A homemade treatment that could revolutionise Parkinson's treatment
A Spalding woman afflicted with Parkinson’s disease has got her life back after taking matters into her own hands with an innovative device that controls her symptoms.
To help combat her Parkinson’s, Sandra has invented the Eye Guide MC – a weighted device that hangs over her ear and sticks out into her peripheral vision.Around ten million people across the world have Parkinson’s disease. It has become the fastest growing neurological disease on the planet, crippling not just those diagnosed with it, but families and loved ones, too.
“You can’t move where you want to move, you can’t think the way you want to think, you want to be like other people, but you can’t be like other people.” “You have to become a new person and reinvent yourself, a person with the Parkinson’s. If that means you now have a tremor, or you can’t eat off your plate the way you used to, that’s you now. It’s who you are.”Quality of life is the mantra that inspired Sandra to take the courageous leap towards Eye Guide MC.
That was when Sandra found the formula of weight and alignment with the device, adding weight to the earpiece to level out her Parkinson’s symptoms in a way nobody had ever seen before. These messages to the brain override signals which affect balance, speech and movement, as well as the tremors people with Parkinson’s suffer with.
United Kingdom Latest News, United Kingdom Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Fire damaged home up in Nottingham up for auction after explosionThe three-bedroom home is up for auction
Read more »
BBC bosses 'eye up Sophie Ellis-Bexter to represent UK at Eurovision 2024'BBC bosses have reportedly set their sights on Sophie Ellis-Bexter to represent the UK at the Eurovision Song Contest next year. Let's face it, Murder on the Dancefloor would win every time.
Read more »
Suitcase uses artificial intelligence to guide blind people safely in JapanResearchers in Japan have developed navigation suitcases using artificial intelligence (AI) to help the visually impaired get to their destinations safely. A survey by the Japanese Ophthalmological Society shows that the total number of blind people in Japan has reached about 1.64 million.
Read more »