Medtronic spacer
Medtronic
Medtronic
Medtronic Home > Information for Physicians > Parkinson's disease > Patient Experience
  Parkinson's disease
 

Therapy Information

 

Product information

 

Activa procedure solution

 

Clinical results

 

Implanting centers in the UK

 

Literature summary

 

Patient selection

 

Important safety information

 

Education and Training

 

Patient Experience

Medtronic
Medtronic

Medtronic
Medtronic

Patient Experience

The following article recounts the experience of one patient who is using ActivaŽ Parkinson's Control Therapy to suppress some of the movement-related symptoms of Parkinson's disease. Medtronic invited this patient to share his story candidly. As you read it, please bear in mind that the experiences are specific to this particular patient. Results vary; not every response is the same.

Mike Robins

Improving the quality of life.Wiping away a grown man's tears.

Mike Robins could be forgiven for dismissing the diagnostic skills of the medical profession in the UK out of hand. Over a period of two years he consulted GPs, psychologists, stress councilors, psychiatrists, alternative medical practitioners and chiropractors for what started as a slight twitch in his shoulder and developed into a noticeable tremor in his right arm and leg. Each specialist diagnosed 'stress' and advised a 'change in life-style'.

It was only when Mike was recovering in a Shanghai hospital, following an appendectomy, that a Chinese neurologist correctly suggested that he was suffering from Parkinson's Disease.

The 56-year-old resident of England's Southampton spent the first twenty years of his working life at sea, five of them in command of merchant ships. A period as a college lecturer followed. For the past ten years he has built a marine electronics start-up into an internationally recognized business. To describe Mike as naturally gregarious is an understatement. But, in the period just before the implant was fitted which now controls his tremor, life had become thoroughly miserable.

"It really knocked the stuffing out of me. I lost all my confidence. I would cry spontaneously. From the moment I woke I just wanted the day to be over with so I could crawl back into bed and go to sleep again. My life was thoroughly miserable", he recalls.

Treatment like diagnosis was hard to obtain: drugs did not work or produced unpleasant and weird side effects.

Mike can vividly remember the moment, during the operation, when his life changed for the better.

"I was required to be awake during the operation at the Radcliffe Infirmary in Oxford. Tipu Aziz, the neuro-surgeon, was inserting a probe about twelve centimeters into my brain to implant a neurostimulator. I was shaking: ninety per cent was tremor, the rest was pure terror".

"It was necessary to tell the surgical team what I was feeling and what I was seeing as the probe passed certain critical areas deep in my brain. I remember the surgeon saying "a millimeter to go.

"As he hit the spot that he had been aiming for, I was suddenly as steady as a rock. My right arm and leg felt light enough to float. The relief. I wanted to laugh. It was an incredible feeling."

Within twelve hours, Mike Robins was walking about: within four days he was involved in a campaign to enable other people to receive the same treatment.

"Without the operation, in a very short time I would have been taken to an old folks home and sat down in a chair where I would have shook uncontrollably throughout each day and been pitied. Nobody would want to talk to me because I was a bit of an embarrassment. The implant operation has proved a miracle."



back
 

top
 

Privacy Statement Terms of Use Medtronic Footer