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Will someone please give detail on the below rather terrifying info on PD
as inherited, and dominant? Is this just one small subgroup of PD? PD
generally?
 
My mother, the PD person, diagnosed at 83, comes of a large and long-lived
family, most of whom I knew or know personally .. none that I know of
showed PD.
 
On Wed, 2 Mar 1994, Ralph Wright wrote:
 
> Just received the new APDA news and was encouraged with new drug studies and
> descriptions of those being tested at  Barrow Neurological Institute.  Do
> most of you get this publication?  This issue has all kinds of good news.
> New dopamine agonists:  cabergoline, ropinerole, pramipexole.  MAO blockers:
> lazebemide  COMT blockers:  tolcapone
>
> In addition, the information on hereditary genetic disorders pretty  nearly
> says that PD is inherited and is a dominant disorder.  To answer some
> questions about why it does not appear in more than one person in a family,
> the article states that upon close examination of others, mild symptoms can
> be identified which never become full blown.  Also, some people do not
> develop overt symptoms until very late in life.  This makes sense to me;  I
> can see tendencies in my sister and brother, not the second sister at this
> point.  My uncle had a very severe neurological disorder which was attributed
> to being gassed in WWI, but I wonder as I think of his rigidity and tremor.
> My father had epilepsy ?????  His sister was diagnosed with Parkinson's at
> the age of 88, two years before her death.  Again, this was probably not
> identified early on;  she spoke very softly for years and had some movement
> problems.