A third symptom of Parkinson's disease is difficulty initiating movement. A patient with Parkinson's, for instance, will have difficulty getting up from a chair or any of the movements that they have to make that are automated tends to be slowed down.
BLAIR FORD, MD: About a million Americans are affected with Parkinson's disease. The average age of onset is mid-fifties -- 55, 56. Although 10 percent of patients have the onset before the age of 40, young onset Parkinson's disease.
The medications include drugs that treat the symptoms of Parkinson's disease. The first of these was levodopa or Sinemet. There are many subsequent medications, dopamine agonists. And all of these help Parkinson's disease for many years in patients. The problem with the medications is that after five years or more, although they still continue to work, they have side effects and the side effects include wearing off problems, the dyskinesia problem. These problems are manageable with a change in medication, but they're not necessarily easy to manage. For this reason, patients often consider a neurosurgical approach. These techniques go back to the 1950s, but only in recent years have they become refined. The most effective neurosurgical treatment for Parkinson's disease at the moment is deep brain stimulation.
ANNOUNCER: Today, Parkinson's patients can be active and mobile using combination therapies and treatment options available.
And for Giacomo Vigilanza, now living 8 years with Parkinson's, it means symptoms can be eased to make living with Parkinson's manageable.