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In this episode of When Life Gives You Parkinson’s, what happens when the side effects of your medication are causing more harm than the disease itself? Many people with Parkinson’s are treated with dopamine agonists, which work perfectly for thousands of people, but can cause uncontrollable, destructive behaviors for others. Among the issues are compulsive shopping, hyper-sexuality, binge eating, internet addictions, and excessive gambling. Larry, Rebecca and Niki will introduce you to two people with Parkinson’s who experienced impulse control disorder while on agonists. One of them gained 60 pounds and the other went deep in debt, lost her inhibitions, her job and nearly everything else. Thank you for listening. Add your voice to the show and leave a message for us here; https://www.speakpipe.com/WhenLifeGivesYouParkinsons Follow us, Larry & Rebecca Gifford Twitter: @ParkinsonsPod Facebook: Facebook.com/ParkinsonsPod Instagram: @parkinsonspod Follow Co-host and Producer Niki Reitmeyer Twitter: @Niki_Reitmayer Thank you to the following people featured in this Vicki Dillon – PwP, follow Vicki on Twitter and her website Ken Robinson – Vicki’s Partner Susan O’Rourke – PwP, President of Artfront Galleries in Newark, NJ Dr. Elana Clar – Neurologist, Movement Disorder Specialist, New Jersey Brain and Spine Dave Andrews – PwP, Follow Dave on Twitter Gil Thelon – PwP, Gil writes about Parkinson’s at www.shufflingeditor.com Dr. Jonathon Squires – Neurologist, Movement Disorder Specialist at Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health Special thanks to Niki Reitmayer for sharing her findings from her UBC Psych 301 Final: Impulse Control Disorders: The Strange Side Effect of Dopamine Agonists When Used to Treat Parkinson’s Disease. CREDIT: Sex, Lies and Parkinson’s Documentary 2011, Channel 4 production. Directed by Oliver Cheetham, Produced by Oliver Cheetham and James Rogan Diagnosed with Parkinson’s? You are not alone. Contact presenting partner Parkinson Canada http://www.parkinson.ca/, call toll free hotline 1-800-565-3000, on Twitter @ParkinsonCanada Thanks also to our content and promotional partners Parkinson’s IQ + You– A free, series of Parkinson’s events from the Michael J. Fox Foundation Spotlight YOPD – The only Parkinson’s organization dedicated to raising awareness for Young Onset Parkinson’s disease and funds for the Cure Parkinson’s Trust. PD Avengers - We want to help end Parkinson’s disease. Join us. World Parkinson Congress 2022 –Make plans to join us for #WPC2022 in Barcelona, Spain. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Do you consider yourself an optimist or a pessimist? 2020 has been a tough year, testing our collective positivity, but what are optimism and pessimism? Neuroscientist Dr. Travis Hodges has some answers as he studies these patterns of thinking IN RATS. Travis is a postdoctoral fellow at the Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health at UBC. We talk to Travis about his research, how he studies pessimism and optimism in adolescent rats, and ultimately what that can teach us about ourselves especially as we get older. A transcript of the episode can be found here: https://bit.ly/3kGHpGG
I will introduce you to Jeanette and Barry Pynn. They are friends of Rebecca and mine that just went through a gut-wrenching couple of years dealing with a misdiagnosis. Jeanette was a runner for her whole life. After decades of raising kids, a great marriage, and dreams of traveling and enjoying the final decades of life together, Jeanette’s gait changed. “I couldn’t flatten my foot out during a run,” she says. Doctors treated her foot issues for years through orthotics and creams. Three years later, the whole left side of her body shutdown after jumping into the Adriatic Sea. Something was definitely wrong. After months of tests, Jeanette received a diagnosis in the Parkinsonian family that she was not expecting: Multiple System Atrophy, also known as MSA. It carries similar symptoms to Parkinson’s but is more aggressive, has a quicker progression and is deadly. The Mayo Clinic reports people with MSA typically live seven to ten years after symptom onset. This is an important fact that Jeanette and Barry did not know and a vital detail that her neurologist failed to mention. Barry remembers leaving the appointment somewhat encouraged, “When we heard that it might be a relative of Parkinson's, it was actually it was a relief.” That relief quickly gave way to fear, when Jeanette was waiting for her new prescriptions at Costco surfing the internet, “I was reading up on the disease and I looked over at Barry and I said, I don't think this is very good. And he said, In what way? And I said, I think you better read this because I can't I can't really explain it to you.” After two years of wrestling with the diagnosis, the disease, and her own impending death, Jeanette and Barry reached out for help. They were in search of support, community, information, context and understanding. Rebecca and I met Barry in the Spring of 2019 at the annual meeting for the Parkinson Society of British Columbia. They were listeners to the podcast and had traveled from Bowen Island, because they read we would be at the event and they wanted to connect. We chatted, they shared their story, and soon we discovered we got along. We became fast friends. And in the back of our heads, we understood we were entering into a friendship with Jeanette, at least, was a proposition that wouldn’t likely survive the next decade. Rebecca’s cell phone rang on a Saturday morning in September last year. It was Jeanette. She had seen a new neurologist, a movement disorder specialist, at the UBC Brain Centre. “She said that it's most likely certain that I have Parkinson's disease and not MSA.” Jeanette continued through tears, “Whoever thought they'd be so happy to have Parkinson’s?” The misdiagnosis of MSA is certainly not rare. A 2015 study featured on Neurology.org examined 134 autopsied brains of people who were clinically diagnosed MSA while living and only 63% had the correct diagnosis at death. As it relates to Parkinson’s disease, a new Parkinson’s UK study shows 25% of people with Parkinson’s are misdiagnosed. A third of those were given medication for an illness they didn’t have and a 10% underwent a needless operation or procedure. Misdiagnosis is likely to continue until researchers discover reliable biomarkers to aid in the diagnosis of Parkinson’s and related disease. Feel free to comment by leaving us a voice message here: https://www.speakpipe.com/WhenLifeGivesYouParkinsons Follow me, Larry Gifford Twitter: @ParkinsonsPod Facebook: Facebook.com/ParkinsonsPod Instagram: @parkinsonspod Follow Co-host and Producer Niki Reitmeyer Twitter: @Niki_Reitmayer Thank you to our special guests: Jeanette Fisher Pynn Barry Pynn Wendy Edey, Facilitor of Hope at “Hope Studies Central” https://sites.google.com/a/ualberta.ca/hope-studies/home Dr. Jonathon Squires at Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health Dr. Stuart Factor, Director of Movement Disorders Program at Emory University School of Medicine. Rebeca Gifford Our presenting partner is Parkinson Canada http://www.parkinson.ca/ The toll free hotline 1-800-565-3000 Follow them on Twitter @ParkinsonCanada Find the new Parkinson Clinical Guideline www.parkinsonclinicalguideline.ca Thanks also to our content and promotional partners Parkinson’s IQ + You– A free, series of Parkinson’s events from the Michael J. Fox Foundation Spotlight YOPD – The only Parkinson’s organization dedicated to raising awareness for Young Onset Parkinson’s disease and funds for the Cure Parkinson’s Trust.
This is a special bonus episode of the When Life Gives You Parkinson’s podcast which we are calling “Extra Dosage.” Full episodes of Season 2 are available every other Wednesday. Every six months, I visit Dr. Jonathon Squires at UBC’s Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health. He is my neurologist and movement disorder specialist. Last week, my wife Rebecca and I sat down with him after our examination and interviewed him for the podcast. We talk about my symptom progression, my medicine regiment, DBS, biomarkers, what a cure will likely look like, stem cells, and the role stress might play in disease progression and symptom management. Even though my motor symptoms are beginning to appear on both my right and left side, in general the tremor and gate issues are stabilized year over year. I am however collecting non-motor symptoms with gusto including exhaustion, anxiety, active dreaming, insomnia, hot flashes, excessive sweating, constipation and bladder urgency. I regularly have difficulty recalling proper nouns and names or short-term instructions, weekend plans, etc. Rebecca noted to Dr. Squires that when I’m “off,” I often will be in a zone or bubble completely unaware of what’s happening around me and not hearing what she says. I am also dealing with neuropathy, dystonia and dyskinesia. In an effort to tackle a few of the more annoying symptoms, Dr. Squires increased my carbidopa-levodopa again. I am now taking five times a day, every four hours, with an optional sixth time in the middle of the night. He also added a sedative, an anti-depressant, a laxative, and Vitamin B Complex. All in – vitamins, supplements, medications and probiotics, I am swallowing more than 200 pills and capsules a week. The good news is medicine works and allows me to be a husband and ad, work, advocate and live life. Due to the increased meds and dyskinesia, we begin to talk about deep brain stimulation (DBS) with Dr. Squires, what the time line is for me before needing DBS, and what risks I may have. If you have a comment or question about the podcast, you can email us: parkinsonspod@curiouscast.ca We invite you to add your voice to the show and leave a message for us here; https://www.speakpipe.com/WhenLifeGivesYouParkinsons Follow me, Larry Gifford Twitter: @ParkinsonsPod Facebook: Facebook.com/ParkinsonsPod Instagram: @parkinsonspod Follow Co-host and Producer Niki Reitmayer Twitter: @Niki_Reitmayer Special thanks to… Dr. Jonathon Squires, Movement Disorder Specialist, Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health at University of British Columbia Rebecca Gifford, my wife. For more info on our presenting partner Parkinson Canada head to http://www.parkinson.ca/ The toll free hotline 1-800-565-3000 Or follow them on Twitter @ParkinsonCanada Thanks also to our content and promotional partners Parkinson’s IQ + You– A free, series of Parkinson’s events from the Michael J. Fox Foundation Spotlight YOPD – The only Parkinson’s organization dedicated to raising awareness for Young Onset Parkinson’s disease.
One of the exciting areas of research as it pertains to understanding Parkinson’s disease is in genetics. Dr. Matt Farrer is a Geneticist at the Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health. In 2004, he found the first genetic connection to Parkinson’s, LRRK2, and his team has sincee identified about dozen others. Dr. Farrer is the first to admit Parkinson’s is not a genetic condition, but as with everything biological there is a genetic component, “The genetic component in Parkinson’s is 27%. That’s the variability in the condition that can be attributed to a genetic cause.” He explains that most people don’t have a clear cut passing of inheritance down the family line from their parents to them, for example. It does happen sometimes, but those families are pretty rare. Dr. Farrer is looking for unequivocal answers. He wants to know what the issue is from a molecular point of view down to a single protein. Once that is determined, Farrer and his team work backs to find out what that protein is doing in a cell, what that cell is doing in a brain and how the mutation discovered leads to disease. “The whole goal is to predict and prevent,” Dr. Farrer says when asked about the chances of a cure. “Cure is a difficult term. I would like to prevent symptoms from progressing. I would like to slow down or halt the disease in people who already have a diagnosis. I would like to prevent it in subjects who may be destined, for example, because of their genetics.” In Kyoto, Dr. Farrer will be discussing new insights into the function of LRRK2 from a genetic point of view. The information may be a bit heady for folks who aren’t researchers, but if you’re interested, Dr. Farrer encourages you not to be intimidated by esoteric terms he may use. Farrer concludes, “Everyone’s coming to Kyoto anyway, it is a strange place for many, but it’s a wonderful place. Get immersed in it.” There are quite a few shout-outs to how beautiful Kyoto is. Here is a list of attractions that are listed by level of accessibility, which will help you plan which sites might be a best fit for your ability to get around the city. There is a magazine called Fokus. It’s like Sweden’s Time Magazine. Fokus’ 2018 Swede of the year in medicine was Sara Riggare. She was diagnosed with Parkinson’s in 2003. 18-years after her first symptoms first appeared. Riggare, co-chair of the Patients Advocate Committee for WPC2019, is self-described as a Parkinson’s “im”-patient. A chemical engineer by trade, she returned to school and is a PhD candidate researching digital self-care for Parkinson’s. Riggare is a proponent of making use of the possibilities of technology and the World Wide Web to benefit individuals with Parkinson’s and empower them with knowledge. “From doing that,” Riggare says, “I learned to observe my body more consciously and I think I’m more attuned to how my body works and the medication effects it.” Each episode of the WPC2019 Podcast, I’m going to check in with James Heron, the Executive Director of the Japanese-Canadian Cultural Centre to teach us a new word or phrase and help us better understand the culture so we can avoid embarrassing ourselves or offending our hosts. When you are sitting down to eat or just before you eat, Heron explains that Japanese people will say, “itadakimasu” which is comparable to “Let’s eat” or “Bon appétit.” A pronunciation can be listened to if you google these phrases online. When it comes to chop sticks, Heron suggests you practice before arriving, but if you are having troubles it is perfectly acceptable to ask for a spoon or a fork. “The important thing with chop sticks,” Heron cautions, “is not to stick them upright in your rice. That is something that is actually part of the funeral ritual.” Also, you should never pass food with your chop sticks and only use the ends of chop sticks that are not going in your mouth to take food off a shared plate. Heron also shared some notes regarding specific foods. When eating noodles, he says, it is okay to slurp. Sushi can be eaten with chopsticks, but is often a hand food. He says the Japanese do not pour soy sauce over anything and they only dip the fish side of the sushi into it, never the rice. Follow me, Larry Gifford Twitter: @ParkinsonsPod Facebook: Facebook.com/ParkinsonsPod Instagram: @parkinsonspod For more info on the World Parkinson Congress head to www.WPC2019.org Facebook: Facebook.com/WorldPDCongress/ Twitter: @WorldPDCongress YouTube: WorldPDcongress Instagram: @worldpdcongress Thank you to: Dr. Matt Farrer, Geneticist at Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health Sara Riggare, co-chair of the Patients Advocate Committee for WPC2019. She’s blogging here. James Heron, Executive Director of Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre
I’m a fairly hopeful guy. Sure, I have dark moments as we all do but, hope wins out more often than not. You might be wondering how I can have hope or be hopeful while dealing with an incurable, progressive brain disease like Parkinson’s. It’s a fair question. I don’t know that I have the answers, but in this episode I go about searching for a better understanding of the role that hope plays in the Parkinson’s community. What I discover is that hope is the one driving force that binds us all together. No matter if you are a person with Parkinson’s, a caregiver, a nurse, neurologist, physiotherapist, counselor, general practitioner or a support group leader we are all dealing in hope. Dr. Matt Farrer is a Professor of Medical Genetics and Molecular Neuroscience at Pacific Parkinson’s Research Centre at the University of British Columbia. He is agenetic researcher who hopes his work will eradicate Parkinson’s. Last year, he mapped my genome and is set to reveal the results of those tests in this episode of the podcast. I also talk to Wendy Edey, a facilitator of Hope at “Hope Studies Central” at the University of Alberta, who has studied the impacts of hope as it relates to Parkinson’s disease. She says, “When you have hope you have the capacity to think about the future and be okay.” Someone who embodies the power of hope in my eyes is the Reverend Dixie Black. The Deacon of Christ Church Cathedral in Vancouver has been living with a Parkinson’s diagnosis since 2013. “Hope means to me trust. Trust that however it goes, I’m not alone and I’ll be taken care of.” In the episode we talk about hope as a common denominator to science and spirituality, we explore the concept of hope, where to find hope, how to keep it and the role it plays in the living our best lives despite the Parkinson’s diagnosis. I hope you listen. Follow me, Larry Gifford Twitter: @ParkinsonsPod Facebook: Facebook.com/ParkinsonsPod Instagram: @parkinsonspod Follow Co-host and Producer Niki Reitmeyer Twitter: @Niki_Reitmayer Thank you toDrMatt Farrer and the staff at the Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health https://www.centreforbrainhealth.ca/. Follow the Centre for Brain Health on Twitter at @DMCBrainHealth. Wendy Edey, Facilitor of Hope at “Hope Studies Central” https://sites.google.com/a/ualberta.ca/hope-studies/home Reverend Dixie Black, Deacon of Christ Church Cathedral in Vancouver. Read and listen to her sermons here. And special thanks to my wife Rebecca Gifford. For more info on our partner Parkinson Canada head to http://www.parkinson.ca/ The toll free hotline is 1-800-565-3000 Or follow them on Twitter Parkinson Canada @ParkinsonCanada Parkinson Society BC @ParkinsonsBC Credits Dila Velazquez – Story Producer Rob Johnston – Senior Audio Producer
In this episode of When Life Gives You Parkinson’s, I talk to people behind several Parkinson’s fundraisers, learn about their experiences with the disease and meet the researchers who benefit from the funds raised. I also let you follow me into Dr. Farrer’s lab as I donate my DNA. Follow me, Larry Gifford Twitter: @ParkinsonsPod Facebook: Facebook.com/ParkinsonsPod Instagram: @parkinsonspod Follow Co-host and Producer Niki Reitmeyer Twitter: @Niki_Reitmayer Thank you to: Emily Chambers. You can check out her music at www.emilychambers.ca and follow her for future alerts about “Shake, Shake, Shake.” You Tube: https://www.youtube.com/emilychambersmusic Twitter: https://twitter.com/em_chambers Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/emilychambersmusic Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/em_chambers/ Michael Chueng. Check out his site www.teaparky.com and follow him. Twitter: https://www.instagram.com/teaparkydotcom/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TeaParky/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/teaparkydotcom/ For details on Porridge for Parkinson’s and The Pacific Parkinson’s Research Institute www.pacificparkinsons.org and follow them. Twitter: https://twitter.com/PPRI__ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PacificParkinsons/ Drs. Matthew Farrer, Silke Cresswell, and A. Jon Stoessl at the Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health https://www.centreforbrainhealth.ca/. Follow the Centre for Brain Health on Twitter at @DMCBrainHealth. Dr. Farrer’s researchers Jesse Fox and Emil Gustavason. And special thanks as always to my wife Rebecca Gifford. For more info on our partner Parkinson Canada head to http://www.parkinson.ca/ The toll free hotline is 1-800-565-3000 Or follow them on Twitter Parkinson Canada @ParkinsonCanada Parkinson Society BC @ParkinsonsBC Credits Dila Velazquez – Story Producer Rob Johnston – Senior Audio Producer
I have never been very athletic. I have never been excited by thinking about or participating in exercise. The idea of a daily workout, gym memberships, exercise classes or scheduled physical activity of any kind has always been something other people do. In August 2017, my neurologist Dr. Jonathon Squires at the Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Healthat UBC gave me a prescription for levodopa-carbidopa and a serious recommendation to exercise. Dr. Squires told me, “The only thing we know so far that slows the progression of Parkinson’s disease is physical activity. It does help control the symptoms and it does help slow the progression as far as we know. So it’s very important.” Never one to accept exercise as the answer suggested the medication might be enough. Dr. Squires rebutted, “In some ways, I feel like all the medications that we use are really just to enable people to exercise.” That’s when I realized this exercise thing is real, but I wanted to know why. I sought out Dr. A Jon Stoessl. He’s the head of Neurology at UBC, co-director of the Centre for Brain Health and one of the neurologists that has been researching the benefits of exercise for people with Parkinson’s disease. I asked if there was anything else aside from exercise I could explore. Anything. Anything? Dr. Stoessl didn’t hesitate or cushion the blow. The answer was no. He explained, “In fact, we don’t have any medical treatments that have been shown to have an impact on disease progression. So, we can treat the symptoms, but we don’t end up treating the underlying disease. Exercise may actually be the way to do that.” Research results suggest an exercise routine that consists of a combination aerobic and resistance training, four days a week, for a half-hour each day. Dr. Stoessl told me if I can still carry on a conversation while I’m working out, I’m not working out hard enough. He also offered this advice, “Do what you hate the least, because it’s no good someone prescribing you a half-hour on the treadmill every day, if you will never get on a treadmill.” So what exercise do I hate the least? In this episode of When Life Gives You Parkinson’s I explore a variety of exercises in search of one or some that I can commit to. I lace up boxing gloves for a Rock Steady Boxing class in at Impact Parkinson’s in New Westminster. Trainer Robyn Murrell takes people with Parkinson’s through circuit training, “You’ve got your foot work, hand-eye coordination, balance, cognitive, and speed. They can all relate somehow to all the different symptoms of Parkinson’s.” She notes the results are beyond the physical improvements, “It gives them a lot more confidence. I think that’s the biggest thing that I see.” Through my search for an exercise right for me, I visit Rain City Fitness to try Cross Fit with Hilary Vanderliek. She was diagnosed with Parkinson’s when she was 24, “I love Cross Fit because it’s given me the opportunity to realize my potential.” I also begin find physical activity and a way to retrain my brain how to walk again through Parkinson’s specific Physiotherapy. Naomi Casiro, BSc(Kin), MPT, Certified PWR! Is the founder of NeuroFit BC, “With Parkinson’s there something we call motor weakness. You know, your muscles are there and they’re ready to function, but the signals aren’t getting through. They’re there, they just aren’t being utilized. They really want to be woken up. Right?” Casiro says waking up those motor patterns through Physiotherapy often leads to people’s functions drastically improving. All of these experiences from the boxing ring to the Neurologist’s office have been overwhelmingly positive and encouraging. They’re all realistic and want to help me and others with Parkinson’s live our best life. Now it’s up to me to commit to being physically active, for the rest of my life, for the best chance to keep Parkinson’s from progressing faster than it wants to. Follow me, Larry Gifford Twitter: @ParkinsonsPod Facebook: Facebook.com/ParkinsonsPod Instagram: @parkinsonspod Follow Co-host and Producer Niki Reitmeyer Twitter: @Niki_Reitmayer Thank you to: My fellow partners in Parkinson’s: Sugar Jay Siddell and Hilary Vanderliek. Check out Hilary’s mental health initiative “The Thought Project.” Robyn Murrell and Impact Parkinson’s in New Westminster, British Columbia. Follow them on Facebookand Twitter @ImpactParkinson. Rain City Fitnesson Instagram @raincityathlsand Cross Fit trainer Liz Carrier. Naomi Casiro and NeuroFit BC. On Facebook https://www.facebook.com/NeuroFitBC/and YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5kLaXx3PMslzSfxVcieM2A Drs. Jonathon Squire and A. Jon Stoessl at the Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health https://www.centreforbrainhealth.ca/. Follow the Centre for Brain Health on Twitter at @DMCBrainHealth. And my wife Rebecca Gifford For more info on our partner Parkinson Canada head to http://www.parkinson.ca/ The toll free hotline is 1-800-565-3000 Or follow them on Twitter Parkinson Canada @ParkinsonCanada Parkinson Society BC @ParkinsonsBC Credits Dila Velazquez – Story Producer Rob Johnston – Senior Audio Producer
This is a special bonus episode of When Life Gives You Parkinson’s which we are calling “Extra Dosage.” Full episodes will be release every other Wednesday. In between, Niki and I will share new information, original interviews and extra material that provide more context to topics raised in the previous episodes of the podcast. We’ll also answer your questions. Feel free to write us with questions at parkinsonspod@curiouscast.ca. From the time my hand started to tremor to the time of my Parkinson’s diagnosis I’d seen my family physician three times, been poked, pushed, pulled and tested by two neurologists and some residents, had blood tests, an ultra sound, an MRI, lost many hours in doctor office waiting rooms and chewed my fingernails to the quick – a couple of times. It was eight months of not knowing. And I was lucky. Some people are waiting years. It is not as if putting a label on my strange symptoms made it better or even go away, but for me it is just a relief to know it is something. But why is Parkinson’s disease so hard to diagnose? In this Extra Dosage episode of When Life Gives You Parkinson’s, I talk to my neurologist and pepper him with questions that I’ve never asked him before. Why is it hard to diagnose? What would he do if he was diagnosed? Is there really a gut health connection? What should I ask in my check-ups? What’s he looking for? And more. I find Dr. Jonathon Squires frank, funny, authentic, and accessible. I hope you do to. Meanwhile, Niki sits down with a Sandie Jones and Grace Ferrari at Parkinson Canada. Sandy pre-dates the Parkinson wonder drug levodopa. She shares her experience with Parkinson’s as a nurse in the early 1960’s. After hearing what it was like, I’ll likely never complain about having to take my pills so often. Follow me, Larry Gifford Twitter: @ParkinsonsPod Facebook: Facebook.com/ParkinsonsPod Instagram: @parkinsonspod Follow Co-host and Producer Niki Reitmeyer Twitter: @Niki_Reitmayer I see Dr. Jonathon Squires at the Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health at UBC. You can find more information about the centre here https://www.centreforbrainhealth.ca/ For more info on our partner Parkinson Canada head to http://www.parkinson.ca/ The toll free hotline mentioned in this episode is 1-800-565-3000 Or follow them on Twitter Parkinson Canada @ParkinsonCanada Parkinson Society BC @ParkinsonsBC Credits Dila Velazquez - Story Producer Rob Johnston - Senior Audio Producer
It was an honour to interview this week’s guest. His research on the effects of exercise within Parkinson’s patients is truly amazing. What’s really inspiring in this episode is how a chance encounter with a Parkinson's patient sparked a new passion that changed him from a "jock" and to pursuing life-changing research. In this episode, you will learn how he leveraged his passion to overcome a number of challenges and he is now working to improve the quality of life for Parkinson’s patients. He is a PhD student at the Pacific Parkinson’s Research Centre and the Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health at the University of British Columbia. Ladies and Gentlemen, Matt Sacheli. Get all the notes and links at http://www.douglasjfoley.com/4.