.  But enough excuses, I’ll just chalk this one up as a learning experience and remember to not promise any deliverables.😀

What I did promise last post was that this post would cover some of the latest news about PD and I will stick to that deliverable.  One of the new blogs that I now follow is The Science of Parkinson’s .  If you haven’t already discovered this site, click on the link to view the site and sign up for posts.  This site is the first I’ve found that does a superb job of taking the latest scientific publications and breaking it down to plain, understandable english.   The author is Simon Stott, and he has been working in the field of Parkinson’s disease research for over 15 years (both in academia and biotech). 

Each month, he publishes a Monthly Research Review in addition to his posts about a single research topic.  You can view the June 2018 review here.  This month there have been several great posts about the latest research and all in a readable and understandable format.  The top story this month has been the report that researchers have found that graphene dots may prevent alpha synuclein from clumping, and even better, they appear to cause the clumps already formed to break up and disappear!    I realize I threw out some new scientific words but if you go to the article here, you will get a full description of alpha synuclein and graphene dots and more.  (At least I didn’t use the actual title of the research report – Graphene Quantum Dots Appear to Prevent α-synucleinopathy in Parkinson’s disease)

So it appears these graphene dots stop the clumping of alpha synuclein and break up the existing clumps in the mouse model of PD which is a great step forward.  As always though, we have to hope the research results are the same (or better) when they conduct clinical trials on current patients.

And speaking of clinical trials, if you haven’t signed up for the Fox Insight study, please go here and join us in the largest longitudinal study of PD and the impact it has on each patient.  If you didn’t see the Micheal J Fox interview with Jane Pauly regarding the Fox Insight study a few weeks ago, you can view it here.

In the other news category, the Parkinson’s Foundation has released it’s Parkinson’s Prevalence Project results which predicts there will be over 930,000 PD patients in the US and Canada by 2020 and 1.2 million by 2030.  They also show the prevalence by state along with many other statistics.  You can view the summary study here.  Interesting findings and this study will hopefully help our efforts for more funding for PD research.

And finally, when I contacted Simon Stott about his website, he recommended some other sites that I found interesting so I have updated my blog list page with those sites, Simon’s site and a new category of sites, PD News Aggregators. 

As always,thanks for reading.

“It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.” – Confucius

 

 

 

 

 

 

Latest Research News

Well, setting a goal of publishing a new post within two weeks of my last post didn’t quite work. Despite my best intentions and adding a reminder to my calendar, I still missed the date by, oh let’s say 2 (OK 3) weeks.  Back in the days before retirement, I used a system called the Franklin Planner to plan out everyday, so maybe I need to do something similar now – NOT!  While it was an interesting (and expensive) planning system complete with training on how to use, fancy binders and custom calendar pages, I still missed a goal or two and I was quite happy to discard the entire system upon retirement.  But enough excuses, I’ll just chalk this one up as a learning experience and remember to not promise any deliverables.😀

What I did promise last post was that this post would cover some of the latest news about PD and I will stick to that deliverable.  One of the new blogs that I now follow is The Science of Parkinson’s .  If you haven’t already discovered this site, click on the link to view the site and sign up for posts.  This site is the first I’ve found that does a superb job of taking the latest scientific publications and breaking it down to plain, understandable english.   The author is Simon Stott, and he has been working in the field of Parkinson’s disease research for over 15 years (both in academia and biotech). 

Each month, he publishes a Monthly Research Review in addition to his posts about a single research topic.  You can view the June 2018 review here.  This month there have been several great posts about the latest research and all in a readable and understandable format.  The top story this month has been the report that researchers have found that graphene dots may prevent alpha synuclein from clumping, and even better, they appear to cause the clumps already formed to break up and disappear!    I realize I threw out some new scientific words but if you go to the article here, you will get a full description of alpha synuclein and graphene dots and more.  (At least I didn’t use the actual title of the research report – Graphene Quantum Dots Appear to Prevent α-synucleinopathy in Parkinson’s disease)

So it appears these graphene dots stop the clumping of alpha synuclein and break up the existing clumps in the mouse model of PD which is a great step forward.  As always though, we have to hope the research results are the same (or better) when they conduct clinical trials on current patients.

And speaking of clinical trials, if you haven’t signed up for the Fox Insight study, please go here and join us in the largest longitudinal study of PD and the impact it has on each patient.  If you didn’t see the Micheal J Fox interview with Jane Pauly regarding the Fox Insight study a few weeks ago, you can view it here.

In the other news category, the Parkinson’s Foundation has released it’s Parkinson’s Prevalence Project results which predicts there will be over 930,000 PD patients in the US and Canada by 2020 and 1.2 million by 2030.  They also show the prevalence by state along with many other statistics.  You can view the summary study here.  Interesting findings and this study will hopefully help our efforts for more funding for PD research.

And finally, when I contacted Simon Stott about his website, he recommended some other sites that I found interesting so I have updated my blog list page with those sites, Simon’s site and a new category of sites, PD News Aggregators. 

As always,thanks for reading.

“It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.” – Confucius