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Jim

I am almost unable to speak.   When my stimulators died I  learned it was 
due to PD AND the DBS stimulators, without them I still had trouble speaking 
although it was not as bad.  My new stimulators make the situation different 
than it was with the older ones.  I felt like I was strangling when I tried 
to speak and  "unpleasant" doesn't' do it justice, although it is difficult 
to describe and impossible for anyone to understand what you go through. 
Now it is still unpleasant but not quite as bad although I just quit talking 
after awhile.

Parkinson's has so many ways to make life intolerable and it bothers me that 
other people cannot begin to get it.   We don't look sick and if we're not 
screaming bloody murder people think you are OK.

Ray

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From: "Jim Slattery" <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Monday, October 11, 2010 6:28 PM
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Unable to speak

>  Has anyonr had this problem? Sometimes when I am bradyinetic (slowness of 
> movement), I connot talk at all. or hardly at  all. This called anarthria. 
> It is  a  symptom of PD, and is caused by lack of muscle tone in the jaw 
> muscles,  tongue, larynx, and throat.  But we don't know why it comes 
> about.
> I would like tto ascertain how prevalent it is. For those of  you wh may 
> not have experienced it yetmm it is a most unpleasant symptom
> Dr J. Slattery PhD
>
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