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Amanda, I used to shake more when involved in music...singing or playing the
piano.  Weird,  just the opposite from you...wonder why.
Ray
Rayilyn Brown
Board Member AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson's Foundation
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----- Original Message -----
From: "Amanda Phillips" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Wednesday, June 20, 2007 3:37 PM
Subject: Re: barking up the wrong tree


> In a message dated 20/06/2007 07:01:44 GMT Standard Time,
> [log in to unmask]
> writes:
>
> Steve
>
> I have  long failed to understand the role of  dopamine in PD but then my
> education has been in the social, not  biological, sciences.
>
> I ask:
>
> How do they know I'm lacking  dopamine when there is no blood test to
> measure
> how much I have? (and   I don't want to wait til I die to find out)
>
> Why if lack of dopamine  caused my tremors do leads in my brain that
> constantly transmit electric  impulses from neurotransmittters in my chest
> stop them?  And how  was  DBS able to immediately straighten out my
> dystonic
> foot?   Since DBS 4 ago years I've kind of plateaued except for my voice.
>
> I  don't think the disease process is understood at all, even  though
> they
> say it is, but then what do I know?
>
> And I don't buy that   you've lost 80%  of your dopamine before you become
> symptomatic.   If lack of  it is the cause, how do you function so long
> without the  right  amount whatever that might be?
>
> Why do PD meds affect people  so differently?  A few years ago Edith Love
> and
> Mario attempted to  develop a  data base to share info.  We need something
> at
> least  nationally.
>
> Ray
>
> Rayilyn Brown
> Board Member AZNPF
> Arizona  Chapter National Parkinson's Foundation
> [log in to unmask]
> ----- Original  Message -----
> From: "Steve Rack" <[log in to unmask]>
> To:  <[log in to unmask]>
> Sent: Monday, June 18, 2007 8:31  PM
> Subject: barking up the wrong tree
>
>
>> Ray I'm going to go  out on a scary limb here. Dopamine is a
>> neuro-transmitter, one of many  identified in our brain. Highly
>> specialized chemicals these - each  with a specific task - except (it
>> seems) dopamine. Dopamine is the  transmitter of mood and movement. Or
>> is it? I don't know of another  dual purpose neuro-transmitter. Do
>> you? Perhaps there's a fundamental  reason that sinemet and the
>> agonist drugs give us strange side effects  before losing what
>> effectiveness they had and failing entirely. Have  our researchers
>> been barking up the wrong tree?
>> --
>>  Steve Rack
>>
>>  ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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>> Brattleboro  VT
>>
>
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>
>
> Why do I stop shaking when really absorbed in playing music ?  There
> isn't
> much time for brain chemistry to change - the doctors just said 'you must
> be
> mistaken -no\I'm not.
>
> How come only humans get pd ?   A matter of intelligence ?   if so, what
> role
> exactly does intelligence play in developing PD ?
>
>
>
>
>
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