Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level. Video Rating: 5 / 5
How To Help Someone With Parkinson’s Disease Thrive
Exercise helps manage Parkinson’s disease
Regular exercise, along with physical and occupational therapy, can help maximize someone’s fitness, mobility, and ability to continue her daily routines after she’s diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. Helping her function at the optimum level now may offset some of the physical limitations that can develop later.
First you’ll want to help her understand why exercise is important. Then you can focus on ways to help her work the best kinds of activity into her life.
Exercise is vital for Parkinson’s disease management. At a time when someone with Parkinson’s probably feels like she’s losing control of her world, one of the best things she can do for herself is exercise, movement disorder experts say. Not only do regular workouts and physical activities lift the spirits, release stress, and tune up the heart, they can also build strength, flexibility, and endurance and improve posture.
A new British analysis that pooled the results of multiple studies found that various exercise interventions boosted physical functioning, health-related quality of life, strength, balance, and walking speed in Parkinson’s patients. And some research on mice with Parkinson’s disease-like symptoms even hints that exercise can enhance the brain’s supply of dopamine, the chemical lacking in Parkinson’s patients.
Physical therapy helps a Parkinson’s patient exercise
Even if the person with Parkinso’s is a couch potato, it’s never too late to benefit from exercise. To get started, she should first discuss with her doctor whether she has any health issues that might preclude certain kinds of activities.
Get workout pointers from a physical therapist. It’s important to take advantage of rehabilitative care services such as physical therapy early in Parkinson’s disease rather than waiting until problems arise, says Julie Carter, associate director of the Parkinson Center of Oregon, in Portland.
The person with Parkinson’s can ask her neurologist for a referral to a PT to help her plan a moderate exercise program. It’s preferable to consult someone knowledgeable about Parkinson’s disease rather than simply see a trainer at the gym. People with Parkinson’s often develop a stooped posture in which their spine and shoulder muscles — along with other big muscle groups in the arms and legs — flex forward. Strengthening the major extensor muscles, such as the back shoulder muscles, can work to counterbalance this, but the average personal trainer may not realize the importance of that in Parkinson’s patients, says Carter.
Based on an evaluation of the patient’s physical condition and her personal goals, the PT can design a targeted program of strengthening, stretching, balance, or aerobic fitness exercises. Your family member can do these on her own or work on them with a gym trainer (make sure the trainer doesn’t modify the program without the PT’s approval).
Stretching is key. Because Parkinson’s patients tend to become stiff and lose the ability to turn the torso, flexibility exercises are crucial for improving range of motion. In Portland, Carter’s center set up classes in pilates, a low-impact exercise system that focuses on breathing and rotating, extending, and flexing the spine. Pilates or a basic stretching routine can make “a big difference in how functional people are over time,” says Carter. “You can just see that they’re visibly able to take bigger strides, they can reach better, they can turn better.”
Similarly, gentle yoga techniques of stretching, breathing, and relaxation can lengthen the spine and extend the big muscle groups, says physical therapist Marilyn Basham of the Parkinson’s Institute and Clinical Center in Sunnyvale, California. “If the spine is elongated, breath comes in easier, swallowing is easier, conversation is easier,” she says.
Troubleshooting movement problems with Parkinson’s
If the Parkinson’s patient has difficulty with walking, balance, pain, or activities such as dressing or getting in and out of bed, the PT can analyze her gait and mobility and offer a range of treatments and coping strategies. For tripping and falling problems, the PT may set her up with an assistive device such as a hiking stick or walker. Ideally, the PT or an occupational therapist (OT) will make a home visit and give tips on improving the safety of her living situation. The PT can also treat slowness of movement. Parkinson’s disease typically impairs the automatic processes in the brain that allow a person to move without thinking about it. One technique for helping the patient, say, stand up from sitting in a chair is to teach her to consciously think about each step of the motion in advance. It’s also worth asking whether the person has slowed down because the illness has made her more sedentary, causing muscle weakness. If so, the solution is to try to get her walking more, according to Basham.
Slowness, stiffness, or gait problems, along with nonmotor Parkinson’s disease symptoms such as depression and apathy, can sap a patient’s motivation levels. You or other family members might try joining her for walks on a flat route. Start with 5- to 10-minute jaunts and build her up to 30 minutes, at least three to five times a week, says Basham. Keep in mind that walking may require her full focus on putting one foot in front of the other. Trying to engage in a conversation at the same time may tax her; if so, suggest holding off on chitchat until you take a break.
Alternative exercises for Parkinson’s patients
Other workout options include dance, water-resistance exercise, and tai chi, the ancient Chinese exercise that emphasizes flowing moves, posture, balance, and meditation. Check with a local medical center or movement disorders clinic to see if it offers these kinds of classes for Parkinson’s patients or seniors.
Also highly recommended is a ten-lesson exercise plan from theater arts coach John Argue, author of Parkinson’s Disease and the Art of Moving. His book and accompanying video teach Parkinson’s patients to purposefully think themselves through the acts of moving and speaking. The most important thing is for your family member to find safe activities that she enjoys doing. If she doesn’t enjoy them, she probably won’t keep doing them.
Other resources:
The National Parkinson Foundation’s free brochure, Parkinson Disease: Fitness Counts A video or DVD of 24 seated exercises entitled Motivating Moves for People with Parkinson’s, coproduced by the Parkinson’s Disease Foundation and available for purchase online. Occupational therapy helps keep Parkinson’s patients independent at home
OTs can also offer solutions when Parkinson’s disease hinders the many little jobs of daily living, from bathing and using the toilet to cooking and eating. These licensed practitioners ask, “What does the person need to do, want to do, and have to do to be able to maintain his daily activities, his life, and his lifestyle?” says Nancy Lowenstein, an OT at Boston University. The OT (occupational therapist) offers strategies and adaptive devices — from extra-long shoehorns to utensils with built-up, easy-grip handles — to navigate activities more easily and safely.
If the physical therapist prescribes a walker, for example, the OT might visit your family member at home to figure out how she’ll use it while getting clothing out of the closet. With each problem at hand, Lowenstein says, the OT might advise changing the way she does the activity or making changes in the home environment. If she has trouble carrying items around the kitchen because of a tremor, she could use a small rolling cart to move them instead. The risk of slipping in the shower or bathtub could be reduced by adding grab bars, a tub seat, or both.
When possible, you or other family members should go to the initial physical therapy and occupational therapy visits with her. Understanding the challenges that she faces will make it easier to provide the kind of support and patience that she needs from you. You can remind her of the OT or PT’s techniques and become part of the solution.
For instance, says Lowenstein, if stiffness and slowness make it a challenge for your family member to open a box of cereal, you could buy a container that’s easy to open and transfer the cereal into it. Or if she has trouble bending down to reach the pots and pans on the bottom kitchen shelf, you might suggest moving them to a more convenient spot.
Caring.com Editorial Team
Caring.com features original content focused exclusively on eldercare matters. Our 20+ editors and writers research and fact-check every article meticulously, and our advisory board reviews the site regularly to assure the accuracy and relevance of the material we publish. We have hundreds of articles and checklists on health, housing, finance, legal and family issues, and other caregiving concerns, and we’re adding new articles and other resources every day.
Taking steps to raise awareness about Parkinson’s
A Vermont woman is hiking the entire long trail this summer for a cause. And she’s getting support along the way. Kristin Carlson has more from the top of Mount Mansfield. Read more on WCAX-TV Vermont
Stretching for the Parkinson’s 5K Walk and Fun Run 2008
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level. Video Rating: 5 / 5
How To Help Someone With Parkinson’s Disease Thrive
Exercise helps manage Parkinson’s disease
Regular exercise, along with physical and occupational therapy, can help maximize someone’s fitness, mobility, and ability to continue her daily routines after she’s diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. Helping her function at the optimum level now may offset some of the physical limitations that can develop later.
First you’ll want to help her understand why exercise is important. Then you can focus on ways to help her work the best kinds of activity into her life.
Exercise is vital for Parkinson’s disease management. At a time when someone with Parkinson’s probably feels like she’s losing control of her world, one of the best things she can do for herself is exercise, movement disorder experts say. Not only do regular workouts and physical activities lift the spirits, release stress, and tune up the heart, they can also build strength, flexibility, and endurance and improve posture.
A new British analysis that pooled the results of multiple studies found that various exercise interventions boosted physical functioning, health-related quality of life, strength, balance, and walking speed in Parkinson’s patients. And some research on mice with Parkinson’s disease-like symptoms even hints that exercise can enhance the brain’s supply of dopamine, the chemical lacking in Parkinson’s patients.
Physical therapy helps a Parkinson’s patient exercise
Even if the person with Parkinso’s is a couch potato, it’s never too late to benefit from exercise. To get started, she should first discuss with her doctor whether she has any health issues that might preclude certain kinds of activities.
Get workout pointers from a physical therapist. It’s important to take advantage of rehabilitative care services such as physical therapy early in Parkinson’s disease rather than waiting until problems arise, says Julie Carter, associate director of the Parkinson Center of Oregon, in Portland.
The person with Parkinson’s can ask her neurologist for a referral to a PT to help her plan a moderate exercise program. It’s preferable to consult someone knowledgeable about Parkinson’s disease rather than simply see a trainer at the gym. People with Parkinson’s often develop a stooped posture in which their spine and shoulder muscles — along with other big muscle groups in the arms and legs — flex forward. Strengthening the major extensor muscles, such as the back shoulder muscles, can work to counterbalance this, but the average personal trainer may not realize the importance of that in Parkinson’s patients, says Carter.
Based on an evaluation of the patient’s physical condition and her personal goals, the PT can design a targeted program of strengthening, stretching, balance, or aerobic fitness exercises. Your family member can do these on her own or work on them with a gym trainer (make sure the trainer doesn’t modify the program without the PT’s approval).
Stretching is key. Because Parkinson’s patients tend to become stiff and lose the ability to turn the torso, flexibility exercises are crucial for improving range of motion. In Portland, Carter’s center set up classes in pilates, a low-impact exercise system that focuses on breathing and rotating, extending, and flexing the spine. Pilates or a basic stretching routine can make “a big difference in how functional people are over time,” says Carter. “You can just see that they’re visibly able to take bigger strides, they can reach better, they can turn better.”
Similarly, gentle yoga techniques of stretching, breathing, and relaxation can lengthen the spine and extend the big muscle groups, says physical therapist Marilyn Basham of the Parkinson’s Institute and Clinical Center in Sunnyvale, California. “If the spine is elongated, breath comes in easier, swallowing is easier, conversation is easier,” she says.
Troubleshooting movement problems with Parkinson’s
If the Parkinson’s patient has difficulty with walking, balance, pain, or activities such as dressing or getting in and out of bed, the PT can analyze her gait and mobility and offer a range of treatments and coping strategies. For tripping and falling problems, the PT may set her up with an assistive device such as a hiking stick or walker. Ideally, the PT or an occupational therapist (OT) will make a home visit and give tips on improving the safety of her living situation. The PT can also treat slowness of movement. Parkinson’s disease typically impairs the automatic processes in the brain that allow a person to move without thinking about it. One technique for helping the patient, say, stand up from sitting in a chair is to teach her to consciously think about each step of the motion in advance. It’s also worth asking whether the person has slowed down because the illness has made her more sedentary, causing muscle weakness. If so, the solution is to try to get her walking more, according to Basham.
Slowness, stiffness, or gait problems, along with nonmotor Parkinson’s disease symptoms such as depression and apathy, can sap a patient’s motivation levels. You or other family members might try joining her for walks on a flat route. Start with 5- to 10-minute jaunts and build her up to 30 minutes, at least three to five times a week, says Basham. Keep in mind that walking may require her full focus on putting one foot in front of the other. Trying to engage in a conversation at the same time may tax her; if so, suggest holding off on chitchat until you take a break.
Alternative exercises for Parkinson’s patients
Other workout options include dance, water-resistance exercise, and tai chi, the ancient Chinese exercise that emphasizes flowing moves, posture, balance, and meditation. Check with a local medical center or movement disorders clinic to see if it offers these kinds of classes for Parkinson’s patients or seniors.
Also highly recommended is a ten-lesson exercise plan from theater arts coach John Argue, author of Parkinson’s Disease and the Art of Moving. His book and accompanying video teach Parkinson’s patients to purposefully think themselves through the acts of moving and speaking. The most important thing is for your family member to find safe activities that she enjoys doing. If she doesn’t enjoy them, she probably won’t keep doing them.
Other resources:
The National Parkinson Foundation’s free brochure, Parkinson Disease: Fitness Counts A video or DVD of 24 seated exercises entitled Motivating Moves for People with Parkinson’s, coproduced by the Parkinson’s Disease Foundation and available for purchase online. Occupational therapy helps keep Parkinson’s patients independent at home
OTs can also offer solutions when Parkinson’s disease hinders the many little jobs of daily living, from bathing and using the toilet to cooking and eating. These licensed practitioners ask, “What does the person need to do, want to do, and have to do to be able to maintain his daily activities, his life, and his lifestyle?” says Nancy Lowenstein, an OT at Boston University. The OT (occupational therapist) offers strategies and adaptive devices — from extra-long shoehorns to utensils with built-up, easy-grip handles — to navigate activities more easily and safely.
If the physical therapist prescribes a walker, for example, the OT might visit your family member at home to figure out how she’ll use it while getting clothing out of the closet. With each problem at hand, Lowenstein says, the OT might advise changing the way she does the activity or making changes in the home environment. If she has trouble carrying items around the kitchen because of a tremor, she could use a small rolling cart to move them instead. The risk of slipping in the shower or bathtub could be reduced by adding grab bars, a tub seat, or both.
When possible, you or other family members should go to the initial physical therapy and occupational therapy visits with her. Understanding the challenges that she faces will make it easier to provide the kind of support and patience that she needs from you. You can remind her of the OT or PT’s techniques and become part of the solution.
For instance, says Lowenstein, if stiffness and slowness make it a challenge for your family member to open a box of cereal, you could buy a container that’s easy to open and transfer the cereal into it. Or if she has trouble bending down to reach the pots and pans on the bottom kitchen shelf, you might suggest moving them to a more convenient spot.
Caring.com Editorial Team
Caring.com features original content focused exclusively on eldercare matters. Our 20+ editors and writers research and fact-check every article meticulously, and our advisory board reviews the site regularly to assure the accuracy and relevance of the material we publish. We have hundreds of articles and checklists on health, housing, finance, legal and family issues, and other caregiving concerns, and we’re adding new articles and other resources every day.
Taking steps to raise awareness about Parkinson’s
A Vermont woman is hiking the entire long trail this summer for a cause. And she’s getting support along the way. Kristin Carlson has more from the top of Mount Mansfield. Read more on WCAX-TV Vermont
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level.
How To Help Someone With Parkinson’s Disease Thrive
Exercise helps manage Parkinson’s disease
Regular exercise, along with physical and occupational therapy, can help maximize someone’s fitness, mobility, and ability to continue her daily routines after she’s diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. Helping her function at the optimum level now may offset some of the physical limitations that can develop later.
First you’ll want to help her understand why exercise is important. Then you can focus on ways to help her work the best kinds of activity into her life.
Exercise is vital for Parkinson’s disease management. At a time when someone with Parkinson’s probably feels like she’s losing control of her world, one of the best things she can do for herself is exercise, movement disorder experts say. Not only do regular workouts and physical activities lift the spirits, release stress, and tune up the heart, they can also build strength, flexibility, and endurance and improve posture.
A new British analysis that pooled the results of multiple studies found that various exercise interventions boosted physical functioning, health-related quality of life, strength, balance, and walking speed in Parkinson’s patients. And some research on mice with Parkinson’s disease-like symptoms even hints that exercise can enhance the brain’s supply of dopamine, the chemical lacking in Parkinson’s patients.
Physical therapy helps a Parkinson’s patient exercise
Even if the person with Parkinso’s is a couch potato, it’s never too late to benefit from exercise. To get started, she should first discuss with her doctor whether she has any health issues that might preclude certain kinds of activities.
Get workout pointers from a physical therapist. It’s important to take advantage of rehabilitative care services such as physical therapy early in Parkinson’s disease rather than waiting until problems arise, says Julie Carter, associate director of the Parkinson Center of Oregon, in Portland.
The person with Parkinson’s can ask her neurologist for a referral to a PT to help her plan a moderate exercise program. It’s preferable to consult someone knowledgeable about Parkinson’s disease rather than simply see a trainer at the gym. People with Parkinson’s often develop a stooped posture in which their spine and shoulder muscles — along with other big muscle groups in the arms and legs — flex forward. Strengthening the major extensor muscles, such as the back shoulder muscles, can work to counterbalance this, but the average personal trainer may not realize the importance of that in Parkinson’s patients, says Carter.
Based on an evaluation of the patient’s physical condition and her personal goals, the PT can design a targeted program of strengthening, stretching, balance, or aerobic fitness exercises. Your family member can do these on her own or work on them with a gym trainer (make sure the trainer doesn’t modify the program without the PT’s approval).
Stretching is key. Because Parkinson’s patients tend to become stiff and lose the ability to turn the torso, flexibility exercises are crucial for improving range of motion. In Portland, Carter’s center set up classes in pilates, a low-impact exercise system that focuses on breathing and rotating, extending, and flexing the spine. Pilates or a basic stretching routine can make “a big difference in how functional people are over time,” says Carter. “You can just see that they’re visibly able to take bigger strides, they can reach better, they can turn better.”
Similarly, gentle yoga techniques of stretching, breathing, and relaxation can lengthen the spine and extend the big muscle groups, says physical therapist Marilyn Basham of the Parkinson’s Institute and Clinical Center in Sunnyvale, California. “If the spine is elongated, breath comes in easier, swallowing is easier, conversation is easier,” she says.
Troubleshooting movement problems with Parkinson’s
If the Parkinson’s patient has difficulty with walking, balance, pain, or activities such as dressing or getting in and out of bed, the PT can analyze her gait and mobility and offer a range of treatments and coping strategies. For tripping and falling problems, the PT may set her up with an assistive device such as a hiking stick or walker. Ideally, the PT or an occupational therapist (OT) will make a home visit and give tips on improving the safety of her living situation. The PT can also treat slowness of movement. Parkinson’s disease typically impairs the automatic processes in the brain that allow a person to move without thinking about it. One technique for helping the patient, say, stand up from sitting in a chair is to teach her to consciously think about each step of the motion in advance. It’s also worth asking whether the person has slowed down because the illness has made her more sedentary, causing muscle weakness. If so, the solution is to try to get her walking more, according to Basham.
Slowness, stiffness, or gait problems, along with nonmotor Parkinson’s disease symptoms such as depression and apathy, can sap a patient’s motivation levels. You or other family members might try joining her for walks on a flat route. Start with 5- to 10-minute jaunts and build her up to 30 minutes, at least three to five times a week, says Basham. Keep in mind that walking may require her full focus on putting one foot in front of the other. Trying to engage in a conversation at the same time may tax her; if so, suggest holding off on chitchat until you take a break.
Alternative exercises for Parkinson’s patients
Other workout options include dance, water-resistance exercise, and tai chi, the ancient Chinese exercise that emphasizes flowing moves, posture, balance, and meditation. Check with a local medical center or movement disorders clinic to see if it offers these kinds of classes for Parkinson’s patients or seniors.
Also highly recommended is a ten-lesson exercise plan from theater arts coach John Argue, author of Parkinson’s Disease and the Art of Moving. His book and accompanying video teach Parkinson’s patients to purposefully think themselves through the acts of moving and speaking. The most important thing is for your family member to find safe activities that she enjoys doing. If she doesn’t enjoy them, she probably won’t keep doing them.
Other resources:
The National Parkinson Foundation’s free brochure, Parkinson Disease: Fitness Counts A video or DVD of 24 seated exercises entitled Motivating Moves for People with Parkinson’s, coproduced by the Parkinson’s Disease Foundation and available for purchase online. Occupational therapy helps keep Parkinson’s patients independent at home
OTs can also offer solutions when Parkinson’s disease hinders the many little jobs of daily living, from bathing and using the toilet to cooking and eating. These licensed practitioners ask, “What does the person need to do, want to do, and have to do to be able to maintain his daily activities, his life, and his lifestyle?” says Nancy Lowenstein, an OT at Boston University. The OT (occupational therapist) offers strategies and adaptive devices — from extra-long shoehorns to utensils with built-up, easy-grip handles — to navigate activities more easily and safely.
If the physical therapist prescribes a walker, for example, the OT might visit your family member at home to figure out how she’ll use it while getting clothing out of the closet. With each problem at hand, Lowenstein says, the OT might advise changing the way she does the activity or making changes in the home environment. If she has trouble carrying items around the kitchen because of a tremor, she could use a small rolling cart to move them instead. The risk of slipping in the shower or bathtub could be reduced by adding grab bars, a tub seat, or both.
When possible, you or other family members should go to the initial physical therapy and occupational therapy visits with her. Understanding the challenges that she faces will make it easier to provide the kind of support and patience that she needs from you. You can remind her of the OT or PT’s techniques and become part of the solution.
For instance, says Lowenstein, if stiffness and slowness make it a challenge for your family member to open a box of cereal, you could buy a container that’s easy to open and transfer the cereal into it. Or if she has trouble bending down to reach the pots and pans on the bottom kitchen shelf, you might suggest moving them to a more convenient spot.
Caring.com Editorial Team
Caring.com features original content focused exclusively on eldercare matters. Our 20+ editors and writers research and fact-check every article meticulously, and our advisory board reviews the site regularly to assure the accuracy and relevance of the material we publish. We have hundreds of articles and checklists on health, housing, finance, legal and family issues, and other caregiving concerns, and we’re adding new articles and other resources every day.
Taking steps to raise awareness about Parkinson’s
A Vermont woman is hiking the entire long trail this summer for a cause. And she’s getting support along the way. Kristin Carlson has more from the top of Mount Mansfield. Read more on WCAX-TV Vermont
Stretching for the Parkinson’s 5K Walk and Fun Run 2008
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level. Video Rating: 5 / 5
Avoid Parkinson’S Drug Disaster
If youâre a regular reader, you know that I prefer natural solutions to medical problems whenever possible. That being said, I also know that there are times when pharmaceutical treatments are useful, even lifesaving. Â For most people with Parkinsonâs disease, prescription drugs hold the best promise for control of their symptoms. When youâre faced with a debilitating disease like Parkinsonâs, the last thing you need is a drug meant to treat your condition that actually brings more heartache into your life. Â Recent research reveals that some of the common prescription drugs for Parkinsonâs create more problems than they solve. Fortunately, this isnât the case for all the possible treatments. When it comes to treating Parkinsonâs some drugs provide a solution to symptoms, while others can lead to disaster.(1)
Drugs that Hurt Instead of Help
Parkinsonâs disease affects your brain. Specifically it inhibits the production of dopamine and causes the basal ganglia area of the brain to degenerate. When you have Parkinsonâs, it affects your coordination. It makes your hands tremble, it weakens your muscles, and it makes it difficult to control your movements.(2) Â Drugs that restore dopamine production can help. But depending on how the drugs work, they can cause some alarming side affects. One type of drug that has researchers particularly concerned is dopamine agonists. Pramiexole and ropinirole are two such drugs that doctors commonly prescribe for Parkinsonâs.(3) Â Researchers at the Mayo Clinic found that one in six patients taking these types of drugs develop destructive behaviors. They often become compulsive gamblers or experience hyper-sexuality. The drugs interfere with judgment and stimulate the area of the brain that responds to pleasure, risk, and reward.(4) Â Iâm sure you can imagine what these side affects do to families. You may be giving time and effort to support a loved one with Parkinsonâs disease. You share in their struggle and it hurts you to see them going through the pain of this devastating disease. And then, the promised treatment changes their behavior, turns them into someone theyâre not, and makes them behave in ways that are hurtful. Â Fortunately, there are other options. The gold standard for treating Parkinsonâs disease is Levodopa. It works differently, and does not trigger destructive behaviors.(5)
Natural Support for Parkinsonâs Patients
Prescription drugs do play a role in treating the symptoms of Parkinson disease, but that doesnât mean there arenât natural remedies that can help, too. Â Because Parkinsonâs disease weakens your muscles and attacks your coordination, the importance of exercise takes on new meaning. Exercise can help strengthen your muscles. It can also improve your flexibility and balance, which will help you to better control your movements. Exercises that focus on core strength and flexibility will provide the most benefit. Try strength training, yoga, and tai chi for the best results.(6)
Research shows that coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10), folate, and vitamin B12 are all important supplements if youâre dealing with Parkinsonâs disease. Â Researchers have found that damage to the mitochondria within your brain cells contributes to the progression of Parkinsonâs disease. The antioxidant properties of CoQ10 can help to protect your mitochondria and your cells from damage. In most Parkinsonâs patients the levels of CoQ10 in the brain are very low. Supplementing with CoQ10 can help restore levels and protect your cells. (7)
Parkinsonâs patients taking Levodopa also typically have low levels of folate and vitamin B12. Researchers have found a link between low folate levels and depression in Parkinsonâs patients. Additionally, theyâve linked low levels of B12 with cognitive impairment. Supplementing with folate and B12 may help to improve overall function, mood, and quality of life in patients with Parkinsonâs.(8)   Parkinsonâs disease is a difficult condition to live with. The last thing you need are drugs that make your life more difficult instead of helping. If you notice any behavior changes after beginning a dopamine agonist prescription, talk to your doctor about switching to Levodopa or an equivalent drug. It can help you feel like yourself again.   Remember to discuss any changes you have planned for your diet, exercise routine, or supplements with your doctor first. Until next timeâ¦Â
âParkinsonâs Disease Medication Triggers Destructive Behaviors,â Bayho.com. 4/17/2009
âParkinsonâs Disease Medication Triggers Destructive Behaviors,â Bayho.com. 4/27/2009
âParkinsonâs Disease Medication Triggers Destructive Behaviors,â Bayho.com. 4/17/2009
âParkinsonâs Disease Medication Triggers Destructive Behaviors,â Bayho.com. 4/8/2009
âParkinsonâs Disease Medication Triggers Destructive Behaviors: Mayo Clinic Case Study Identifies At-Risk Patients,â MayoClinic.org. 4/8/2009
âParkinsonâs Disease,â MedicineNet.com. Viewed 4/27/2009
 Hargreaves IP, et al. âThe coenzyme Q10 status of the brain regions of Parkinson’s disease patients,â Neurosci Lett 2008; 447(1): 17-19
Triantafyilou NI, et al. âFolate and vitamin B12 levels in levodopa-treated Parkinson’s disease patients: their relationship to clinical manifestations, mood and cognition,â Parkinsonism Relat Disord 2008; 14(4): 321-25
Dr. Blankstein has been practicing for over 30 years as a leading Cardiologist. Trained in traditional medicine and Board Certified in both Internal Medicine and Cardiovascular Disease, he knows the importance of good medical care. This consideration has allowed him to discover safe and natural ways of healing. His dedication to bringing the latest and best in health solutions to his patients and the public has given him the experience to research and develop proven natural remedies for many illnesses.
Sleep disorder linked to Parkinson’s and dementia
Acting out violent dreams may be a sign of future illness, study says Read more on The Globe and Mail
Question by I’m in pieces…baby fix me: How long do people live after being diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease?
My grandfather is 80 years old, very tall and thin. He was diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease about a year ago. He is on medication but it seems to have stopped working now. My grandparents live in a very desolate area and I doubt he will be able to get new medication.
How long does he have? On average?
Best answer:
Answer by Marielle I am so sorry to hear of this. Parkinson’s disease as you know is not curable and hard to even treat. I wish I could give you an exact time frame but, not even a doctor knows. Some people I have taken care of had it for 20 yr before passing away. Other people have it for 6 mon. and pass away. Not to minimize your grandfather but only to help you understand…. he is 80 years old. He is at life expectancy. He has accomplished a lot in those 80 years and will leave a great legacy. So please start focusing on all that he has done. Start collecting pictures, awards, certificates, newspaper clippings, etc. Talk to family members and ask them questions and write down all that you can remember. Look forward to making a book that can be put together in a nice hard covered journal. If he served in any foreign wars find out if he has metals.
What a great memorial book you can make about your grandfather. You have a lot of work to do in a short time.
So the key thing is to focus on what he accomplished and done and let nature take its course in how much time he has left
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level. Video Rating: 5 / 5
Avoid Parkinson’S Drug Disaster
If youâre a regular reader, you know that I prefer natural solutions to medical problems whenever possible. That being said, I also know that there are times when pharmaceutical treatments are useful, even lifesaving. Â For most people with Parkinsonâs disease, prescription drugs hold the best promise for control of their symptoms. When youâre faced with a debilitating disease like Parkinsonâs, the last thing you need is a drug meant to treat your condition that actually brings more heartache into your life. Â Recent research reveals that some of the common prescription drugs for Parkinsonâs create more problems than they solve. Fortunately, this isnât the case for all the possible treatments. When it comes to treating Parkinsonâs some drugs provide a solution to symptoms, while others can lead to disaster.(1)
Drugs that Hurt Instead of Help
Parkinsonâs disease affects your brain. Specifically it inhibits the production of dopamine and causes the basal ganglia area of the brain to degenerate. When you have Parkinsonâs, it affects your coordination. It makes your hands tremble, it weakens your muscles, and it makes it difficult to control your movements.(2) Â Drugs that restore dopamine production can help. But depending on how the drugs work, they can cause some alarming side affects. One type of drug that has researchers particularly concerned is dopamine agonists. Pramiexole and ropinirole are two such drugs that doctors commonly prescribe for Parkinsonâs.(3) Â Researchers at the Mayo Clinic found that one in six patients taking these types of drugs develop destructive behaviors. They often become compulsive gamblers or experience hyper-sexuality. The drugs interfere with judgment and stimulate the area of the brain that responds to pleasure, risk, and reward.(4) Â Iâm sure you can imagine what these side affects do to families. You may be giving time and effort to support a loved one with Parkinsonâs disease. You share in their struggle and it hurts you to see them going through the pain of this devastating disease. And then, the promised treatment changes their behavior, turns them into someone theyâre not, and makes them behave in ways that are hurtful. Â Fortunately, there are other options. The gold standard for treating Parkinsonâs disease is Levodopa. It works differently, and does not trigger destructive behaviors.(5)
Natural Support for Parkinsonâs Patients
Prescription drugs do play a role in treating the symptoms of Parkinson disease, but that doesnât mean there arenât natural remedies that can help, too. Â Because Parkinsonâs disease weakens your muscles and attacks your coordination, the importance of exercise takes on new meaning. Exercise can help strengthen your muscles. It can also improve your flexibility and balance, which will help you to better control your movements. Exercises that focus on core strength and flexibility will provide the most benefit. Try strength training, yoga, and tai chi for the best results.(6)
Research shows that coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10), folate, and vitamin B12 are all important supplements if youâre dealing with Parkinsonâs disease. Â Researchers have found that damage to the mitochondria within your brain cells contributes to the progression of Parkinsonâs disease. The antioxidant properties of CoQ10 can help to protect your mitochondria and your cells from damage. In most Parkinsonâs patients the levels of CoQ10 in the brain are very low. Supplementing with CoQ10 can help restore levels and protect your cells. (7)
Parkinsonâs patients taking Levodopa also typically have low levels of folate and vitamin B12. Researchers have found a link between low folate levels and depression in Parkinsonâs patients. Additionally, theyâve linked low levels of B12 with cognitive impairment. Supplementing with folate and B12 may help to improve overall function, mood, and quality of life in patients with Parkinsonâs.(8)   Parkinsonâs disease is a difficult condition to live with. The last thing you need are drugs that make your life more difficult instead of helping. If you notice any behavior changes after beginning a dopamine agonist prescription, talk to your doctor about switching to Levodopa or an equivalent drug. It can help you feel like yourself again.   Remember to discuss any changes you have planned for your diet, exercise routine, or supplements with your doctor first. Until next timeâ¦Â
âParkinsonâs Disease Medication Triggers Destructive Behaviors,â Bayho.com. 4/17/2009
âParkinsonâs Disease Medication Triggers Destructive Behaviors,â Bayho.com. 4/27/2009
âParkinsonâs Disease Medication Triggers Destructive Behaviors,â Bayho.com. 4/17/2009
âParkinsonâs Disease Medication Triggers Destructive Behaviors,â Bayho.com. 4/8/2009
âParkinsonâs Disease Medication Triggers Destructive Behaviors: Mayo Clinic Case Study Identifies At-Risk Patients,â MayoClinic.org. 4/8/2009
âParkinsonâs Disease,â MedicineNet.com. Viewed 4/27/2009
 Hargreaves IP, et al. âThe coenzyme Q10 status of the brain regions of Parkinson’s disease patients,â Neurosci Lett 2008; 447(1): 17-19
Triantafyilou NI, et al. âFolate and vitamin B12 levels in levodopa-treated Parkinson’s disease patients: their relationship to clinical manifestations, mood and cognition,â Parkinsonism Relat Disord 2008; 14(4): 321-25
Dr. Blankstein has been practicing for over 30 years as a leading Cardiologist. Trained in traditional medicine and Board Certified in both Internal Medicine and Cardiovascular Disease, he knows the importance of good medical care. This consideration has allowed him to discover safe and natural ways of healing. His dedication to bringing the latest and best in health solutions to his patients and the public has given him the experience to research and develop proven natural remedies for many illnesses.
‘The Good Wife’: Michael J. Fox gets the sympathy vote
Fall TV just got a little more awesome. Five-time Emmy Award winner Michael J. Fox shows no sign of slowing down as he makes plans to follow up his critically acclaimed guest-starring role on “Rescue Me” with a one-shot appearance on CBS’s “The Good Wife.”Fox stepped down from his role on “Spin City” in 2001 when symptoms of his Parkinson’s Disease became too difficult to conceal on-screen (and … Read more on Zap2It
Question by I’m in pieces…baby fix me: How long do people live after being diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease?
My grandfather is 80 years old, very tall and thin. He was diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease about a year ago. He is on medication but it seems to have stopped working now. My grandparents live in a very desolate area and I doubt he will be able to get new medication.
How long does he have? On average?
Best answer:
Answer by Marielle I am so sorry to hear of this. Parkinson’s disease as you know is not curable and hard to even treat. I wish I could give you an exact time frame but, not even a doctor knows. Some people I have taken care of had it for 20 yr before passing away. Other people have it for 6 mon. and pass away. Not to minimize your grandfather but only to help you understand…. he is 80 years old. He is at life expectancy. He has accomplished a lot in those 80 years and will leave a great legacy. So please start focusing on all that he has done. Start collecting pictures, awards, certificates, newspaper clippings, etc. Talk to family members and ask them questions and write down all that you can remember. Look forward to making a book that can be put together in a nice hard covered journal. If he served in any foreign wars find out if he has metals.
What a great memorial book you can make about your grandfather. You have a lot of work to do in a short time.
So the key thing is to focus on what he accomplished and done and let nature take its course in how much time he has left
Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level.
Foods and Techniques for Longevity, Life Extension, Reducing the Risk of Age-Related Disease.
The key to a long and healthy life lies in staying active, eating more fruit and grains, and practicing massage and meditation in order to shed stress and create enthusiasm for life.
You can live longer possibly by reducing your risks of the age-related diseases, especially cardiovascular disease.
But, the real emphasis is not on life extension. It’s on healthy aging, trying to keep healthy as long as possible.
The key to longevity is delaying the onset and reducing the risk of age-related disease. Age-related disease are these big categories of illness that become more common after age 60 and that account for a great deal of premature death and disability.
So, the big ones are cardiovascular disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and its Parkinsons disease. So, I think the emphasis is on preventing those, showing you how to reduce the risk or delay the onset. Into this comes family history, personal history to see where your greatest risks are. Then concentrate the preventive efforts in those areas.
It’s not all that complicated. It just means doing some work, though. It means doing some homework and then learning the information that you need then applying it. And it’s applying it really in all areas of your lifestyle. It means looking at how you eat, how you use dietary supplements, how you exercise, how you handle stress, how you sleep, how you rest, how you deal with your mind, how to create meaning and significance in what you do. You know, you really need to work in all those areas to ensure healthy aging.
If you are smoking probably its not possible do much for you. And if you’re not paying attention to weight and not paying attention to your cholesterol and not paying attention to other medical risks that you may have, you know, you can put all the flowers you want in your house and it’s not gonna help.
De-stress using methods which work for you – everything from doing yoga to listening to relaxing music to getting massaged. Breathing methods are cost efficient and time efficient. And these mostly come from the yoga tradition. From these techniques Meditation is the Big Kahuna at 20 minutes per day.
Eat fewer foods of animal origin; more fruits and vegetables; more plant-based protein from soy foods, for example.
Make sure you’ve got omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in your diet, either from oily fish, or Flax Seed Oil.
Try to reduce consumption of quick-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are the ones made from any kind of flour, sugar, high fructose corn syrup.
And try to eat more of the slower-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are beans, whole grains, packed grains, winter squashes, sweet potatoes.
Really learn the differences between good fats and bad fats. Fry Less. Use cold pressed organic olive oil and flax seed oil as a main oil in salads. Include nuts, seeds, avocados, in your diet.
Reduce the amount of poisonous pesticides and steroids in your diet by buying anything which is concentrated, like oils or meat, organically, which just means that it is produced without pesticides or steroids.
Take a good multivitamin, multimineral supplement. Add things to the diet, like green tea and dark chocolate and red wine, in moderation, if you want their antioxidant effects.
Well, I think aside from eating right, you want to maintain physical activity throughout life. And that doesn’t mean you have to run marathons, or go to aerobics classes. Walking is a perfectly good physical activity if you do enough of it regularly enough. You want to learn some method of stress management. You know, like breathing exercises.
You want to really try to identify negative thought patterns that lead to negative behavior, – eating too much and smoking, or too angry or depressed, and see how you can change them through meditation and Advanced Energy Enhancement Techniques.
I think you want to keep your mind active, whether that’s by learning another language, or changing your computer operating system frequently. You want to stay connected and involved with life. Usually this comes less mechanically and selfishly than the previous methods by finding something you are really interested in and that which can help other people.
Again meditation can create this meaning and significance effect of enthusiasm for life, which really is the key. I think you really want to try to focus on the positive attributes of wisdom that come with aging, as well as the negative ones. For example, people die very quickly after retirement because they have lost their reason for living.
After all the above, if we have enthusiasm for life we live longer. Meaning and Significance in what we do comes from accessing higher energies through Meditation.
Satchidanand,
Director of Energy Enhancement, is one of the leading teachers of Meditation.!
He helps people worldwide reach further than they EVER thought possible,
FASTER!!!
Daniel Brooks was a 50-year-old husband, father and district-level administrator in a public school system, when he first noticed pronounced tremors, speech difficulties and walking problems developing. In this book, Daniel chronicles his life with a Parkinson?s Plus syndrome and explains how he dealt with the neurological decline that resulted. Read a user-friendly, patient’s explanation of the defining symptoms of these atypical Parkinsonism disorders and find out how this neuro-degenerative
Rating: (out of 1 reviews)
List Price: $ 12.99
Price: $ 12.99
Early stage Alzheimer’s support group does wonders for caregivers, patients
PORT ST. LUCIE — A doctor says, “Alzheimer’s disease,” and your life changes. As the disease progresses, the household division of labor shifts. Say, “I already told you,” one time too many, and relationships grow strained. Read more on St. Lucie News Tribune
Question by AK: What is the cure for parkinson’s disease? How can it be reversed and completely cured?
One of my best friend has Parkinson’s disease going into 4th or 5th year. He is taking medication to control movement and the dosage is now up to 15 pills a day. Is there a cure/treatment for this disease? What can be done to reverse it? Are there any therapies to halt this disease? Are there any herbal suplements?
Best answer:
Answer by robin j it cannot be cured, the tremors can be controlled.
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level. Video Rating: 5 / 5
Foods and Techniques for Longevity, Life Extension, Reducing the Risk of Age-Related Disease.
The key to a long and healthy life lies in staying active, eating more fruit and grains, and practicing massage and meditation in order to shed stress and create enthusiasm for life.
You can live longer possibly by reducing your risks of the age-related diseases, especially cardiovascular disease.
But, the real emphasis is not on life extension. It’s on healthy aging, trying to keep healthy as long as possible.
The key to longevity is delaying the onset and reducing the risk of age-related disease. Age-related disease are these big categories of illness that become more common after age 60 and that account for a great deal of premature death and disability.
So, the big ones are cardiovascular disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and its Parkinsons disease. So, I think the emphasis is on preventing those, showing you how to reduce the risk or delay the onset. Into this comes family history, personal history to see where your greatest risks are. Then concentrate the preventive efforts in those areas.
It’s not all that complicated. It just means doing some work, though. It means doing some homework and then learning the information that you need then applying it. And it’s applying it really in all areas of your lifestyle. It means looking at how you eat, how you use dietary supplements, how you exercise, how you handle stress, how you sleep, how you rest, how you deal with your mind, how to create meaning and significance in what you do. You know, you really need to work in all those areas to ensure healthy aging.
If you are smoking probably its not possible do much for you. And if you’re not paying attention to weight and not paying attention to your cholesterol and not paying attention to other medical risks that you may have, you know, you can put all the flowers you want in your house and it’s not gonna help.
De-stress using methods which work for you – everything from doing yoga to listening to relaxing music to getting massaged. Breathing methods are cost efficient and time efficient. And these mostly come from the yoga tradition. From these techniques Meditation is the Big Kahuna at 20 minutes per day.
Eat fewer foods of animal origin; more fruits and vegetables; more plant-based protein from soy foods, for example.
Make sure you’ve got omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in your diet, either from oily fish, or Flax Seed Oil.
Try to reduce consumption of quick-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are the ones made from any kind of flour, sugar, high fructose corn syrup.
And try to eat more of the slower-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are beans, whole grains, packed grains, winter squashes, sweet potatoes.
Really learn the differences between good fats and bad fats. Fry Less. Use cold pressed organic olive oil and flax seed oil as a main oil in salads. Include nuts, seeds, avocados, in your diet.
Reduce the amount of poisonous pesticides and steroids in your diet by buying anything which is concentrated, like oils or meat, organically, which just means that it is produced without pesticides or steroids.
Take a good multivitamin, multimineral supplement. Add things to the diet, like green tea and dark chocolate and red wine, in moderation, if you want their antioxidant effects.
Well, I think aside from eating right, you want to maintain physical activity throughout life. And that doesn’t mean you have to run marathons, or go to aerobics classes. Walking is a perfectly good physical activity if you do enough of it regularly enough. You want to learn some method of stress management. You know, like breathing exercises.
You want to really try to identify negative thought patterns that lead to negative behavior, – eating too much and smoking, or too angry or depressed, and see how you can change them through meditation and Advanced Energy Enhancement Techniques.
I think you want to keep your mind active, whether that’s by learning another language, or changing your computer operating system frequently. You want to stay connected and involved with life. Usually this comes less mechanically and selfishly than the previous methods by finding something you are really interested in and that which can help other people.
Again meditation can create this meaning and significance effect of enthusiasm for life, which really is the key. I think you really want to try to focus on the positive attributes of wisdom that come with aging, as well as the negative ones. For example, people die very quickly after retirement because they have lost their reason for living.
After all the above, if we have enthusiasm for life we live longer. Meaning and Significance in what we do comes from accessing higher energies through Meditation.
Satchidanand,
Director of Energy Enhancement, is one of the leading teachers of Meditation.!
He helps people worldwide reach further than they EVER thought possible,
FASTER!!!
Love and Other Drugs, Now With Parkinson’s Disease
The first trailer for Love and Other Drugs was just released last week, and it’s all Jake Gyllenhaal and Anne Hathaway banging, falling in love, and being generally charming. But maybe that was all a bit too light. Today, a second trailer for the film has been released, this one making explicit that Hathaway’s character has Parkinson’s disease (and that Gyllenhaal sells lots and lots of Viagra … Read more on Vulture
Question by AK: What is the cure for parkinson’s disease? How can it be reversed and completely cured?
One of my best friend has Parkinson’s disease going into 4th or 5th year. He is taking medication to control movement and the dosage is now up to 15 pills a day. Is there a cure/treatment for this disease? What can be done to reverse it? Are there any therapies to halt this disease? Are there any herbal suplements?
Best answer:
Answer by robin j it cannot be cured, the tremors can be controlled.
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level. Video Rating: 5 / 5
Foods and Techniques for Longevity, Life Extension, Reducing the Risk of Age-Related Disease.
The key to a long and healthy life lies in staying active, eating more fruit and grains, and practicing massage and meditation in order to shed stress and create enthusiasm for life.
You can live longer possibly by reducing your risks of the age-related diseases, especially cardiovascular disease.
But, the real emphasis is not on life extension. It’s on healthy aging, trying to keep healthy as long as possible.
The key to longevity is delaying the onset and reducing the risk of age-related disease. Age-related disease are these big categories of illness that become more common after age 60 and that account for a great deal of premature death and disability.
So, the big ones are cardiovascular disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and its Parkinsons disease. So, I think the emphasis is on preventing those, showing you how to reduce the risk or delay the onset. Into this comes family history, personal history to see where your greatest risks are. Then concentrate the preventive efforts in those areas.
It’s not all that complicated. It just means doing some work, though. It means doing some homework and then learning the information that you need then applying it. And it’s applying it really in all areas of your lifestyle. It means looking at how you eat, how you use dietary supplements, how you exercise, how you handle stress, how you sleep, how you rest, how you deal with your mind, how to create meaning and significance in what you do. You know, you really need to work in all those areas to ensure healthy aging.
If you are smoking probably its not possible do much for you. And if you’re not paying attention to weight and not paying attention to your cholesterol and not paying attention to other medical risks that you may have, you know, you can put all the flowers you want in your house and it’s not gonna help.
De-stress using methods which work for you – everything from doing yoga to listening to relaxing music to getting massaged. Breathing methods are cost efficient and time efficient. And these mostly come from the yoga tradition. From these techniques Meditation is the Big Kahuna at 20 minutes per day.
Eat fewer foods of animal origin; more fruits and vegetables; more plant-based protein from soy foods, for example.
Make sure you’ve got omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in your diet, either from oily fish, or Flax Seed Oil.
Try to reduce consumption of quick-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are the ones made from any kind of flour, sugar, high fructose corn syrup.
And try to eat more of the slower-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are beans, whole grains, packed grains, winter squashes, sweet potatoes.
Really learn the differences between good fats and bad fats. Fry Less. Use cold pressed organic olive oil and flax seed oil as a main oil in salads. Include nuts, seeds, avocados, in your diet.
Reduce the amount of poisonous pesticides and steroids in your diet by buying anything which is concentrated, like oils or meat, organically, which just means that it is produced without pesticides or steroids.
Take a good multivitamin, multimineral supplement. Add things to the diet, like green tea and dark chocolate and red wine, in moderation, if you want their antioxidant effects.
Well, I think aside from eating right, you want to maintain physical activity throughout life. And that doesn’t mean you have to run marathons, or go to aerobics classes. Walking is a perfectly good physical activity if you do enough of it regularly enough. You want to learn some method of stress management. You know, like breathing exercises.
You want to really try to identify negative thought patterns that lead to negative behavior, – eating too much and smoking, or too angry or depressed, and see how you can change them through meditation and Advanced Energy Enhancement Techniques.
I think you want to keep your mind active, whether that’s by learning another language, or changing your computer operating system frequently. You want to stay connected and involved with life. Usually this comes less mechanically and selfishly than the previous methods by finding something you are really interested in and that which can help other people.
Again meditation can create this meaning and significance effect of enthusiasm for life, which really is the key. I think you really want to try to focus on the positive attributes of wisdom that come with aging, as well as the negative ones. For example, people die very quickly after retirement because they have lost their reason for living.
After all the above, if we have enthusiasm for life we live longer. Meaning and Significance in what we do comes from accessing higher energies through Meditation.
Satchidanand,
Director of Energy Enhancement, is one of the leading teachers of Meditation.!
He helps people worldwide reach further than they EVER thought possible,
FASTER!!!
Walter C. “Neil” Pohlhaus Jr. dies at age 83
Member of 1950 Hopkins champion team who became a lacrosse coach for 30 years at St. Paul’s Walter Cornelius “Neil” Pohlhaus Jr., a retired Realtor and lacrosse coach who had been a member of the fabled 1950 Johns Hopkins champion lacrosse team, died Monday of Parkinson’s disease at his North Baltimore home. Read more on Baltimore Sun
Question by AK: What is the cure for parkinson’s disease? How can it be reversed and completely cured?
One of my best friend has Parkinson’s disease going into 4th or 5th year. He is taking medication to control movement and the dosage is now up to 15 pills a day. Is there a cure/treatment for this disease? What can be done to reverse it? Are there any therapies to halt this disease? Are there any herbal suplements?
Best answer:
Answer by robin j it cannot be cured, the tremors can be controlled.
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level.
Foods and Techniques for Longevity, Life Extension, Reducing the Risk of Age-Related Disease.
The key to a long and healthy life lies in staying active, eating more fruit and grains, and practicing massage and meditation in order to shed stress and create enthusiasm for life.
You can live longer possibly by reducing your risks of the age-related diseases, especially cardiovascular disease.
But, the real emphasis is not on life extension. It’s on healthy aging, trying to keep healthy as long as possible.
The key to longevity is delaying the onset and reducing the risk of age-related disease. Age-related disease are these big categories of illness that become more common after age 60 and that account for a great deal of premature death and disability.
So, the big ones are cardiovascular disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and its Parkinsons disease. So, I think the emphasis is on preventing those, showing you how to reduce the risk or delay the onset. Into this comes family history, personal history to see where your greatest risks are. Then concentrate the preventive efforts in those areas.
It’s not all that complicated. It just means doing some work, though. It means doing some homework and then learning the information that you need then applying it. And it’s applying it really in all areas of your lifestyle. It means looking at how you eat, how you use dietary supplements, how you exercise, how you handle stress, how you sleep, how you rest, how you deal with your mind, how to create meaning and significance in what you do. You know, you really need to work in all those areas to ensure healthy aging.
If you are smoking probably its not possible do much for you. And if you’re not paying attention to weight and not paying attention to your cholesterol and not paying attention to other medical risks that you may have, you know, you can put all the flowers you want in your house and it’s not gonna help.
De-stress using methods which work for you – everything from doing yoga to listening to relaxing music to getting massaged. Breathing methods are cost efficient and time efficient. And these mostly come from the yoga tradition. From these techniques Meditation is the Big Kahuna at 20 minutes per day.
Eat fewer foods of animal origin; more fruits and vegetables; more plant-based protein from soy foods, for example.
Make sure you’ve got omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in your diet, either from oily fish, or Flax Seed Oil.
Try to reduce consumption of quick-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are the ones made from any kind of flour, sugar, high fructose corn syrup.
And try to eat more of the slower-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are beans, whole grains, packed grains, winter squashes, sweet potatoes.
Really learn the differences between good fats and bad fats. Fry Less. Use cold pressed organic olive oil and flax seed oil as a main oil in salads. Include nuts, seeds, avocados, in your diet.
Reduce the amount of poisonous pesticides and steroids in your diet by buying anything which is concentrated, like oils or meat, organically, which just means that it is produced without pesticides or steroids.
Take a good multivitamin, multimineral supplement. Add things to the diet, like green tea and dark chocolate and red wine, in moderation, if you want their antioxidant effects.
Well, I think aside from eating right, you want to maintain physical activity throughout life. And that doesn’t mean you have to run marathons, or go to aerobics classes. Walking is a perfectly good physical activity if you do enough of it regularly enough. You want to learn some method of stress management. You know, like breathing exercises.
You want to really try to identify negative thought patterns that lead to negative behavior, – eating too much and smoking, or too angry or depressed, and see how you can change them through meditation and Advanced Energy Enhancement Techniques.
I think you want to keep your mind active, whether that’s by learning another language, or changing your computer operating system frequently. You want to stay connected and involved with life. Usually this comes less mechanically and selfishly than the previous methods by finding something you are really interested in and that which can help other people.
Again meditation can create this meaning and significance effect of enthusiasm for life, which really is the key. I think you really want to try to focus on the positive attributes of wisdom that come with aging, as well as the negative ones. For example, people die very quickly after retirement because they have lost their reason for living.
After all the above, if we have enthusiasm for life we live longer. Meaning and Significance in what we do comes from accessing higher energies through Meditation.
Satchidanand,
Director of Energy Enhancement, is one of the leading teachers of Meditation.!
He helps people worldwide reach further than they EVER thought possible,
FASTER!!!
Fighting Parkinson’s
Barbara Larsen’s job is to help people rediscover that natural rhythm. The Nevada City resident and author teaches exercise classes to people suffering from Parkinson’s and their caretakers. Read more on The Grass Valley Union
Question by AK: What is the cure for parkinson’s disease? How can it be reversed and completely cured?
One of my best friend has Parkinson’s disease going into 4th or 5th year. He is taking medication to control movement and the dosage is now up to 15 pills a day. Is there a cure/treatment for this disease? What can be done to reverse it? Are there any therapies to halt this disease? Are there any herbal suplements?
Best answer:
Answer by robin j it cannot be cured, the tremors can be controlled.
Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level. Video Rating: 5 / 5
Foods and Techniques for Longevity, Life Extension, Reducing the Risk of Age-Related Disease.
The key to a long and healthy life lies in staying active, eating more fruit and grains, and practicing massage and meditation in order to shed stress and create enthusiasm for life.
You can live longer possibly by reducing your risks of the age-related diseases, especially cardiovascular disease.
But, the real emphasis is not on life extension. It’s on healthy aging, trying to keep healthy as long as possible.
The key to longevity is delaying the onset and reducing the risk of age-related disease. Age-related disease are these big categories of illness that become more common after age 60 and that account for a great deal of premature death and disability.
So, the big ones are cardiovascular disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and its Parkinsons disease. So, I think the emphasis is on preventing those, showing you how to reduce the risk or delay the onset. Into this comes family history, personal history to see where your greatest risks are. Then concentrate the preventive efforts in those areas.
It’s not all that complicated. It just means doing some work, though. It means doing some homework and then learning the information that you need then applying it. And it’s applying it really in all areas of your lifestyle. It means looking at how you eat, how you use dietary supplements, how you exercise, how you handle stress, how you sleep, how you rest, how you deal with your mind, how to create meaning and significance in what you do. You know, you really need to work in all those areas to ensure healthy aging.
If you are smoking probably its not possible do much for you. And if you’re not paying attention to weight and not paying attention to your cholesterol and not paying attention to other medical risks that you may have, you know, you can put all the flowers you want in your house and it’s not gonna help.
De-stress using methods which work for you – everything from doing yoga to listening to relaxing music to getting massaged. Breathing methods are cost efficient and time efficient. And these mostly come from the yoga tradition. From these techniques Meditation is the Big Kahuna at 20 minutes per day.
Eat fewer foods of animal origin; more fruits and vegetables; more plant-based protein from soy foods, for example.
Make sure you’ve got omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in your diet, either from oily fish, or Flax Seed Oil.
Try to reduce consumption of quick-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are the ones made from any kind of flour, sugar, high fructose corn syrup.
And try to eat more of the slower-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are beans, whole grains, packed grains, winter squashes, sweet potatoes.
Really learn the differences between good fats and bad fats. Fry Less. Use cold pressed organic olive oil and flax seed oil as a main oil in salads. Include nuts, seeds, avocados, in your diet.
Reduce the amount of poisonous pesticides and steroids in your diet by buying anything which is concentrated, like oils or meat, organically, which just means that it is produced without pesticides or steroids.
Take a good multivitamin, multimineral supplement. Add things to the diet, like green tea and dark chocolate and red wine, in moderation, if you want their antioxidant effects.
Well, I think aside from eating right, you want to maintain physical activity throughout life. And that doesn’t mean you have to run marathons, or go to aerobics classes. Walking is a perfectly good physical activity if you do enough of it regularly enough. You want to learn some method of stress management. You know, like breathing exercises.
You want to really try to identify negative thought patterns that lead to negative behavior, – eating too much and smoking, or too angry or depressed, and see how you can change them through meditation and Advanced Energy Enhancement Techniques.
I think you want to keep your mind active, whether that’s by learning another language, or changing your computer operating system frequently. You want to stay connected and involved with life. Usually this comes less mechanically and selfishly than the previous methods by finding something you are really interested in and that which can help other people.
Again meditation can create this meaning and significance effect of enthusiasm for life, which really is the key. I think you really want to try to focus on the positive attributes of wisdom that come with aging, as well as the negative ones. For example, people die very quickly after retirement because they have lost their reason for living.
After all the above, if we have enthusiasm for life we live longer. Meaning and Significance in what we do comes from accessing higher energies through Meditation.
Satchidanand,
Director of Energy Enhancement, is one of the leading teachers of Meditation.!
He helps people worldwide reach further than they EVER thought possible,
FASTER!!!
Fighting Parkinson’s
Barbara Larsen’s job is to help people rediscover that natural rhythm. The Nevada City resident and author teaches exercise classes to people suffering from Parkinson’s and their caretakers. Read more on The Grass Valley Union
Question by AK: What is the cure for parkinson’s disease? How can it be reversed and completely cured?
One of my best friend has Parkinson’s disease going into 4th or 5th year. He is taking medication to control movement and the dosage is now up to 15 pills a day. Is there a cure/treatment for this disease? What can be done to reverse it? Are there any therapies to halt this disease? Are there any herbal suplements?
Best answer:
Answer by robin j it cannot be cured, the tremors can be controlled.
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level.
Foods and Techniques for Longevity, Life Extension, Reducing the Risk of Age-Related Disease.
The key to a long and healthy life lies in staying active, eating more fruit and grains, and practicing massage and meditation in order to shed stress and create enthusiasm for life.
You can live longer possibly by reducing your risks of the age-related diseases, especially cardiovascular disease.
But, the real emphasis is not on life extension. It’s on healthy aging, trying to keep healthy as long as possible.
The key to longevity is delaying the onset and reducing the risk of age-related disease. Age-related disease are these big categories of illness that become more common after age 60 and that account for a great deal of premature death and disability.
So, the big ones are cardiovascular disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and its Parkinsons disease. So, I think the emphasis is on preventing those, showing you how to reduce the risk or delay the onset. Into this comes family history, personal history to see where your greatest risks are. Then concentrate the preventive efforts in those areas.
It’s not all that complicated. It just means doing some work, though. It means doing some homework and then learning the information that you need then applying it. And it’s applying it really in all areas of your lifestyle. It means looking at how you eat, how you use dietary supplements, how you exercise, how you handle stress, how you sleep, how you rest, how you deal with your mind, how to create meaning and significance in what you do. You know, you really need to work in all those areas to ensure healthy aging.
If you are smoking probably its not possible do much for you. And if you’re not paying attention to weight and not paying attention to your cholesterol and not paying attention to other medical risks that you may have, you know, you can put all the flowers you want in your house and it’s not gonna help.
De-stress using methods which work for you – everything from doing yoga to listening to relaxing music to getting massaged. Breathing methods are cost efficient and time efficient. And these mostly come from the yoga tradition. From these techniques Meditation is the Big Kahuna at 20 minutes per day.
Eat fewer foods of animal origin; more fruits and vegetables; more plant-based protein from soy foods, for example.
Make sure you’ve got omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in your diet, either from oily fish, or Flax Seed Oil.
Try to reduce consumption of quick-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are the ones made from any kind of flour, sugar, high fructose corn syrup.
And try to eat more of the slower-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are beans, whole grains, packed grains, winter squashes, sweet potatoes.
Really learn the differences between good fats and bad fats. Fry Less. Use cold pressed organic olive oil and flax seed oil as a main oil in salads. Include nuts, seeds, avocados, in your diet.
Reduce the amount of poisonous pesticides and steroids in your diet by buying anything which is concentrated, like oils or meat, organically, which just means that it is produced without pesticides or steroids.
Take a good multivitamin, multimineral supplement. Add things to the diet, like green tea and dark chocolate and red wine, in moderation, if you want their antioxidant effects.
Well, I think aside from eating right, you want to maintain physical activity throughout life. And that doesn’t mean you have to run marathons, or go to aerobics classes. Walking is a perfectly good physical activity if you do enough of it regularly enough. You want to learn some method of stress management. You know, like breathing exercises.
You want to really try to identify negative thought patterns that lead to negative behavior, – eating too much and smoking, or too angry or depressed, and see how you can change them through meditation and Advanced Energy Enhancement Techniques.
I think you want to keep your mind active, whether that’s by learning another language, or changing your computer operating system frequently. You want to stay connected and involved with life. Usually this comes less mechanically and selfishly than the previous methods by finding something you are really interested in and that which can help other people.
Again meditation can create this meaning and significance effect of enthusiasm for life, which really is the key. I think you really want to try to focus on the positive attributes of wisdom that come with aging, as well as the negative ones. For example, people die very quickly after retirement because they have lost their reason for living.
After all the above, if we have enthusiasm for life we live longer. Meaning and Significance in what we do comes from accessing higher energies through Meditation.
Satchidanand,
Director of Energy Enhancement, is one of the leading teachers of Meditation.!
He helps people worldwide reach further than they EVER thought possible,
FASTER!!!
Our tags can be used in a variety of ways. A great way to add style and safety to your life!
Use them as fashion accessories, keyrings or as a way to ID luggage and school backpacks.
Lifetime Warranty. We guarantee the tag text will never become unreadable. If, for some crazy reason, it does we’ll replace it for free. FREE keychain ring and metal clamp attachment included!
We can custom PRINT ANY TEXT you would like on the back of this medial ID tag. Just leave a comment in the “Gift Message” box using the Gift Message option with the text you would like on the back.
Add your name, address, emergency contact, or other medical information via the “Gift Message” option.
This specially designed medical identification tag indicates that the wearer has Parkinson’s Disease. It is contructed from an aluminum core surrounded by a plastic coating and is made to last a lifetime. This medical ID tag will easily alert other individuals of a condition even when the wearer is unable to. Our medical alert tags can be worn as a bracelet, a necklace or attached to any form of clothing or accessory. Tag features the artwork in the picture above on one side and the text that e
Price: $ 11.99
Fighting Parkinson’s
Barbara Larsen’s job is to help people rediscover that natural rhythm. The Nevada City resident and author teaches exercise classes to people suffering from Parkinson’s and their caretakers. Read more on The Grass Valley Union
Question by AK: What is the cure for parkinson’s disease? How can it be reversed and completely cured?
One of my best friend has Parkinson’s disease going into 4th or 5th year. He is taking medication to control movement and the dosage is now up to 15 pills a day. Is there a cure/treatment for this disease? What can be done to reverse it? Are there any therapies to halt this disease? Are there any herbal suplements?
Best answer:
Answer by robin j it cannot be cured, the tremors can be controlled.
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level. Video Rating: 5 / 5
Foods and Techniques for Longevity, Life Extension, Reducing the Risk of Age-Related Disease.
The key to a long and healthy life lies in staying active, eating more fruit and grains, and practicing massage and meditation in order to shed stress and create enthusiasm for life.
You can live longer possibly by reducing your risks of the age-related diseases, especially cardiovascular disease.
But, the real emphasis is not on life extension. It’s on healthy aging, trying to keep healthy as long as possible.
The key to longevity is delaying the onset and reducing the risk of age-related disease. Age-related disease are these big categories of illness that become more common after age 60 and that account for a great deal of premature death and disability.
So, the big ones are cardiovascular disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and its Parkinsons disease. So, I think the emphasis is on preventing those, showing you how to reduce the risk or delay the onset. Into this comes family history, personal history to see where your greatest risks are. Then concentrate the preventive efforts in those areas.
It’s not all that complicated. It just means doing some work, though. It means doing some homework and then learning the information that you need then applying it. And it’s applying it really in all areas of your lifestyle. It means looking at how you eat, how you use dietary supplements, how you exercise, how you handle stress, how you sleep, how you rest, how you deal with your mind, how to create meaning and significance in what you do. You know, you really need to work in all those areas to ensure healthy aging.
If you are smoking probably its not possible do much for you. And if you’re not paying attention to weight and not paying attention to your cholesterol and not paying attention to other medical risks that you may have, you know, you can put all the flowers you want in your house and it’s not gonna help.
De-stress using methods which work for you – everything from doing yoga to listening to relaxing music to getting massaged. Breathing methods are cost efficient and time efficient. And these mostly come from the yoga tradition. From these techniques Meditation is the Big Kahuna at 20 minutes per day.
Eat fewer foods of animal origin; more fruits and vegetables; more plant-based protein from soy foods, for example.
Make sure you’ve got omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in your diet, either from oily fish, or Flax Seed Oil.
Try to reduce consumption of quick-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are the ones made from any kind of flour, sugar, high fructose corn syrup.
And try to eat more of the slower-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are beans, whole grains, packed grains, winter squashes, sweet potatoes.
Really learn the differences between good fats and bad fats. Fry Less. Use cold pressed organic olive oil and flax seed oil as a main oil in salads. Include nuts, seeds, avocados, in your diet.
Reduce the amount of poisonous pesticides and steroids in your diet by buying anything which is concentrated, like oils or meat, organically, which just means that it is produced without pesticides or steroids.
Take a good multivitamin, multimineral supplement. Add things to the diet, like green tea and dark chocolate and red wine, in moderation, if you want their antioxidant effects.
Well, I think aside from eating right, you want to maintain physical activity throughout life. And that doesn’t mean you have to run marathons, or go to aerobics classes. Walking is a perfectly good physical activity if you do enough of it regularly enough. You want to learn some method of stress management. You know, like breathing exercises.
You want to really try to identify negative thought patterns that lead to negative behavior, – eating too much and smoking, or too angry or depressed, and see how you can change them through meditation and Advanced Energy Enhancement Techniques.
I think you want to keep your mind active, whether that’s by learning another language, or changing your computer operating system frequently. You want to stay connected and involved with life. Usually this comes less mechanically and selfishly than the previous methods by finding something you are really interested in and that which can help other people.
Again meditation can create this meaning and significance effect of enthusiasm for life, which really is the key. I think you really want to try to focus on the positive attributes of wisdom that come with aging, as well as the negative ones. For example, people die very quickly after retirement because they have lost their reason for living.
After all the above, if we have enthusiasm for life we live longer. Meaning and Significance in what we do comes from accessing higher energies through Meditation.
Satchidanand,
Director of Energy Enhancement, is one of the leading teachers of Meditation.!
He helps people worldwide reach further than they EVER thought possible,
FASTER!!!
Our tags can be used in a variety of ways. A great way to add style and safety to your life!
Use them as fashion accessories, keyrings or as a way to ID luggage and school backpacks.
Lifetime Warranty. We guarantee the tag text will never become unreadable. If, for some crazy reason, it does we’ll replace it for free. FREE keychain ring and metal clamp attachment included!
We can custom PRINT ANY TEXT you would like on the back of this medial ID tag. Just leave a comment in the “Gift Message” box using the Gift Message option with the text you would like on the back.
Add your name, address, emergency contact, or other medical information via the “Gift Message” option.
This specially designed medical identification tag indicates that the wearer has Parkinson’s Disease. It is contructed from an aluminum core surrounded by a plastic coating and is made to last a lifetime. This medical ID tag will easily alert other individuals of a condition even when the wearer is unable to. Our medical alert tags can be worn as a bracelet, a necklace or attached to any form of clothing or accessory. Tag features the artwork in the picture above on one side and the text that e
Price: $ 11.99
Scientists successfully use human induced pluripotent stem cells to treat Parkinson’s in rodents
Researchers have successfully used human induced pluripotent stem cells to treat rodents afflicted with Parkinson’s disease. The research validates a scalable protocol that can be used to manufacture the type of neurons needed to treat the disease and paves the way for the use of iPSC’s in various biomedical applications. Read more on Science Daily
Question by AK: What is the cure for parkinson’s disease? How can it be reversed and completely cured?
One of my best friend has Parkinson’s disease going into 4th or 5th year. He is taking medication to control movement and the dosage is now up to 15 pills a day. Is there a cure/treatment for this disease? What can be done to reverse it? Are there any therapies to halt this disease? Are there any herbal suplements?
Best answer:
Answer by robin j it cannot be cured, the tremors can be controlled.
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level. Video Rating: 5 / 5
Foods and Techniques for Longevity, Life Extension, Reducing the Risk of Age-Related Disease.
The key to a long and healthy life lies in staying active, eating more fruit and grains, and practicing massage and meditation in order to shed stress and create enthusiasm for life.
You can live longer possibly by reducing your risks of the age-related diseases, especially cardiovascular disease.
But, the real emphasis is not on life extension. It’s on healthy aging, trying to keep healthy as long as possible.
The key to longevity is delaying the onset and reducing the risk of age-related disease. Age-related disease are these big categories of illness that become more common after age 60 and that account for a great deal of premature death and disability.
So, the big ones are cardiovascular disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and its Parkinsons disease. So, I think the emphasis is on preventing those, showing you how to reduce the risk or delay the onset. Into this comes family history, personal history to see where your greatest risks are. Then concentrate the preventive efforts in those areas.
It’s not all that complicated. It just means doing some work, though. It means doing some homework and then learning the information that you need then applying it. And it’s applying it really in all areas of your lifestyle. It means looking at how you eat, how you use dietary supplements, how you exercise, how you handle stress, how you sleep, how you rest, how you deal with your mind, how to create meaning and significance in what you do. You know, you really need to work in all those areas to ensure healthy aging.
If you are smoking probably its not possible do much for you. And if you’re not paying attention to weight and not paying attention to your cholesterol and not paying attention to other medical risks that you may have, you know, you can put all the flowers you want in your house and it’s not gonna help.
De-stress using methods which work for you – everything from doing yoga to listening to relaxing music to getting massaged. Breathing methods are cost efficient and time efficient. And these mostly come from the yoga tradition. From these techniques Meditation is the Big Kahuna at 20 minutes per day.
Eat fewer foods of animal origin; more fruits and vegetables; more plant-based protein from soy foods, for example.
Make sure you’ve got omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in your diet, either from oily fish, or Flax Seed Oil.
Try to reduce consumption of quick-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are the ones made from any kind of flour, sugar, high fructose corn syrup.
And try to eat more of the slower-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are beans, whole grains, packed grains, winter squashes, sweet potatoes.
Really learn the differences between good fats and bad fats. Fry Less. Use cold pressed organic olive oil and flax seed oil as a main oil in salads. Include nuts, seeds, avocados, in your diet.
Reduce the amount of poisonous pesticides and steroids in your diet by buying anything which is concentrated, like oils or meat, organically, which just means that it is produced without pesticides or steroids.
Take a good multivitamin, multimineral supplement. Add things to the diet, like green tea and dark chocolate and red wine, in moderation, if you want their antioxidant effects.
Well, I think aside from eating right, you want to maintain physical activity throughout life. And that doesn’t mean you have to run marathons, or go to aerobics classes. Walking is a perfectly good physical activity if you do enough of it regularly enough. You want to learn some method of stress management. You know, like breathing exercises.
You want to really try to identify negative thought patterns that lead to negative behavior, – eating too much and smoking, or too angry or depressed, and see how you can change them through meditation and Advanced Energy Enhancement Techniques.
I think you want to keep your mind active, whether that’s by learning another language, or changing your computer operating system frequently. You want to stay connected and involved with life. Usually this comes less mechanically and selfishly than the previous methods by finding something you are really interested in and that which can help other people.
Again meditation can create this meaning and significance effect of enthusiasm for life, which really is the key. I think you really want to try to focus on the positive attributes of wisdom that come with aging, as well as the negative ones. For example, people die very quickly after retirement because they have lost their reason for living.
After all the above, if we have enthusiasm for life we live longer. Meaning and Significance in what we do comes from accessing higher energies through Meditation.
Satchidanand,
Director of Energy Enhancement, is one of the leading teachers of Meditation.!
He helps people worldwide reach further than they EVER thought possible,
FASTER!!!
Our tags can be used in a variety of ways. A great way to add style and safety to your life!
Use them as fashion accessories, keyrings or as a way to ID luggage and school backpacks.
Lifetime Warranty. We guarantee the tag text will never become unreadable. If, for some crazy reason, it does we’ll replace it for free. FREE keychain ring and metal clamp attachment included!
We can custom PRINT ANY TEXT you would like on the back of this medial ID tag. Just leave a comment in the “Gift Message” box using the Gift Message option with the text you would like on the back.
Add your name, address, emergency contact, or other medical information via the “Gift Message” option.
This specially designed medical identification tag indicates that the wearer has Parkinson’s Disease. It is contructed from an aluminum core surrounded by a plastic coating and is made to last a lifetime. This medical ID tag will easily alert other individuals of a condition even when the wearer is unable to. Our medical alert tags can be worn as a bracelet, a necklace or attached to any form of clothing or accessory. Tag features the artwork in the picture above on one side and the text that e
Price: $ 11.99
Gene linked to Parkinson’s
CHICAGO – A GENE linked with the immune system may play a role in developing Parkinson’s disease, researchers said on Sunday, marking a possible advance in the search for effective treatments. They said a gene in the human leukocyte antigen region or HLA – which contains a large number of genes related to immune system function – was strongly linked with Parkinson’s disease. ‘That means the … Read more on Straits Times
Question by AK: What is the cure for parkinson’s disease? How can it be reversed and completely cured?
One of my best friend has Parkinson’s disease going into 4th or 5th year. He is taking medication to control movement and the dosage is now up to 15 pills a day. Is there a cure/treatment for this disease? What can be done to reverse it? Are there any therapies to halt this disease? Are there any herbal suplements?
Best answer:
Answer by robin j it cannot be cured, the tremors can be controlled.
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level.
Foods and Techniques for Longevity, Life Extension, Reducing the Risk of Age-Related Disease.
The key to a long and healthy life lies in staying active, eating more fruit and grains, and practicing massage and meditation in order to shed stress and create enthusiasm for life.
You can live longer possibly by reducing your risks of the age-related diseases, especially cardiovascular disease.
But, the real emphasis is not on life extension. It’s on healthy aging, trying to keep healthy as long as possible.
The key to longevity is delaying the onset and reducing the risk of age-related disease. Age-related disease are these big categories of illness that become more common after age 60 and that account for a great deal of premature death and disability.
So, the big ones are cardiovascular disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and its Parkinsons disease. So, I think the emphasis is on preventing those, showing you how to reduce the risk or delay the onset. Into this comes family history, personal history to see where your greatest risks are. Then concentrate the preventive efforts in those areas.
It’s not all that complicated. It just means doing some work, though. It means doing some homework and then learning the information that you need then applying it. And it’s applying it really in all areas of your lifestyle. It means looking at how you eat, how you use dietary supplements, how you exercise, how you handle stress, how you sleep, how you rest, how you deal with your mind, how to create meaning and significance in what you do. You know, you really need to work in all those areas to ensure healthy aging.
If you are smoking probably its not possible do much for you. And if you’re not paying attention to weight and not paying attention to your cholesterol and not paying attention to other medical risks that you may have, you know, you can put all the flowers you want in your house and it’s not gonna help.
De-stress using methods which work for you – everything from doing yoga to listening to relaxing music to getting massaged. Breathing methods are cost efficient and time efficient. And these mostly come from the yoga tradition. From these techniques Meditation is the Big Kahuna at 20 minutes per day.
Eat fewer foods of animal origin; more fruits and vegetables; more plant-based protein from soy foods, for example.
Make sure you’ve got omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in your diet, either from oily fish, or Flax Seed Oil.
Try to reduce consumption of quick-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are the ones made from any kind of flour, sugar, high fructose corn syrup.
And try to eat more of the slower-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are beans, whole grains, packed grains, winter squashes, sweet potatoes.
Really learn the differences between good fats and bad fats. Fry Less. Use cold pressed organic olive oil and flax seed oil as a main oil in salads. Include nuts, seeds, avocados, in your diet.
Reduce the amount of poisonous pesticides and steroids in your diet by buying anything which is concentrated, like oils or meat, organically, which just means that it is produced without pesticides or steroids.
Take a good multivitamin, multimineral supplement. Add things to the diet, like green tea and dark chocolate and red wine, in moderation, if you want their antioxidant effects.
Well, I think aside from eating right, you want to maintain physical activity throughout life. And that doesn’t mean you have to run marathons, or go to aerobics classes. Walking is a perfectly good physical activity if you do enough of it regularly enough. You want to learn some method of stress management. You know, like breathing exercises.
You want to really try to identify negative thought patterns that lead to negative behavior, – eating too much and smoking, or too angry or depressed, and see how you can change them through meditation and Advanced Energy Enhancement Techniques.
I think you want to keep your mind active, whether that’s by learning another language, or changing your computer operating system frequently. You want to stay connected and involved with life. Usually this comes less mechanically and selfishly than the previous methods by finding something you are really interested in and that which can help other people.
Again meditation can create this meaning and significance effect of enthusiasm for life, which really is the key. I think you really want to try to focus on the positive attributes of wisdom that come with aging, as well as the negative ones. For example, people die very quickly after retirement because they have lost their reason for living.
After all the above, if we have enthusiasm for life we live longer. Meaning and Significance in what we do comes from accessing higher energies through Meditation.
Satchidanand,
Director of Energy Enhancement, is one of the leading teachers of Meditation.!
He helps people worldwide reach further than they EVER thought possible,
FASTER!!!
Daniel Brooks was a 50-year-old husband, father and district-level administrator in a public school system, when he first noticed pronounced tremors, speech difficulties and walking problems developing. In this book, Daniel chronicles his life with a Parkinson?s Plus syndrome and explains how he dealt with the neurological decline that resulted. Read a user-friendly, patient’s explanation of the defining symptoms of these atypical Parkinsonism disorders and find out how this neuro-degenerative
Rating: (out of 1 reviews)
List Price: $ 12.99
Price: $ 12.99
Gene linked to Parkinson’s
CHICAGO – A GENE linked with the immune system may play a role in developing Parkinson’s disease, researchers said on Sunday, marking a possible advance in the search for effective treatments. They said a gene in the human leukocyte antigen region or HLA – which contains a large number of genes related to immune system function – was strongly linked with Parkinson’s disease. ‘That means the … Read more on Straits Times
Question by AK: What is the cure for parkinson’s disease? How can it be reversed and completely cured?
One of my best friend has Parkinson’s disease going into 4th or 5th year. He is taking medication to control movement and the dosage is now up to 15 pills a day. Is there a cure/treatment for this disease? What can be done to reverse it? Are there any therapies to halt this disease? Are there any herbal suplements?
Best answer:
Answer by robin j it cannot be cured, the tremors can be controlled.
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level.
Foods and Techniques for Longevity, Life Extension, Reducing the Risk of Age-Related Disease.
The key to a long and healthy life lies in staying active, eating more fruit and grains, and practicing massage and meditation in order to shed stress and create enthusiasm for life.
You can live longer possibly by reducing your risks of the age-related diseases, especially cardiovascular disease.
But, the real emphasis is not on life extension. It’s on healthy aging, trying to keep healthy as long as possible.
The key to longevity is delaying the onset and reducing the risk of age-related disease. Age-related disease are these big categories of illness that become more common after age 60 and that account for a great deal of premature death and disability.
So, the big ones are cardiovascular disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and its Parkinsons disease. So, I think the emphasis is on preventing those, showing you how to reduce the risk or delay the onset. Into this comes family history, personal history to see where your greatest risks are. Then concentrate the preventive efforts in those areas.
It’s not all that complicated. It just means doing some work, though. It means doing some homework and then learning the information that you need then applying it. And it’s applying it really in all areas of your lifestyle. It means looking at how you eat, how you use dietary supplements, how you exercise, how you handle stress, how you sleep, how you rest, how you deal with your mind, how to create meaning and significance in what you do. You know, you really need to work in all those areas to ensure healthy aging.
If you are smoking probably its not possible do much for you. And if you’re not paying attention to weight and not paying attention to your cholesterol and not paying attention to other medical risks that you may have, you know, you can put all the flowers you want in your house and it’s not gonna help.
De-stress using methods which work for you – everything from doing yoga to listening to relaxing music to getting massaged. Breathing methods are cost efficient and time efficient. And these mostly come from the yoga tradition. From these techniques Meditation is the Big Kahuna at 20 minutes per day.
Eat fewer foods of animal origin; more fruits and vegetables; more plant-based protein from soy foods, for example.
Make sure you’ve got omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in your diet, either from oily fish, or Flax Seed Oil.
Try to reduce consumption of quick-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are the ones made from any kind of flour, sugar, high fructose corn syrup.
And try to eat more of the slower-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are beans, whole grains, packed grains, winter squashes, sweet potatoes.
Really learn the differences between good fats and bad fats. Fry Less. Use cold pressed organic olive oil and flax seed oil as a main oil in salads. Include nuts, seeds, avocados, in your diet.
Reduce the amount of poisonous pesticides and steroids in your diet by buying anything which is concentrated, like oils or meat, organically, which just means that it is produced without pesticides or steroids.
Take a good multivitamin, multimineral supplement. Add things to the diet, like green tea and dark chocolate and red wine, in moderation, if you want their antioxidant effects.
Well, I think aside from eating right, you want to maintain physical activity throughout life. And that doesn’t mean you have to run marathons, or go to aerobics classes. Walking is a perfectly good physical activity if you do enough of it regularly enough. You want to learn some method of stress management. You know, like breathing exercises.
You want to really try to identify negative thought patterns that lead to negative behavior, – eating too much and smoking, or too angry or depressed, and see how you can change them through meditation and Advanced Energy Enhancement Techniques.
I think you want to keep your mind active, whether that’s by learning another language, or changing your computer operating system frequently. You want to stay connected and involved with life. Usually this comes less mechanically and selfishly than the previous methods by finding something you are really interested in and that which can help other people.
Again meditation can create this meaning and significance effect of enthusiasm for life, which really is the key. I think you really want to try to focus on the positive attributes of wisdom that come with aging, as well as the negative ones. For example, people die very quickly after retirement because they have lost their reason for living.
After all the above, if we have enthusiasm for life we live longer. Meaning and Significance in what we do comes from accessing higher energies through Meditation.
Satchidanand,
Director of Energy Enhancement, is one of the leading teachers of Meditation.!
He helps people worldwide reach further than they EVER thought possible,
FASTER!!!
Daniel Brooks was a 50-year-old husband, father and district-level administrator in a public school system, when he first noticed pronounced tremors, speech difficulties and walking problems developing. In this book, Daniel chronicles his life with a Parkinson?s Plus syndrome and explains how he dealt with the neurological decline that resulted. Read a user-friendly, patient’s explanation of the defining symptoms of these atypical Parkinsonism disorders and find out how this neuro-degenerative
Rating: (out of 1 reviews)
List Price: $ 12.99
Price: $ 12.99
Overlook Hospital Neuroscience Institute begins Tai Chi for Parkinson’s patients in Summit
SUMMIT — Neurologists at the Atlantic Neuroscience Institute at Overlook Hospital plan to study the effects of Tai Chi on patients diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. The hope is that the martial art practice can help Parkinson’s patients return to a… Read more on Independent Press
Question by AK: What is the cure for parkinson’s disease? How can it be reversed and completely cured?
One of my best friend has Parkinson’s disease going into 4th or 5th year. He is taking medication to control movement and the dosage is now up to 15 pills a day. Is there a cure/treatment for this disease? What can be done to reverse it? Are there any therapies to halt this disease? Are there any herbal suplements?
Best answer:
Answer by robin j it cannot be cured, the tremors can be controlled.
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level. Video Rating: 5 / 5
Foods and Techniques for Longevity, Life Extension, Reducing the Risk of Age-Related Disease.
The key to a long and healthy life lies in staying active, eating more fruit and grains, and practicing massage and meditation in order to shed stress and create enthusiasm for life.
You can live longer possibly by reducing your risks of the age-related diseases, especially cardiovascular disease.
But, the real emphasis is not on life extension. It’s on healthy aging, trying to keep healthy as long as possible.
The key to longevity is delaying the onset and reducing the risk of age-related disease. Age-related disease are these big categories of illness that become more common after age 60 and that account for a great deal of premature death and disability.
So, the big ones are cardiovascular disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and its Parkinsons disease. So, I think the emphasis is on preventing those, showing you how to reduce the risk or delay the onset. Into this comes family history, personal history to see where your greatest risks are. Then concentrate the preventive efforts in those areas.
It’s not all that complicated. It just means doing some work, though. It means doing some homework and then learning the information that you need then applying it. And it’s applying it really in all areas of your lifestyle. It means looking at how you eat, how you use dietary supplements, how you exercise, how you handle stress, how you sleep, how you rest, how you deal with your mind, how to create meaning and significance in what you do. You know, you really need to work in all those areas to ensure healthy aging.
If you are smoking probably its not possible do much for you. And if you’re not paying attention to weight and not paying attention to your cholesterol and not paying attention to other medical risks that you may have, you know, you can put all the flowers you want in your house and it’s not gonna help.
De-stress using methods which work for you – everything from doing yoga to listening to relaxing music to getting massaged. Breathing methods are cost efficient and time efficient. And these mostly come from the yoga tradition. From these techniques Meditation is the Big Kahuna at 20 minutes per day.
Eat fewer foods of animal origin; more fruits and vegetables; more plant-based protein from soy foods, for example.
Make sure you’ve got omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in your diet, either from oily fish, or Flax Seed Oil.
Try to reduce consumption of quick-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are the ones made from any kind of flour, sugar, high fructose corn syrup.
And try to eat more of the slower-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are beans, whole grains, packed grains, winter squashes, sweet potatoes.
Really learn the differences between good fats and bad fats. Fry Less. Use cold pressed organic olive oil and flax seed oil as a main oil in salads. Include nuts, seeds, avocados, in your diet.
Reduce the amount of poisonous pesticides and steroids in your diet by buying anything which is concentrated, like oils or meat, organically, which just means that it is produced without pesticides or steroids.
Take a good multivitamin, multimineral supplement. Add things to the diet, like green tea and dark chocolate and red wine, in moderation, if you want their antioxidant effects.
Well, I think aside from eating right, you want to maintain physical activity throughout life. And that doesn’t mean you have to run marathons, or go to aerobics classes. Walking is a perfectly good physical activity if you do enough of it regularly enough. You want to learn some method of stress management. You know, like breathing exercises.
You want to really try to identify negative thought patterns that lead to negative behavior, – eating too much and smoking, or too angry or depressed, and see how you can change them through meditation and Advanced Energy Enhancement Techniques.
I think you want to keep your mind active, whether that’s by learning another language, or changing your computer operating system frequently. You want to stay connected and involved with life. Usually this comes less mechanically and selfishly than the previous methods by finding something you are really interested in and that which can help other people.
Again meditation can create this meaning and significance effect of enthusiasm for life, which really is the key. I think you really want to try to focus on the positive attributes of wisdom that come with aging, as well as the negative ones. For example, people die very quickly after retirement because they have lost their reason for living.
After all the above, if we have enthusiasm for life we live longer. Meaning and Significance in what we do comes from accessing higher energies through Meditation.
Satchidanand,
Director of Energy Enhancement, is one of the leading teachers of Meditation.!
He helps people worldwide reach further than they EVER thought possible,
FASTER!!!
Inspired by her father’s interaction with her children, Rasheda Ali wrote this book to address the most commonly asked questions from children who may not understand why their loved ones with Parkinson’s disease behave in certain ways. Written for adults to read to children, the book encourages dialogue through the use of colorful illustrations, situations depicting symptoms, and interactive questions. Medical facts are provided at the end of each page to help readers answer children’s qu
Rating: (out of 6 reviews)
List Price: $ 19.95
Price: $ 4.99
Not all dementia is Alzheimer’s disease – Tue, 17 Aug 2010 PST
For those people 55 and older, researchers have some grim news: One in six will develop some form of dementia. The dementia could include Alzheimer’s, which impacts nearly half of those 85-plus, or it could manifest as a different dementia, including Lewy body, vascular, Parkinson’s disease or frontal lobe dementia. Read more on The Spokesman-Review
Question by AK: What is the cure for parkinson’s disease? How can it be reversed and completely cured?
One of my best friend has Parkinson’s disease going into 4th or 5th year. He is taking medication to control movement and the dosage is now up to 15 pills a day. Is there a cure/treatment for this disease? What can be done to reverse it? Are there any therapies to halt this disease? Are there any herbal suplements?
Best answer:
Answer by robin j it cannot be cured, the tremors can be controlled.
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level. Video Rating: 5 / 5
Foods and Techniques for Longevity, Life Extension, Reducing the Risk of Age-Related Disease.
The key to a long and healthy life lies in staying active, eating more fruit and grains, and practicing massage and meditation in order to shed stress and create enthusiasm for life.
You can live longer possibly by reducing your risks of the age-related diseases, especially cardiovascular disease.
But, the real emphasis is not on life extension. It’s on healthy aging, trying to keep healthy as long as possible.
The key to longevity is delaying the onset and reducing the risk of age-related disease. Age-related disease are these big categories of illness that become more common after age 60 and that account for a great deal of premature death and disability.
So, the big ones are cardiovascular disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and its Parkinsons disease. So, I think the emphasis is on preventing those, showing you how to reduce the risk or delay the onset. Into this comes family history, personal history to see where your greatest risks are. Then concentrate the preventive efforts in those areas.
It’s not all that complicated. It just means doing some work, though. It means doing some homework and then learning the information that you need then applying it. And it’s applying it really in all areas of your lifestyle. It means looking at how you eat, how you use dietary supplements, how you exercise, how you handle stress, how you sleep, how you rest, how you deal with your mind, how to create meaning and significance in what you do. You know, you really need to work in all those areas to ensure healthy aging.
If you are smoking probably its not possible do much for you. And if you’re not paying attention to weight and not paying attention to your cholesterol and not paying attention to other medical risks that you may have, you know, you can put all the flowers you want in your house and it’s not gonna help.
De-stress using methods which work for you – everything from doing yoga to listening to relaxing music to getting massaged. Breathing methods are cost efficient and time efficient. And these mostly come from the yoga tradition. From these techniques Meditation is the Big Kahuna at 20 minutes per day.
Eat fewer foods of animal origin; more fruits and vegetables; more plant-based protein from soy foods, for example.
Make sure you’ve got omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in your diet, either from oily fish, or Flax Seed Oil.
Try to reduce consumption of quick-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are the ones made from any kind of flour, sugar, high fructose corn syrup.
And try to eat more of the slower-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are beans, whole grains, packed grains, winter squashes, sweet potatoes.
Really learn the differences between good fats and bad fats. Fry Less. Use cold pressed organic olive oil and flax seed oil as a main oil in salads. Include nuts, seeds, avocados, in your diet.
Reduce the amount of poisonous pesticides and steroids in your diet by buying anything which is concentrated, like oils or meat, organically, which just means that it is produced without pesticides or steroids.
Take a good multivitamin, multimineral supplement. Add things to the diet, like green tea and dark chocolate and red wine, in moderation, if you want their antioxidant effects.
Well, I think aside from eating right, you want to maintain physical activity throughout life. And that doesn’t mean you have to run marathons, or go to aerobics classes. Walking is a perfectly good physical activity if you do enough of it regularly enough. You want to learn some method of stress management. You know, like breathing exercises.
You want to really try to identify negative thought patterns that lead to negative behavior, – eating too much and smoking, or too angry or depressed, and see how you can change them through meditation and Advanced Energy Enhancement Techniques.
I think you want to keep your mind active, whether that’s by learning another language, or changing your computer operating system frequently. You want to stay connected and involved with life. Usually this comes less mechanically and selfishly than the previous methods by finding something you are really interested in and that which can help other people.
Again meditation can create this meaning and significance effect of enthusiasm for life, which really is the key. I think you really want to try to focus on the positive attributes of wisdom that come with aging, as well as the negative ones. For example, people die very quickly after retirement because they have lost their reason for living.
After all the above, if we have enthusiasm for life we live longer. Meaning and Significance in what we do comes from accessing higher energies through Meditation.
Satchidanand,
Director of Energy Enhancement, is one of the leading teachers of Meditation.!
He helps people worldwide reach further than they EVER thought possible,
FASTER!!!
This comprehensive guide to the day-to-day issues confronted by Parkinson disease patients and their caregivers covers every caregiving stage.It’s all here in an illustrated, easy-to-read format, including the decision to provide home care, preparing the home, assisting with daily activities, financial management, and strategies for avoiding caregiver burnout. This guide also includes information on the specific issues that PD patients and caregivers face, as well as tips on purchasing equipmen
Rating: (out of 3 reviews)
List Price: $ 24.95
Price: $ 19.46
‘Wider impact’ of brain disease
A new form of brain disease, similar to Creutzfeld-Jakob Disease, could affect more people than previously thought, researchers in the US say. Read more on BBC News
Question by AK: What is the cure for parkinson’s disease? How can it be reversed and completely cured?
One of my best friend has Parkinson’s disease going into 4th or 5th year. He is taking medication to control movement and the dosage is now up to 15 pills a day. Is there a cure/treatment for this disease? What can be done to reverse it? Are there any therapies to halt this disease? Are there any herbal suplements?
Best answer:
Answer by robin j it cannot be cured, the tremors can be controlled.
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level.
Foods and Techniques for Longevity, Life Extension, Reducing the Risk of Age-Related Disease.
The key to a long and healthy life lies in staying active, eating more fruit and grains, and practicing massage and meditation in order to shed stress and create enthusiasm for life.
You can live longer possibly by reducing your risks of the age-related diseases, especially cardiovascular disease.
But, the real emphasis is not on life extension. It’s on healthy aging, trying to keep healthy as long as possible.
The key to longevity is delaying the onset and reducing the risk of age-related disease. Age-related disease are these big categories of illness that become more common after age 60 and that account for a great deal of premature death and disability.
So, the big ones are cardiovascular disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and its Parkinsons disease. So, I think the emphasis is on preventing those, showing you how to reduce the risk or delay the onset. Into this comes family history, personal history to see where your greatest risks are. Then concentrate the preventive efforts in those areas.
It’s not all that complicated. It just means doing some work, though. It means doing some homework and then learning the information that you need then applying it. And it’s applying it really in all areas of your lifestyle. It means looking at how you eat, how you use dietary supplements, how you exercise, how you handle stress, how you sleep, how you rest, how you deal with your mind, how to create meaning and significance in what you do. You know, you really need to work in all those areas to ensure healthy aging.
If you are smoking probably its not possible do much for you. And if you’re not paying attention to weight and not paying attention to your cholesterol and not paying attention to other medical risks that you may have, you know, you can put all the flowers you want in your house and it’s not gonna help.
De-stress using methods which work for you – everything from doing yoga to listening to relaxing music to getting massaged. Breathing methods are cost efficient and time efficient. And these mostly come from the yoga tradition. From these techniques Meditation is the Big Kahuna at 20 minutes per day.
Eat fewer foods of animal origin; more fruits and vegetables; more plant-based protein from soy foods, for example.
Make sure you’ve got omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in your diet, either from oily fish, or Flax Seed Oil.
Try to reduce consumption of quick-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are the ones made from any kind of flour, sugar, high fructose corn syrup.
And try to eat more of the slower-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are beans, whole grains, packed grains, winter squashes, sweet potatoes.
Really learn the differences between good fats and bad fats. Fry Less. Use cold pressed organic olive oil and flax seed oil as a main oil in salads. Include nuts, seeds, avocados, in your diet.
Reduce the amount of poisonous pesticides and steroids in your diet by buying anything which is concentrated, like oils or meat, organically, which just means that it is produced without pesticides or steroids.
Take a good multivitamin, multimineral supplement. Add things to the diet, like green tea and dark chocolate and red wine, in moderation, if you want their antioxidant effects.
Well, I think aside from eating right, you want to maintain physical activity throughout life. And that doesn’t mean you have to run marathons, or go to aerobics classes. Walking is a perfectly good physical activity if you do enough of it regularly enough. You want to learn some method of stress management. You know, like breathing exercises.
You want to really try to identify negative thought patterns that lead to negative behavior, – eating too much and smoking, or too angry or depressed, and see how you can change them through meditation and Advanced Energy Enhancement Techniques.
I think you want to keep your mind active, whether that’s by learning another language, or changing your computer operating system frequently. You want to stay connected and involved with life. Usually this comes less mechanically and selfishly than the previous methods by finding something you are really interested in and that which can help other people.
Again meditation can create this meaning and significance effect of enthusiasm for life, which really is the key. I think you really want to try to focus on the positive attributes of wisdom that come with aging, as well as the negative ones. For example, people die very quickly after retirement because they have lost their reason for living.
After all the above, if we have enthusiasm for life we live longer. Meaning and Significance in what we do comes from accessing higher energies through Meditation.
Satchidanand,
Director of Energy Enhancement, is one of the leading teachers of Meditation.!
He helps people worldwide reach further than they EVER thought possible,
FASTER!!!
This comprehensive guide to the day-to-day issues confronted by Parkinson disease patients and their caregivers covers every caregiving stage.It’s all here in an illustrated, easy-to-read format, including the decision to provide home care, preparing the home, assisting with daily activities, financial management, and strategies for avoiding caregiver burnout. This guide also includes information on the specific issues that PD patients and caregivers face, as well as tips on purchasing equipmen
Rating: (out of 3 reviews)
List Price: $ 24.95
Price: $ 19.46
Frank F. Favazza Jr. dies at 82
Prominent contractor built apartments and schools and was a Maryland Racing Commission member Frank F. Favazza Jr., a general contractor who was a member of the Maryland Racing Commission, died of Parkinson’s disease complications Wednesday at Lorien Mays Chapel Health Center in Timonium. He was 82. Read more on Baltimore Sun
Question by AK: What is the cure for parkinson’s disease? How can it be reversed and completely cured?
One of my best friend has Parkinson’s disease going into 4th or 5th year. He is taking medication to control movement and the dosage is now up to 15 pills a day. Is there a cure/treatment for this disease? What can be done to reverse it? Are there any therapies to halt this disease? Are there any herbal suplements?
Best answer:
Answer by robin j it cannot be cured, the tremors can be controlled.
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level. Video Rating: 5 / 5
Foods and Techniques for Longevity, Life Extension, Reducing the Risk of Age-Related Disease.
The key to a long and healthy life lies in staying active, eating more fruit and grains, and practicing massage and meditation in order to shed stress and create enthusiasm for life.
You can live longer possibly by reducing your risks of the age-related diseases, especially cardiovascular disease.
But, the real emphasis is not on life extension. It’s on healthy aging, trying to keep healthy as long as possible.
The key to longevity is delaying the onset and reducing the risk of age-related disease. Age-related disease are these big categories of illness that become more common after age 60 and that account for a great deal of premature death and disability.
So, the big ones are cardiovascular disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and its Parkinsons disease. So, I think the emphasis is on preventing those, showing you how to reduce the risk or delay the onset. Into this comes family history, personal history to see where your greatest risks are. Then concentrate the preventive efforts in those areas.
It’s not all that complicated. It just means doing some work, though. It means doing some homework and then learning the information that you need then applying it. And it’s applying it really in all areas of your lifestyle. It means looking at how you eat, how you use dietary supplements, how you exercise, how you handle stress, how you sleep, how you rest, how you deal with your mind, how to create meaning and significance in what you do. You know, you really need to work in all those areas to ensure healthy aging.
If you are smoking probably its not possible do much for you. And if you’re not paying attention to weight and not paying attention to your cholesterol and not paying attention to other medical risks that you may have, you know, you can put all the flowers you want in your house and it’s not gonna help.
De-stress using methods which work for you – everything from doing yoga to listening to relaxing music to getting massaged. Breathing methods are cost efficient and time efficient. And these mostly come from the yoga tradition. From these techniques Meditation is the Big Kahuna at 20 minutes per day.
Eat fewer foods of animal origin; more fruits and vegetables; more plant-based protein from soy foods, for example.
Make sure you’ve got omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in your diet, either from oily fish, or Flax Seed Oil.
Try to reduce consumption of quick-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are the ones made from any kind of flour, sugar, high fructose corn syrup.
And try to eat more of the slower-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are beans, whole grains, packed grains, winter squashes, sweet potatoes.
Really learn the differences between good fats and bad fats. Fry Less. Use cold pressed organic olive oil and flax seed oil as a main oil in salads. Include nuts, seeds, avocados, in your diet.
Reduce the amount of poisonous pesticides and steroids in your diet by buying anything which is concentrated, like oils or meat, organically, which just means that it is produced without pesticides or steroids.
Take a good multivitamin, multimineral supplement. Add things to the diet, like green tea and dark chocolate and red wine, in moderation, if you want their antioxidant effects.
Well, I think aside from eating right, you want to maintain physical activity throughout life. And that doesn’t mean you have to run marathons, or go to aerobics classes. Walking is a perfectly good physical activity if you do enough of it regularly enough. You want to learn some method of stress management. You know, like breathing exercises.
You want to really try to identify negative thought patterns that lead to negative behavior, – eating too much and smoking, or too angry or depressed, and see how you can change them through meditation and Advanced Energy Enhancement Techniques.
I think you want to keep your mind active, whether that’s by learning another language, or changing your computer operating system frequently. You want to stay connected and involved with life. Usually this comes less mechanically and selfishly than the previous methods by finding something you are really interested in and that which can help other people.
Again meditation can create this meaning and significance effect of enthusiasm for life, which really is the key. I think you really want to try to focus on the positive attributes of wisdom that come with aging, as well as the negative ones. For example, people die very quickly after retirement because they have lost their reason for living.
After all the above, if we have enthusiasm for life we live longer. Meaning and Significance in what we do comes from accessing higher energies through Meditation.
Satchidanand,
Director of Energy Enhancement, is one of the leading teachers of Meditation.!
He helps people worldwide reach further than they EVER thought possible,
FASTER!!!
This comprehensive guide to the day-to-day issues confronted by Parkinson disease patients and their caregivers covers every caregiving stage.It’s all here in an illustrated, easy-to-read format, including the decision to provide home care, preparing the home, assisting with daily activities, financial management, and strategies for avoiding caregiver burnout. This guide also includes information on the specific issues that PD patients and caregivers face, as well as tips on purchasing equipmen
Rating: (out of 3 reviews)
List Price: $ 24.95
Price: $ 19.46
20 new ideas in science
Today’s most cutting-edge scientific thinking: from switching off ageing to “enhancing” our babies; understanding consciousness to finding dark matter. You read it here first. Read more on The New Statesman
Question by AK: What is the cure for parkinson’s disease? How can it be reversed and completely cured?
One of my best friend has Parkinson’s disease going into 4th or 5th year. He is taking medication to control movement and the dosage is now up to 15 pills a day. Is there a cure/treatment for this disease? What can be done to reverse it? Are there any therapies to halt this disease? Are there any herbal suplements?
Best answer:
Answer by robin j it cannot be cured, the tremors can be controlled.
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level. Video Rating: 5 / 5
Foods and Techniques for Longevity, Life Extension, Reducing the Risk of Age-Related Disease.
The key to a long and healthy life lies in staying active, eating more fruit and grains, and practicing massage and meditation in order to shed stress and create enthusiasm for life.
You can live longer possibly by reducing your risks of the age-related diseases, especially cardiovascular disease.
But, the real emphasis is not on life extension. It’s on healthy aging, trying to keep healthy as long as possible.
The key to longevity is delaying the onset and reducing the risk of age-related disease. Age-related disease are these big categories of illness that become more common after age 60 and that account for a great deal of premature death and disability.
So, the big ones are cardiovascular disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and its Parkinsons disease. So, I think the emphasis is on preventing those, showing you how to reduce the risk or delay the onset. Into this comes family history, personal history to see where your greatest risks are. Then concentrate the preventive efforts in those areas.
It’s not all that complicated. It just means doing some work, though. It means doing some homework and then learning the information that you need then applying it. And it’s applying it really in all areas of your lifestyle. It means looking at how you eat, how you use dietary supplements, how you exercise, how you handle stress, how you sleep, how you rest, how you deal with your mind, how to create meaning and significance in what you do. You know, you really need to work in all those areas to ensure healthy aging.
If you are smoking probably its not possible do much for you. And if you’re not paying attention to weight and not paying attention to your cholesterol and not paying attention to other medical risks that you may have, you know, you can put all the flowers you want in your house and it’s not gonna help.
De-stress using methods which work for you – everything from doing yoga to listening to relaxing music to getting massaged. Breathing methods are cost efficient and time efficient. And these mostly come from the yoga tradition. From these techniques Meditation is the Big Kahuna at 20 minutes per day.
Eat fewer foods of animal origin; more fruits and vegetables; more plant-based protein from soy foods, for example.
Make sure you’ve got omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in your diet, either from oily fish, or Flax Seed Oil.
Try to reduce consumption of quick-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are the ones made from any kind of flour, sugar, high fructose corn syrup.
And try to eat more of the slower-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are beans, whole grains, packed grains, winter squashes, sweet potatoes.
Really learn the differences between good fats and bad fats. Fry Less. Use cold pressed organic olive oil and flax seed oil as a main oil in salads. Include nuts, seeds, avocados, in your diet.
Reduce the amount of poisonous pesticides and steroids in your diet by buying anything which is concentrated, like oils or meat, organically, which just means that it is produced without pesticides or steroids.
Take a good multivitamin, multimineral supplement. Add things to the diet, like green tea and dark chocolate and red wine, in moderation, if you want their antioxidant effects.
Well, I think aside from eating right, you want to maintain physical activity throughout life. And that doesn’t mean you have to run marathons, or go to aerobics classes. Walking is a perfectly good physical activity if you do enough of it regularly enough. You want to learn some method of stress management. You know, like breathing exercises.
You want to really try to identify negative thought patterns that lead to negative behavior, – eating too much and smoking, or too angry or depressed, and see how you can change them through meditation and Advanced Energy Enhancement Techniques.
I think you want to keep your mind active, whether that’s by learning another language, or changing your computer operating system frequently. You want to stay connected and involved with life. Usually this comes less mechanically and selfishly than the previous methods by finding something you are really interested in and that which can help other people.
Again meditation can create this meaning and significance effect of enthusiasm for life, which really is the key. I think you really want to try to focus on the positive attributes of wisdom that come with aging, as well as the negative ones. For example, people die very quickly after retirement because they have lost their reason for living.
After all the above, if we have enthusiasm for life we live longer. Meaning and Significance in what we do comes from accessing higher energies through Meditation.
Satchidanand,
Director of Energy Enhancement, is one of the leading teachers of Meditation.!
He helps people worldwide reach further than they EVER thought possible,
FASTER!!!
Written by an international group of renowned experts, the Fifth Edition of this premier reference provides comprehensive, current information on the genetics, pathophysiology, diagnosis, medical and surgical treatment, and behavioral and psychologic concomitants of all common and uncommon movement disorders. Coverage includes Parkinson’s disease, other neurodegenerative diseases, tremors, dystonia, Tourette’s syndrome, Huntington’s disease, and ataxias. This edition features extensive updates o
List Price: $ 159.00
Price: $ 28.95
Parkinson’s sufferer gets bail after 6 weeks jail
A suitable bail address has been found for a 69-year-old Parkinson’s disease sufferer charged with indecent assault. Read more on 3news
Question by AK: What is the cure for parkinson’s disease? How can it be reversed and completely cured?
One of my best friend has Parkinson’s disease going into 4th or 5th year. He is taking medication to control movement and the dosage is now up to 15 pills a day. Is there a cure/treatment for this disease? What can be done to reverse it? Are there any therapies to halt this disease? Are there any herbal suplements?
Best answer:
Answer by robin j it cannot be cured, the tremors can be controlled.
Three bold new research programmes focusing on devastating neurodegenerative diseases – Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and motor neurone disease – have received major funding from the Wellcome Trust and the Medical Research Council. In this short interview, we meet Professors Nicholas Wood, John Hardy and Anthony Schapira at the Institute of Neurology, London, as they outline the changing face of Parkinson’s disease research and their hopes to fully understand its causes and effects at the genetic level. Video Rating: 5 / 5
Foods and Techniques for Longevity, Life Extension, Reducing the Risk of Age-Related Disease.
The key to a long and healthy life lies in staying active, eating more fruit and grains, and practicing massage and meditation in order to shed stress and create enthusiasm for life.
You can live longer possibly by reducing your risks of the age-related diseases, especially cardiovascular disease.
But, the real emphasis is not on life extension. It’s on healthy aging, trying to keep healthy as long as possible.
The key to longevity is delaying the onset and reducing the risk of age-related disease. Age-related disease are these big categories of illness that become more common after age 60 and that account for a great deal of premature death and disability.
So, the big ones are cardiovascular disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and its Parkinsons disease. So, I think the emphasis is on preventing those, showing you how to reduce the risk or delay the onset. Into this comes family history, personal history to see where your greatest risks are. Then concentrate the preventive efforts in those areas.
It’s not all that complicated. It just means doing some work, though. It means doing some homework and then learning the information that you need then applying it. And it’s applying it really in all areas of your lifestyle. It means looking at how you eat, how you use dietary supplements, how you exercise, how you handle stress, how you sleep, how you rest, how you deal with your mind, how to create meaning and significance in what you do. You know, you really need to work in all those areas to ensure healthy aging.
If you are smoking probably its not possible do much for you. And if you’re not paying attention to weight and not paying attention to your cholesterol and not paying attention to other medical risks that you may have, you know, you can put all the flowers you want in your house and it’s not gonna help.
De-stress using methods which work for you – everything from doing yoga to listening to relaxing music to getting massaged. Breathing methods are cost efficient and time efficient. And these mostly come from the yoga tradition. From these techniques Meditation is the Big Kahuna at 20 minutes per day.
Eat fewer foods of animal origin; more fruits and vegetables; more plant-based protein from soy foods, for example.
Make sure you’ve got omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in your diet, either from oily fish, or Flax Seed Oil.
Try to reduce consumption of quick-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are the ones made from any kind of flour, sugar, high fructose corn syrup.
And try to eat more of the slower-digesting carbohydrate foods, which are beans, whole grains, packed grains, winter squashes, sweet potatoes.
Really learn the differences between good fats and bad fats. Fry Less. Use cold pressed organic olive oil and flax seed oil as a main oil in salads. Include nuts, seeds, avocados, in your diet.
Reduce the amount of poisonous pesticides and steroids in your diet by buying anything which is concentrated, like oils or meat, organically, which just means that it is produced without pesticides or steroids.
Take a good multivitamin, multimineral supplement. Add things to the diet, like green tea and dark chocolate and red wine, in moderation, if you want their antioxidant effects.
Well, I think aside from eating right, you want to maintain physical activity throughout life. And that doesn’t mean you have to run marathons, or go to aerobics classes. Walking is a perfectly good physical activity if you do enough of it regularly enough. You want to learn some method of stress management. You know, like breathing exercises.
You want to really try to identify negative thought patterns that lead to negative behavior, – eating too much and smoking, or too angry or depressed, and see how you can change them through meditation and Advanced Energy Enhancement Techniques.
I think you want to keep your mind active, whether that’s by learning another language, or changing your computer operating system frequently. You want to stay connected and involved with life. Usually this comes less mechanically and selfishly than the previous methods by finding something you are really interested in and that which can help other people.
Again meditation can create this meaning and significance effect of enthusiasm for life, which really is the key. I think you really want to try to focus on the positive attributes of wisdom that come with aging, as well as the negative ones. For example, people die very quickly after retirement because they have lost their reason for living.
After all the above, if we have enthusiasm for life we live longer. Meaning and Significance in what we do comes from accessing higher energies through Meditation.
Satchidanand,
Director of Energy Enhancement, is one of the leading teachers of Meditation.!
He helps people worldwide reach further than they EVER thought possible,
FASTER!!!
Written by an international group of renowned experts, the Fifth Edition of this premier reference provides comprehensive, current information on the genetics, pathophysiology, diagnosis, medical and surgical treatment, and behavioral and psychologic concomitants of all common and uncommon movement disorders. Coverage includes Parkinson’s disease, other neurodegenerative diseases, tremors, dystonia, Tourette’s syndrome, Huntington’s disease, and ataxias. This edition features extensive updates o
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Dying palliative nurse leading push for ‘good’ deaths
Chris Sherwood has spent years trying to change the way we die. Now, after a diagnosis of Parkinson’s, his battle is personal. Read more on Toronto Star
Question by AK: What is the cure for parkinson’s disease? How can it be reversed and completely cured?
One of my best friend has Parkinson’s disease going into 4th or 5th year. He is taking medication to control movement and the dosage is now up to 15 pills a day. Is there a cure/treatment for this disease? What can be done to reverse it? Are there any therapies to halt this disease? Are there any herbal suplements?
Best answer:
Answer by robin j it cannot be cured, the tremors can be controlled.
Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!
Flag at Liberty Station viewed from the Parkinson’s 5k Walk & Fun Run 2008