This greatly saddens me. But Ron was quite an advocate, leaving us with a lot of hope.
It was via these forums (BrainTalk, then NeuroTalk) that I first met Ron Hutton. He had been diagnosed with Parkinson's a few years longer than I (I was dx in 1994 - Ron was dx in 1991). This is proof that most PD is slow in progression.
Ron volunteered with several of of the same offline group's as I (Grassroots Connection, Pipeline Project, and PLWP). When I was in Germany promoting a trial in which I was enrolled and the potential of this new therapy, my husband and I spent 3 days with Ron and his lovely wife, Margaret. They were an exceptional host and hostess.
Another visitor from NeuroTalk had spent a few days with Ron prior to our visit.
It was our friend, Rick Everette, who lived a little over 100 miles from my home. Rick and I had good intentions of getting together, but you know what they say about good intentions . . .
Ron (aka Dr. Hutton) was brilliant! He held (among other degrees) a PhD in Chemical Engineering (I think - I'm unsure of the degree concentration). He also was a silversmith and served on an IRB at Kings College for a study on mucuna purines (see slides from a PDF Webinar)
http://www.pdf.org/pdf/Complementary..._Brandabur.pdf
You might want to find Ron's posts on his creative theory concerning the blood brain barrier (do a forum search)
Adding the link:
http://neurotalk.psychcentral.com/thread174588.html
NOTE - I don't believe his obituary has been posted online yet I will try to call his family, but there is a 5-6 hour time difference
Peg