Strong yet Weak: After countless miles and... - Cure Parkinson's

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Strong yet Weak

Fredzu profile image
12 Replies

After countless miles and lifting weights, my legs are the strongest part of my body.

I can't understand why the muscles in the legs, particularly the thighs feel weak?

Is PD doing his thing?

FJohn1

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Fredzu profile image
Fredzu
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12 Replies
JohnPepper profile image
JohnPepper

Hi fjohn. When you do strenuous prolonged exercise your muscles need a day to recover, otherwise they eat themselves up, in order to find the energy they need in order to do the work you are demending of them. So they get smaller and weeker.

Niludi profile image
Niludi in reply to JohnPepper

Hi John. I have the same problem. I can't do anything even walking is difficult.it's like they just give in fandango this is from waist down.so frustrating,

soup profile image
soup

How do they feel weak? Do they look underdeveloped and weak or are they just not capable of doing what you want of them?

If your exercise has been walking and weight lifting the muscles used in those actions will have been strengthened, along with the neural pathways that govern those moves.

However, the muscles not needed in the movements will not have developed. Also, humans are excellent at adapting to situations and you may find that your body will have used muscle groups that are not usual for the exercise since the usual ones are hared to stimulate and control with Parkinson's.

A Neurophysiotherapist recently pinpointed the small muscle groups that my husband was underusing when walking and balancing and designed and exercise programme to specifically work on those.

BillDavid profile image
BillDavid

Fjohn1, , great awareness, will help you in future. Problem is that Patients are not informed about what is going on. Recommend a book by Dr Dwight McGoon MD, Parkensson's Management. Ia a Surgeon at MAYO who has the disease. Brieftly, the issue is posture., which focuses its the movement. Two muscles are dynamically opposed, extensor to straighten join, and reflexor to pull down to right angle appearance. Note, thet both pull. The PD effect is in the straitum which fails to tense the extensors. They are weak. Meanwhile, the reflexors tense up, pull tight, because they re no lomger balanced. They need to be stretched, w3hich extensors need to be strengthen. There are sets of exercisesdesigned to accompliish both. Realizing that the reflexor muscles will be pain full, I am ssure that you an notice this in tight nd leg mucles.

BillDavid

Catlou profile image
Catlou in reply to BillDavid

Do you have a site for these exercises

BillDavid profile image
BillDavid in reply to Catlou

Try a DVD The Magic of Movement Availbe through tyhe Wisc onsin Chapter APDA.'''DVD by Jane Bursch'

Bi;;David

BillDavid profile image
BillDavid in reply to Catlou

Looked up the contact. Magic of Movement Manual\DVD.

Contact Jordan M ooney, 608-345-7938. Donation greatly appreciated.

Niludi profile image
Niludi

Thank you for that.I am going to take a look at this.!

Fredzu profile image
Fredzu

After a lifetime of exercising, I find myself weak. I credit PD for unveiling this truth.

I will change.

FJohn1

Beckey profile image
Beckey

I get the same thing. Very frustrating!

ecurb profile image
ecurb

Yes... strength is not so much a question of muscle as it is of nervous influx and Parkinson's hampers that influx, hence the feeling of weakness.

Fredzu profile image
Fredzu

Thank you for your astute reflection. Who should I be?

FJohn1

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