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Adaptive deep brain stimulation provides remarkable relief for 70-year-old conductor Rand Laycock, whose Parkinson's tremors impacted his musical career until a breakthrough in treatment.
Adaptive deep brain stimulation has virtually eliminated the most debilitating motor symptoms for some Parkinson’s patients and considerably improved their lives.
A progressive neurological disorder affecting 10 million people globally, Parkinson’s can cause disruptive symptoms such as ...
Deep brain stimulation has revealed that a specific type of brain wave activity is associated with levels of anxiety in people living with Parkinson's disease, according to research led by ...
Parkinson's disease patients and advocates are marking Friday as the start of a new era for treatment of the illness as a doctors deploy a breakthrough neurological device for the first time in ...
Refining an "always on" device Doctors have offered deep brain stimulation to Parkinson’s patients since 2002. But until now, devices have only provided continuous stimulation—not the dynamic ...
After 45 years of marriage, Mark Geddes and his wife Jill were on the verge of sleeping in separate rooms due to the ...
In those nations, MAID is available to a wider universe of pained people, not just those with fewer than six months to live.
Now, scientists at the University of Sydney have made an exciting discovery: they’ve found a new brain protein linked to Parkinson’s and figured out how to modify it. This cou ...
An alternative to more invasive surgical procedures like deep brain stimulation (DBS) MRgFUS intervention is a non-surgical ...
Parkinson’s disease often starts on one side of the body, and new research shows this asymmetry influences how non-motor symptoms progress.
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