Parkinson's Disease Tulip


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Old 04-07-2010, 02:28 PM #11
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aquario mentioned out-of-phase tones and such so I thought I would add this about my own experiments with brainwave entrainment. Despite the name it is simply synching our brains to music or a beat to produce a particular effect (calmness, for example).

Using recordings of a steady tone at different frequencies, I find that 6 Hz is special to me. Five is not nor is seven. I find that fist thing in the morning, 6 Hz will dissolve my "curly toes" in about three minutes and relieve general cramping in about the same time. I am not tremor dominant but the times I have tested it, it has had a positive effect. Also, a similar effect is found around the 130 Hz area. That's as far asI have gotten.

This is pretty safe stuff with 100,000s sold to help you remodel yourself, but if epileptic be more cautious. If you want to email me I will send you an mp3 to play with. Or, if you want to get really into it, search for the shareware program "BrainWave Generator". It really does do things. Just banishing curly toes is worth a small fortune to me.
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Born in 1953, 1st symptoms and misdiagnosed as essential tremor in 1992. Dx with PD in 2000.
Currently (2011) taking 200/50 Sinemet CR 8 times a day + 10/100 Sinemet 3 times a day. Functional 90% of waking day but fragile. Failure at exercise but still trying. Constantly experimenting. Beta blocker and ACE inhibitor at present. Currently (01/2013) taking ldopa/carbadopa 200/50 CR six times a day + 10/100 form 3 times daily. Functional 90% of day. Update 04/2013: L/C 200/50 8x; Beta Blocker; ACE Inhib; Ginger; Turmeric; Creatine; Magnesium; Potassium. Doing well.
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Old 04-08-2010, 08:26 AM #12
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aquario View Post
As a musician working occasionally with audio, I've long wondered about tremor frequency and the phenomenon known as phase cancellation. If you take two audio signals of identical frequency and have them occur 180 degrees out of phase with each other, they cancel out the sound. It's how some noise cancellation headphones operate. So if say a parkinson's tremor happens at 4 hz, could one theoretically set up a device that would fire at 4 hz but would be out of phase and thus eliminate the noisy shaking?

Jon

Neat idea.
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