Parkinson's Disease Tulip


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Old 03-24-2007, 11:10 AM #1
burckle burckle is offline
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Default How does your medication affect you?

How does your medication affect you?

I was diagnosed nearly 4 years ago. Initially, I was on a trial (Precept 1347) but that was discontinued and I asked to be put on another trial. I've been on this new trial for more than a year. In this new trial I was definitely getting the medication; no placebo was involved. However, I have noticed some subtle changes in me; nothing big or extensive but noticeable, at least to me. For example, prior to going on my current trial,(Stalevo) I was reluctant to drive to work on the Parkway (in this case, the Palisades Parkway heading towards New York City). Each morning, I would question my confidence level in driving on the Parkway. Invariably, I would find it low and opt to take the side roads to work. Going home in the afternoon, I would make the same decision and take the side roads. My reluctance to take the Parkway was due to speed. I found that I was not comfortable going more than 50 miles per hour. However, after beginning this new trial I found that I had no problem in going at the same speed as the other cars (65 to 70 miles per hour). This doesn't mean that I drive with reckless abandon. I'm a very safe driver, safe to the point of pure boredom but I have no problem with speed.

Another thing has happened. Once people pass a certain age they frequently remark that time is passing faster. It's really our perception of time since there is really no change. However, since going on PD medication my perception has been that time has slowed down.

I seldom gamble, if that is coming to your mind. We go to Mohegan Sun in Connecticut about once every two months, agree to lose a set amount ($100) and never exceed it. I usually quit after losing $60. I exhibit no other flamboyance since starting medication. Excessively boring behavior is not a recognized side affect of PD medication.

Has anyone else noticed changes since starting or changing medication?

All the best.

Lloyd.
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Old 03-24-2007, 01:55 PM #2
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Default stay on your toes...

...about the gambling. People who have never done so at all suddenly find themselves doing it. I have no inclination that way at all, but I wouldn't tempt the fates.

Other compulsive and destructive behaviors include sex as in chasing after people other than your spouse. Again it happens to people who would never thought they'd be susceptable. Again I don't tempt the gods (and being big and hairy provides a certain amount of safety :-) )

I do notice some obsession on the study of PD itself. It is just about all I read about and I probably put in two to four hours a day. I figure that to be a bizarre blessing of sorts. It might even lead to something important.

My meds are sinemet CR and requip and selegeline. By the way, it is probably unhealthy for me to refer to them as "my meds" like they were family members or something. But what the heck.

When they are "coming on" the first time in the morning, I have a strong urge to stretch and growl and carry on. I used the image of a butterfly tearing at his cocoon and it is apt, although if bears came in cocoons I would choose that.

On a good day, once on i stay on. But some days it is more like a roller coaster. Up and down.

Don't know if that tells you or not. Another good question though.
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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 03-26-2007, 03:59 PM #3
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Default Thanks

Thanks for your post Everett:

What I had in mind were more subtle changes but I suppose any change in personality, outlook etc is worth considering. When I was first diagnosed I spent a great deal of time on the web, looking for information on PD. I don't do that anymore, feeling that it kept me from leading a normal life. However, from my past research experience I know there is frequently value in collecting data which initially seems unrelated but which on closer scrutiny may be related. I keep going back to my paper on the Stradivarius as an example because I know it best. I asked one simple question. When did the Maunder Minimum (a cold period in the 17th and 18 th century) start and when did Stradivarius live? Search on the web indicated that they both began life one year apart (1640 and 1641) which indicated that Stradivarius very likely used wood that grew during a cold period in Europe. I guessed that the cold period resulted in slow growing wood leading to closely spaced tree rings, denser, stronger wood (all of which was correct) and enhanced tonal quality (which was also true). This doesn't mean that I'm right about the origin of the sound of the Stradivarius but, rather, here is another point that can be considered. It opens up another avenue for research one that had not been considered before

A similar approach may be made for PD. What are the characteristics of a PD sufferer? I know they differ; my PD seems to be somewhat different from yours or Rosebuds. Identify them, classify them, get a big enough data base and analyse them using something like Factor Analysis. We have the audience (the folks who read NT). I know you started something like this last year but I haven't seen anything recently. The important thing, from my viewpoint, is to collect data without any result in mind. In other words, ask the question, but don't anticipate the answer. Let the data do the talking. It may lead to something.

Time to go home.

All the best,

Lloyd

All the best,

Lloyd
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Old 03-29-2007, 10:28 PM #4
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Default Something entirely different.

Requip makes me freeze and yawn, rather insignificant side effects. I have no new compulsive urges. I am very afraid of driving on a highway, and I miss driving. I may look into Stalevo.
Did you see, and participate in the PD patient survey from Holland? It appeared here. It was a very thorough list of PD symptom questions, and the results should be interesting.

A question, Lloyd, that you may find interesting - or not....
It is completely off topic, a geology, maybe a meteorology question.
I study physical anthropology for pleasure and because I suffer from insatiable curiosity. At about 40.000 BC mankind suddenly became much more creative than before. new tools appeared, and paintings. For the previous millions of years the tools had hardly changed, and then suddenly Boom, the human brain improved, the tall Cro Magnon appeared, and homo sapiens evolved. What caused the Boom?
We were in Denmark the summer of Chernobyl.....the strawberries and cherries in the garden were twice as big as usual that summer.
If it did that to the fruit - did it have the same effect on babies' and children's brains?
Could there have been a geological event 40.000 (+ 2007) years ago that released Uranium of that magnitude into a part of the earth's atmosphere, an event that caused the Boom.
If you don't want to speculate about this I will not be at all miffed. It tickles my curiosity, you may just think it's silly. I'm an amateur, not a scholar.

birte
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Old 03-30-2007, 09:10 AM #5
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Default 40,000 years ago

Dear Birte:

Thank you for your post and your question about what might have happened some 40,000 years ago. This period of time is referred to as Stage 3 (the name varies depending upon what and where you are studying. I use the oxygen isotope chronology derived from the deep sea record). Stage 3 was characterized by fairly rapid climatic oscillations from warm to cold and back to warm again. By fairly rapid I mean something on the order of 15,000 to 20,000 years. This stage is also characterized by the migration of Cro Magnum man into Europe. He/she could have brought their technology into Europe with them. Interesting that you should mention 40,000 years because stage 3 is becoming an interval of great interest to Paleoclimatologists (people who study the climate of the past). The reason for this is rapid (in a Geological sense) climate change.

I have published a few papers on early Man in Java and Africa. Very frustrating because there are so few remains to work with. It leaves a lot of room (sometimes too much room) for speculation.

By the way are you going to the PD walk in Central Park? I believe it's in April. We will probably go.

All the best,

Lloyd
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Old 03-30-2007, 12:11 PM #6
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Default Symptom analysis

I keep a spreadsheet, up to date daily, on all my PD symptoms (well I assume they all relate to my PD). So that I can try to analyse their prominence ( I have 27 different symptoms that can appear) and to chart the possible impact of the many potential variables (the weather, drug timing, drug changes, rest periods, physical activity level, physical capability, mood etc) and to try to clearly ascertain if and how I am deteriorating. I then take a summary of this to my 6 monthly Neurologist consultation. I also give myself a score from 1 to 10 on how I feel each day, 10 being very good for me with PD and not me without PD! Mind you I am not sure I can remember how I felt without PD!!!

Interestingly since I have been taking Levodopa (3 years) & Amantadine (18 months) my motor symptoms have all improved significantly and my non motor symptoms have all got worse and new ones have appeared. I suspect I am paying a high price for my motor symptom improvements and I was interested in Steves recent post about under medicating his Sinemet. Its a balance and a highly complicated one at that. 30 minutes with your Neurologist twice a year for such a complex illness is hideously inadequate, so I do the daily symptom analysis to try to help me optimise that 30 minutes and I do an agenda (check list sounds less pompous) for the consultation.

I have established some interesting trends from the daily analysis that I do not think I would have been aware of otherwise. I have been doing this for 18months now.

I do not know if you have analysed your behaviour and symptoms changes in such daily detail, but if not it might be worth a try.

Chris
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Old 03-31-2007, 03:13 AM #7
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Default Medication

Burckle,
Good question, each of us notices small effects, and assumes it is just ourselves who are affected, but we probably all experience similar effects.
One such effect that my wife commented on only today, was that I am better in the morning before I take my meds, than when I have taken my meds and they have worn off. In other words, the "off" experienced when my meds have stopped working, is worse than the morning off, when I have not taken any meds. Anyone else noticed this?
Another one is I can always tell when my meds are about to kick in, by my legs becoming "restless". It is an uncomfortable feeling, but soon passes and I am fully "on".
After 16 years of PD, it is difficult to remember whether some things like my perception of time has altered. Now, I find time is passing very rapidly, much faster than before I was diagnosed. But life when you are retired and having a good time, after the stresses of a demanding job, is bound to seem to go faster. (We are just back after 16 days in Tahiti, very enjoyable except for the total of 40 hours in a plane, and the massive security arrangements in the USA, even though I was only in transit in LA.
They even took my fingerprints!! I had to take my shoes off and have them carefully examined, all this, and I was only passing through)
An increase in interest in gambling is often attributed to PD meds, and there I have to plead guilty. However, I seem to win more often than I lose, but I can't put that down to PD meds. LOL.
Ron
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Old 03-31-2007, 06:51 AM #8
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Default Welcome home Ron

Glad to have you back. Did your lowered stress and/or increased vitamin D continue to have positive effects?

My relationship with my meds is similar to that you describe. Definite difference between unmedicated and off, the latter being far worse.

My apologies to you and Margaret for the madmen ruining my country.

-Rick
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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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