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Hi Bev,
No I haven't tried it yet, but my neuro has said that he is considering it.
I'll mention it when I see him the next time. I bashed my left wrist into my
office desk yesterday, and on the day before that, and unfortunately in the
exact same spot, too. If ya gotta do it, don't do it half-heartedly! ;-) 
- I trust his judgement completely, something I unfortunately can't say
about some of my previous ones. Sven is the first neuro I've heard say that
his first "sanity check" when selecting a course of treatment is "would I do
this if it were my own son"? 

/John 

-----Ursprungligt meddelande-----
Från: Parkinson's Information Exchange Network
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] För Beverly Bashe
Skickat: den 16 februari 2007 21:48
Till: [log in to unmask]
Ämne: Re: [SPAM] Re-introduction: John Svensk, the parkie formerly known
asJohn Qvist

John, have you tried Amantadine, the anti-flu drug, which can be used to
stop dyskenisias.  My husband, David, used it up to 3x/day depending upon
the severity of the dyskenisias until he had his DBS surgery.  The DBS
stopped the dyskenisias totally.  If you haven't tried Amandadine, consider
asking your doctor.

BTW, a dear, dear friend of mine, Ylva Lindroth is a rheumatologist in
Sweden.  She lives in Lund, but I'm not sure where her practice is.

Bev Bashe
----- Original Message -----
From: "John Svensk" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Wednesday, February 14, 2007 2:12 AM
Subject: [SPAM] Re-introduction: John Svensk, the parkie formerly known
asJohn Qvist


> Hi, my name is John Svensk, the list old-timers may remember me by the
> name
> John Qvist. I'm 38, have experienced symptoms of PD since I was 18, and
> was
> diagnosed at 26. I live in Viksjö, a suburb of Stockholm, Sweden, together
> with my lovely wife Veronica. Veronica and I got married in 2004 and
> that's
> when I changed my name; I decided to take my wife's family name. I still
> work 75% part time as a programmer at a small government agency (150
> people,
> working with different aspects of higher education). In my spare time I
> compete in what I think Americans call "bullseye pistol", slow fire
> precision shooting at paper targets with ten rings at a distance of 25 or
> 50
> yards/meters, each target gets five shots in six minutes, and a
> competition
> can have six, eight or twelve targets per competitor. Half the fun is
> producing respectable scores while dyskinetic: other competitors just
> can't
> believe their eyes, hahaha. The trick is that I have found a position that
> keeps the involuntary movements at a minimum when I concentrate and relax.
> After that, it's just a question of concentrating on the front sight,
> aiming
> carefully and squeeeeezing the trigger slowly. It is a sport that helps me
> stay sane by forcing me to focus on something else than muscle pains,
> cramps, tremors, memory problems, flailing arms and shuffling feet.
>
> Take care, see you later!
> /John
>
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