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Old 03-26-2018, 08:14 PM
ol'cs ol'cs is offline
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Join Date: Sep 2006
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ol'cs ol'cs is offline
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 629
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Quote:
Originally Posted by lindylanka View Post
It isn't just PD that this is relevant to either, there are a fair few neurological diseases that seem to have borderline cases where people seem to maybe have fibro/pd or ms/altzheimers pd/ms etc., and things are not so easy to sort out. Chances are there won't be a cure, but more likely a series pf breakthrough 'accidents' that will allow for better quality of life for people with different PD issues. I am not sure that there will be a PD 'cure', just like there won't be a definitive cancer sure, how could there be with so many different variables. And what of MSA or LBD? What I would like to see is that all people with this spectrum of disorders are treated properly in the here and now, no matter how old or infirm they are, and that medical science starts to document what is really going on with patients, instead of trying to pattern match people to what must surely now be an obsolete picture. If for instance they started to really look at the non-motor symptoms in thousands of people surely they would learn something new, and what about the pain that is often said to not be a PD symptom.....!!??

Not that I don't want to see research, but that whichever way you look at it, science is simply not as rational as it would like to be seen to be. I am with those that think that the approach to the problem is as important to finding viable treatments as ever, and that maybe research is not as open-minded as it could be...

Lindy
And here lie the "hopefulls", whom after 20 or more years of quietly sufffering the effects of a still unelucidated etiology of parkinsonism have all but no interst left in talking about it. Some of us early onsets will just keep living this nightmare for decades, with very little help and very few resources; for the lucky ones of us who are still able to function for part of the day, consider yourself "lucky". There has been very litttle progress toward drugs that could at least make us be more able to tolerate the horrors of stage 4. I used to have hope, when i ws dxed in 1997. I looked around most corners for knowledge, but found a host of well meaning researchers who did a lot of work, but have not cracked the nut yet. God help us all..................cs
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