Hello to all, I hope everyone is doing well. I have a question, and need some advice.
I had an interview with a potential client, where the mother whom is 70 has Parkinson's Disease, and she specifically asked me about PD and Depression and Severe Anxiety. I do know that about 40 million of the 100 million people diagnosed with PD do get depression and anxiety.
Does anyone out there have a clinical answer for this.
I understand that they need to be concerned about it with PD because
Anxiety is a major determinant of quality of life in people with PD even when accounting for
The presence of depression; and
The severity of the movement disorder.
ALSO,
As a caregiver, what are the ways or the best ways people have found to deal with severe anxiety. From my telephone call with the daughter, it sounds like her tremors are pretty bad, and they haven't found the magic medication for these to stop. Advice please?
Thanks so much.
6 Answers
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All of this is very complex, and as many of us are caregivers to many of these loving clients, we want to be as well educated as we can be to provide the family assistance.
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Again we see serotonin in the spotlight, but it is probably more complicated.
PD is linked less strongly to the other two, so a person with PD can still live a good life despite the problems that go along with the disease. I would not be surprised, however, if people with PD may have damage in some of the other areas of the brain, such as what we see with Lewey Body dementia. I also wouldn't be surprised if the losses that go along with advancing PD can themselves cause anxiety and depression.
From what I've read about Robin Williams, he has suffered from depression for a long time. It made me wonder if he had a problem too many people suffer from -- not being able to feel happy. I knew a teenage boy who was so handsome and always trying to make others happy who had the problem. He said he never could be happy, no matter how he tried. He finally hung himself, because his life was so painful to him. It was a tragedy that probably happened because his brain was not geared to letting him feel pleasure or happiness. And I wonder if many comedians suffer from this -- always trying to act to make others happy, but never feeling it themselves.
We never appreciate what our brains do for us until there is a problem. Not being able to feel happy to me seems like it would be the worst one.