What causes Parkinson's disease?

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  • Опубликовано: 22 окт 2024

Комментарии • 88

  • @karenmoore5620
    @karenmoore5620 Год назад +19

    I wonder if trauma to the head and years and years of depression an cause this? My mom has Parkinsons and I wonder if this could have caused it

    • @yadd2610
      @yadd2610 Год назад

      Yup mate. I can tell you what leads to that, it's like (something happens in your life)->leading to you getting stuck in a state-> because of this your physical functioning stretches->after a while it breaks-> this is where Parkinsons has already done. Now the symptoms start to appear.
      Basically... The decisions you take will lead you to bad zones(like regret, vengeful, etc) and that changes your physical functioning. Hence you can see good people or armymen or veterans suffering from this. Parkinsons usually happens to good people. You can rarely see bad people get Parkinsons.
      Our abstract (decisions etc) is strongly connected to our concrete (physical bodies). Hence the origin of religions(they set a rule what needs to be done and what not)
      Damn... How long have humans come.

  • @TimeMaster1976
    @TimeMaster1976 Год назад +17

    Someone, somewhere knows. There is no money in a cure.

  • @captainamerica9028
    @captainamerica9028 29 дней назад +4

    Years ago I researched Parkinson's and when my Mother started getting it, fortunately I was able to reverse it. It's caused by an ATP7B copper binding gene defect that causes a toxic buildup of free copper. People born with a mutation of this defective gene will live a relatively normal life while the free copper gradually builds. They might have T2 insulin resistance or high BP caused by the elevated free copper, but their brain is protected by the blood brain barrier BBB. As people age their BBB deteriorates and becomes permeable, allowing the free copper to enter the brain. Why dopamine is low is because the free copper depletes the brain of zinc and zinc is needed for neurotransmitter production, binding and uptake. Copper is an antagonist to zinc and when one gets high, the other gets low. B5 is another antagonist to copper, and it's a proven fact that the brains of Parkinson''s patients are extremely deficient in B5 and zinc, along with other things that the free copper antagonizes. Free copper and the ATP7B gene are a relatively new discovery, found after mapping the genome. People with Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, ALS, Tourette's, T2 diabetes, and Schizophrenia have been tested and the majority all had an elevated free copper. If you wanna reverse it, you simply need to start chelating the free copper. The safest way to do it is with 50mg of zinc picolinate one hour before meals, 3 times per day. 500 mg of B5 twice a day, 1000 mg vit C 5 times per day, 1 mg molybdenum 2 times a day, 500 mg MSN 2 times per day, manganese 8 mg per day, Curcumin 500 mg 2 times per day, along with daily vitamin A and E. In 9-12 months your free copper level will be brought to a non toxic level. The test for free copper at the lab corp in Oklahoma that I use is 279071, but the # may differ in your lab or state. This is called a direct measurement of free copper and is not a serum copper test. This test measures the amount of toxic free copper that is unbound to Ceruloplasmin protein. A normal free copper should be 0-10 mcg/dl. A usage patent was applied for with the FDA to treat Parkinson's and the other free copper disorders with ammonium tetrathiomolybdate TM, but the FDA refused to approve it. They did approve it for Wilson's disease though, so try and find a doctor that will change your diagnosis to neurological Wilson's disease if your free copper test shows it's elevated. TM is much faster at decoppering and will bring it to a non toxic level in 8 weeks. TM will have to be compounded by a compounding pharmacist. Id you can't get TM, just use the things I mentioned, zinc, B5 etc. Don't let them give you the old copper chelating drug, penacillimine, because it doesn't bind the free copper. It aggressively mobilizes the free copper from tissues and floods the brain with massive amounts of this stuff, leaving about half the people in a vegetative state. Zinc and the other things are primers for metallothionein in intestinal cells, which will bind the free copper in the intestines. The intestinal cells have an 8 day turnover and new ones are made then the old copper laden cells will slough off in the stool and the process starts all over. As for Curcumin, it acts as a sort of gene therapy and will partially correct an ATP7B gene defect and help you evacuate the free copper through the bile duct as the body is suppose to do. Other things you need to do is check your water pipes to make sure they are not copper, and also check your multi vitamin to make sure it doesn't contain copper. Your elevated free copper might not be due to an ATP7B gene defect and could be due to copper coming from vitamins and drinking water. Also have your methylmalonic acid tested, which will show your tissue level of B12. When B12 gets low at the tissue level, it elevated M acid and wreaks havoc on the body and brain. It dissolves myelin sheaths from nerves and it also blocks enzymes in the urea cycle that convert ammonia to urea, causing a high ammonia and ammonia is a neurotoxin. A low B12 at the tissue level will cause tremors etc. that will mimic Parkinson's. A serum B12 test won't suffice, you must have a methylmalonic acid test to see what the tissue levels are.

    • @Truth.4.All.
      @Truth.4.All. 24 дня назад

      Thanks for sharing ❤

    • @hanay5543
      @hanay5543 23 дня назад

      Can i please contact u

    • @hanay5543
      @hanay5543 23 дня назад

      My grandmother is going through parkisnson

    • @hanay5543
      @hanay5543 23 дня назад

      Plzzz i need to have more info do you have contact info

  • @nathanvanderbelt3639
    @nathanvanderbelt3639 2 года назад +3

    I love my new INBRIJA inhaler. Anytime I feel an off period I just use my inhaler and I’m back on within minutes of using it.

  • @Da_brianceart
    @Da_brianceart Год назад +7

    He was asking direct questions as if he had understood the condition and brushing through while we are clueless 🤣☺️

    • @AG-ld6rv
      @AG-ld6rv 7 месяцев назад +1

      Well, Parkinson's is mostly the death of certain neurons that deal with dopamine and motor skills. Like he said in the video, we basically have no idea why it happens. A person's neurons just start dying off. We treat the symptoms caused e.g. helping reduce your tremor, but even with treatment, you pretty much die once about 80% of these neurons die. There is no known way to reduce the speed of neuronal death or reverse it or prevent it. I find this topic interesting, because a lot of people feel our modern science answers all the questions with concrete information and facts. However, when it comes to neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson's, we just have no idea of the cause. There's all sorts of odd correlations and things we observe happening, but we know so little that we cannot halt the progress of the disease.

    • @sdilluminatigrandfounder3807
      @sdilluminatigrandfounder3807 3 месяца назад

      @@AG-ld6rv That is what it is. The question was WHY people get it. What causes the damage that reduces dopamine.

    • @AG-ld6rv
      @AG-ld6rv 3 месяца назад +1

      @@sdilluminatigrandfounder3807 The cause is unknown. You're asking the same question every medical doctor and Parkinson's researcher is asking. For whatever reason, some people's dopamine-related neurons just start dying. No known cause + no known treatment to halt the progression.

    • @sdilluminatigrandfounder3807
      @sdilluminatigrandfounder3807 3 месяца назад

      @@AG-ld6rv The video said it was answering that question. THAT is what my comment was about. SMDH

    • @AG-ld6rv
      @AG-ld6rv 3 месяца назад +1

      @@sdilluminatigrandfounder3807 Yeah, the answer is in the video: We have no idea why. Like I said a long time ago, this is a good lesson to hear, because a lot of people view science as having figured everything out.
      (1) Physics -- Einstein's equations. Uh oh, galaxies are actually spinning so fast that, using our physics equations, they should fling apart. This is an active area of research is astronomy and physics.
      (2) Biology - We all read about cells in middle school. Sounds pretty concrete. Oh wow, a paper from 3 weeks ago discusses that an incredibly simple bacterium has a protein in it unknown until now. Guess how much we don't know about the various types of human cells we study? Basically, we're in the same boat. There are tons of activities in human cells that confuse us. There are even tons of things in our cells we still don't know about.
      (3) Medicine - We all know that you get sick and take some medicine. Sounds great. Uh oh, we actually have no way to treat Parkinson's among hundreds of other diseases. Further, a lot of medication is based on simple statistics. You'd think we know how an SSRI treats depression, but if you ask a medical researchers, the mechanism of action of one is unknown (It isn't thought to relate to the serotonin reuptake inhibition that defines that class of serotonin reuptake inhibitors i.e. SSRIs.)
      (5) Philosophy - a person might think the smartest minds have settled on things like grand ethical philosophies. You take an intro to ethics, and the first thing they do is sketch out an outline about how everyone argues over things, how every nice theory has counterexamples where a person decides to do something that feels horrible when using a certain theory, and so on. It even opens up with a vague argument, not really that pleasing, that ethics is only thought to exist just because a large number of humans adhere to similar principles across all time and all cultures. Well, that's an ad populum fallacy...
      (6) Mathematics - Surely, the math we all use underpinning so much of our progress everywhere in engineering and physics is placed on solid grounds. Right? Uh oh, let's talk about infinity. Just search up the axiom of choice. It is involved in a large number of proofs, and it is by far the most controversial thing assumed in our mathematics since it's not really common sense, yet it is assumed true at will. The topic is so hairy that some mathematicians try to reprove important mathematical results without that axiom. Sometimes, they can do it (with a much more complex proof), but often, we haven't been able to produce a similar proof yet. Or look up Gödel's incompleteness theorems... it isn't the most reassuring conclusion, but it is proven true. It basically says that there are some true things in math that our mathematical systems literally can never prove true. Yikes.
      (7) History - Oh come on, don't we know that... especially when it comes to more recent events? Well, it turns out that science has a lot of work to do, and in many (very important cases), there is ongoing argument about what happened. The view we gain learning some simple history in school is not the same view a historian by trade has when it comes to history. In many cases, we can't even agree on how a person from the 1800s perished let alone have concrete information about why an entire nation did something, how exactly they did it, and what exact impact their choices had. Plus, the winners write history.
      More or less, the further you research topics, the more you understand that science, philosophy, and math have a tremendous amount of work needed before we can close up shop and fire all researchers and thinkers.

  • @DouglasHitchon
    @DouglasHitchon 2 месяца назад

    I believe I’ve had Parkinson’s for decades before I was advised I had it..I personally think a stress related breakdown in my early years started it progressing..then many years later I had a memory recall incident that totally broke me when I realised it was true..that was when my symptoms became far more evident..whether I’m right in my instance or not I don’t know but I can recall the tremors way back in my early years but they stayed at a very manageable stage until years later as I said with my major memory recall..now it’s progressing much more rapidly.

    • @egar6489
      @egar6489 2 месяца назад

      What kind of stress do u mean?

  • @spacecatboy2962
    @spacecatboy2962 Год назад

    does the oxygen pressure treatment help them

  • @breatheasy333
    @breatheasy333 4 месяца назад

    Heard it’s also genetically carried and can get environmentally turned on.
    over wearing physical activity such as being a massage therapist could - along with life long stressors could have been what turned Parkinson’s on with my abuelita.
    Thanks for the vid

  • @jeffreyg8275
    @jeffreyg8275 2 года назад +3

    Is it related to altzhimers? I heard the word plack

    • @besmart2350
      @besmart2350 Год назад

      I wander the same thing

    • @TomeRodrigo
      @TomeRodrigo 2 месяца назад

      Alzheimers have amyloid plaque. Parkinson's is more like an alpha-synuclein protein folded in a disordered way. These incorrectly constructed versions of alpha-synuclein clump together in aggregates that are called 'Lewy bodies'.

  • @marks2696
    @marks2696 2 года назад +1

    How do I get in contact with you?

  • @ShroomedMisterCraft
    @ShroomedMisterCraft Год назад

    I was in a month long coma from psychedelic mushrooms hallucinating. I've been losing my memory and having seizures ever since. It keeps getting worse. Could that have triggered pd?

    • @jigsaw4253
      @jigsaw4253 Год назад +2

      How tf does that happen? How many grams did u take? I need answers. Tell me the story

    • @realhyrulesoverlord
      @realhyrulesoverlord 11 месяцев назад

      We need answers

    • @jigsaw4253
      @jigsaw4253 11 месяцев назад

      @@realhyrulesoverlord He's full of shit bro.

  • @audreythurman3496
    @audreythurman3496 4 месяца назад

    But what causes the loss of dopamine, my mom was just diagnosed with his she's unable to walk one day she was fine the next her legs gave out and she can't.

    • @sdilluminatigrandfounder3807
      @sdilluminatigrandfounder3807 3 месяца назад

      Brain damage causes it. What they did not answer is what triggers the brain damage, or the build up of the plaques he was talking about.

  • @AnhKhoaa-vw2lt
    @AnhKhoaa-vw2lt 2 года назад +35

    How Muhammad Ali fight with this disease shown how great he is

    • @purpleperc1012
      @purpleperc1012 2 года назад

      What 😂

    • @marcialzetterfeldt5196
      @marcialzetterfeldt5196 2 года назад +9

      @@purpleperc1012 Muhammad Ali fought Larry Holmes When he had parkinsons at the age of 39

    • @elainecassell1465
      @elainecassell1465 2 года назад

      On

    • @Mannysmm
      @Mannysmm 2 года назад +3

      @@purpleperc1012 shush

    • @daju.9786
      @daju.9786 Год назад

      On a scale of 1-10, I will rate you 13 in terms of how stupid you are.

  • @wread1982
    @wread1982 3 месяца назад

    Pesticides and fungicides in foods

  • @333pinkfeather
    @333pinkfeather Год назад +1

    Ohhh okay so the crustifcation of the peniel glad crystal...purification. to See balance again..neat..tha know I somehow knew this and was hoping to find . I have a rock that's a crystal I side but has a plaque like stone substance stuck on it.i use it to explain how it works in the brain .too cool thankyou so much

  • @foldedsniper878
    @foldedsniper878 Год назад

    So are they not as happy too

  • @michaelcook8550
    @michaelcook8550 2 года назад +4

    This dude is informal, but he uses a lot of filler words.

  • @keitymarley733
    @keitymarley733 9 месяцев назад +1

    Parkinson disease is a very terrible illness, my Dad suffered from it for 19 years until we finally got a help and a medicine from Dr Madida that truly works that helped treat, cure and reversed all his symptoms completely💯…My Dad is well again🎉🎉

    • @laurenclark1480
      @laurenclark1480 7 месяцев назад +1

      What med please?

    • @TomeRodrigo
      @TomeRodrigo 2 месяца назад

      Scammer.

    • @keitymarley733
      @keitymarley733 2 месяца назад

      @@TomeRodrigo who scammed you asshole?? I don’t know why you would just come to someone post uninvited and being saying shit. You are an hypocrite, get lost fool.

    • @keitymarley733
      @keitymarley733 2 месяца назад

      @@TomeRodrigo What is the meaning of this nonsense, who invited you here dumb head??

    • @hanay5543
      @hanay5543 23 дня назад

      What medicine???

  • @sneapyy
    @sneapyy Год назад +3

    Whos watching this after ali died 😢

    • @dreamer5687
      @dreamer5687 Год назад

      Ali??

    • @prashantchandel9238
      @prashantchandel9238 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@dreamer5687I don't know in which world you live, seriously,you don't know ali
      Remember whenever a stranger ask you about ali,the first name in your mind should be "THE GREATEST MUHAMMAD ALI"
      no hate,just being hurt by you lack of knowledge ❤❤❤

  • @garysewell5194
    @garysewell5194 5 месяцев назад +1

    I believe that prolonged depression is a major factor for greater periods of time.

  • @lizzynatir9083
    @lizzynatir9083 10 месяцев назад

    Great things Dr Madida on RUclips has being doing for mankind, I undergo his Parkinson disease treatment plan for weeks and my Parkinson Disease was completely reversed...

  • @lrb05131963
    @lrb05131963 3 года назад +1

    Can a husband feed his wife some poison or foods that can cause lost of Dopamine

    • @iusepc2317
      @iusepc2317 2 года назад +14

      wtf-

    • @audreyhockeyy
      @audreyhockeyy 2 года назад +3

      He could be feeding you a antipsychotic without your knowledge

    • @kbyoungblood6948
      @kbyoungblood6948 2 года назад +4

      This question is too specific, It scares me!

    • @besmart2350
      @besmart2350 Год назад

      You have a delusion of persecution. Please contact psychiatrists and neurologists

    • @333pinkfeather
      @333pinkfeather Год назад

      @@audreyhockeyy like chlorazapam?? Maybe! Woow