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Two People with Parkinson's in Public Eye- Different Expectations of Disease
Progression
 07/26/07  None.
Andy Barrie is the host of a popular morning radio program in Toronto,
Canada with more than 200,000 listeners per week. Within the last few months
he noticed changes in his walking and handwriting. He consulted with a
neurologist, who pronounced a diagnosis of Parkinson's disease. Barrie's
Parkinson's disease course is hard to predict at this point, because he is
so newly diagnosed. However, there are some educated guesses we can make
about the course his life will take under the sway of Parkinson's disease.
Please keep in mind that these are generalities.
Barrie is 62 years old, the average age of diagnosis for Parkinson's
disease. Let's contrast what he might expect with the experience of a
30-year-old who lives with PD. Ben Petrick is now battling Parkinson's
disease instead of playing professional baseball. Because he is
"young-onset" he can assume some different expectations about his future
than Barrie can.
Some general rules of thumb for predicting the course of Parkinson's disease
include the following:
Older patients tend to decline faster than younger patients. Petrick's age
may mean that he lives for more than 40 years before he is completely
bed-ridden, while Barrie is more likely to have 15 to 20 years before he
reaches that level of decline.
People who have trouble balancing and walking tend to decline faster.
Unfortunately, Barrie noticed walking challenges early on. Petrick mentions
trouble walking, but he has been diagnosed for some time now, so it is hard
to tell if this means anything.
Patients with rigidity and hypokinesia as their first symptoms tend to reach
disability and later stages of Parkinson's disease faster than average.
People who notice tremor alone as their first symptom tend not to decline as
quickly as other people living with Parkinson's disease. They also tend to
respond to levodopa over a longer period of time. As the disease progresses,
people who notice tremor as the dominant feature of Parkinson's disease also
tend to decline at a slower pace.
People who do not respond well to levodopa therapy deteriorate more rapidly
than others. Luckily, Petrick is responding well to his medications, and we
suspect that levodopa is one of them. Barrie is so newly diagnosed that he
may be taking a dopamine agonist.
Having another health condition along with Parkinson's disease, often leads
to faster degeneration.
Males tend to decline a little faster than females.
People who develop dementia tend to decline faster than those who do not.
People who developed Parkinson's disease as a consequence of a Parkin gene
mutation may experience accelerated progression of Parkinson's disease.
We hope this gives you some ideas about what you may confront as you look to
the years ahead. We also hope this information helps you refine your
strategy and gives you more happy hours, days, and years.


Rayilyn Brown
Board Member AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson's Foundation
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