For those who do not know me I am a regular poster here on HU, but I have SCA1 and not Parkinson's. SCA1 is similar to Parkinson's and the symptoms are almost identical, but SCA1 is caused by one known mutation in the DNA whereas Parkinson's seems to have many possible causes. However, I have been drawn to the posts on the Parkinson's forum because one current theory on what is common amongst all Parkinson's patients is a mutant protein (alpha-synuclein) that hangs out in the brain and causes damage. In my disease it is ATXN1 that hangs out in the brain and causes the symptoms. Anyways enough background and onto the point of this post . . . .
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I was asked to share this post on the Parkinson's forum so here it goes
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So, last August I was at work on a layover in Hartford, CT and went down to the fitness center in the hotel and hopped on the treadmill for my regular 30 minute run. Most of the hotels at which we stay for work have the LifeStyle brand of treadmill. These are narrower and slightly more bouncy than the treadmill I have at home. Anyways, I found that morning that I had to grab the handrail suddenly as my right hip became immensely stiff and I couldn't seem to get it to take a normal stride. I absolutely panicked. Luckily there was no one else in the gym to witness my strange behavior. I slowed the pace down, raised my legs higher in my stride, and I was able to continue albeit feeling slightly unbalanced the whole time. When I got home my run on my home treadmill was normal and I just decided that I had tried to run early in the morning whilst I normally run in the afternoon, and I probably shouldn't have had the 3rd glass of wine the night before. In any case time passed, and I didn't think anything more of it. Then two months ago it happened again. I powered through as there was another person in the gym, but it was agonizing with my right hip just incredibly tight. I had to slow the pace and really focus on lifting my right leg high on each step making a more rounded stride versus a shuffle stride. This time when I got home I had the same feeling on my home treadmill. Even worse I woke early one morning for work and all that day I found myself just ever so slightly off balance while walking normally which has never happened to me before. Plus I suddenly found myself needing a 1 hour nap every afternoon. I then decided no more treadmills at work because I didn't want anyone to see, but what to do? I can't have symptoms start now because I have 2 kids in college, and at the moment my wife is unemployed. I need at least 5 more years of work, and if I can't walk straight that will be a big problem. So now I'll "cut to the chase". The symptom is gone and I feel great. Do the symptoms come and go on there own? Is it psychosomatic? I don't know, but my gut tells me one of the changes I made helped ALOT. Here is what I did. First, I started walking longer and faster everyday. Second, I started taking Ubiquinol and PQQ. I felt slightly better. Third, I started snorting mannitol everyday instead of once per week. I felt a little better. Then a month later I realized that the symptoms started when I cut back my thiamine intake from 1 g to 500 mg per day so I re-upped my thiamine to 2 g per day. Overnight I felt better. I didn't need a nap, and my treadmill running felt normal, and that has lasted now for about 2 weeks so far. How long until I feel unbalanced and tired again? Who knows. I just wanted to share my story and put one more bit of anecdotal evidence out there for high dose thiamine. I'm not sure if it's just the thiamine or the combination of Ubiquinol, PQQ, snorting mannitol, AND thiamine. All I know is I feel 100% better.
Joe in NY
P.S. For those that don't know the whole story there is tons of discussion in the Parkinson's forum on high dose thiamine as a treatment for Parkinson's. It all comes from an Italian Dr. who claims to help many different illnesses with high dose thiamine including one report on SCA2. Unfortunately he has not been able to attract serious interest from researchers so the information to date is either from him or anecdotal like mine, and nothing scientific: ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articl...
P.P.S I have recently learned that Dr C. has been very sick/injured and wish him all the best and a speedy recovery!