Organización del Mal de Parkinson

Creado voluntariamente por una victima con este mal.

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Interview with CBS Channel 4 TV aired on Sept. 23, 2004
at 5:00 PM Health News
*
  Entrevista con el canal 4 TV el 23 de Sept. 2004
en el noticiero de las 5:00 PM
 


 

 

ARTICLES

 

  These are Articles I have written about different aspects of Parkinson's disease.

to read just click on the underlined link:

 

 

Blank Canvas

 

Love and Parkinson's Disease

 

Living with Constipation - A Parkinson's Disease Reality

 

Motherhood and Parkinson's Disease

 

Living with Parkinson's disease -Article written by Matt Nielsen from MyParkinsoninfo.com about my Parkinson's disease quest.

  

Deep Brain Stimulation (dbs) - 10 years after approval

 

Happy Mother's Day   

 

My challenges with walking, balance and posture 

 

Communication & Parkinson's Disease 




 
NY Daily News
4/03/08
 

 
Article as it appeared around the web - "Art for a Cause"
Todays's News -Herald-Colorado
Standard Journal-The upper Valley's
The Richfield Reaper-Utah
Gulf Coast Newspapers- Alabama
 
03/31/08
 

 
HEROES IN P.D.
 
 

 




ASBURY PARK PRESS
Front Page January 29, 2004

Parkinson’s victim finds artistic calling New treatment appears to have helped woman
BY LINDA DeNICOLA
Staff Writer JEFF GRANIT staff

Elena Tuero, who has Parkinson’s disease, recently discovered a skill she never knew she had — the ability to paint.
 
With medical advances in the treatment of Parkinson’s disease, Elena Tuero has gotten her speech and mobility back after many years of not having control over those functions.
 
At one point she felt so hopeless that she tried to take her life. That was about 13 years ago. Although her life with debilitating Parkinson’s disease remained a struggle, she found the will to live because she had three daughters to raise.
 
In June, after undergoing deep brain stimulation surgery, Tuero, 44, found a reason to live just for herself — painting. "Painting means so much to me. Before I had given up on me.
 
Now my kids talk about me with pride," she said. In addition to painting, the pretty Peruvian woman with high cheekbones said she cares about things she didn’t care about before the procedure, like how she looks. "I like clothes now. Before I didn’t care what I put on in the morning.
 
Now I like to look nice," she said. Tuero, who was born in Peru and came to the United States when she was 13, has lived in Freehold Township for 11 years. Her oldest daughter is married and the younger two are teenagers living at home.
 
They are both honor students, one at Freehold Borough High School and the other at the Eisenhower Middle School. Tiffany, 14, said she is amazed at what her mother can do. "I think it is so interesting that my mom, who never did anything like this, can paint these beautiful pictures (after the deep brain stimulation). My friends are all amazed, too," she said.
 
Tuero is also amazed because she did not know she had artistic ability. One day in September she picked up a paint brush and created her first painting.
 
"My first painting turned out so well. I wasn’t prepared for it myself. I couldn’t believe that I could hold a brush and I didn’t know anything about paint," the artist said. She recently took two classes and the teacher told her she was gifted and did not need lessons; she just needed to paint.
 
"I use magazines, post cards and books as a reference for ideas, but than I do it my way," she explained.
 
Tuero said she started with acrylics, but now only uses oils. "It’s a challenge to me. Oil slows me down. With acrylics, I worked too fast," she said.
 
She has not stopped painting since the day she started and now has a room full of colorful impressionist and cubist-style works that are vibrant and whimsical expressions of her artistic and hopeful nature. She works all of the time she is awake. "If I can’t sleep, I get up and paint.
 
There is no special time for painting. I do it whenever I am inspired. You’re there with yourself and your own dream," she said. According to the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Deep Brain Stimulation in the thalamus for the treatment of tremor was approved by the FDA in 1997. Subsequently, it has been found that stimulation of certain parts of the brain can relieve multiple symptoms of Parkinson’s disease.
 
Before her June 26 surgery in which surgeons implanted two batteries into her chest with wires to her brain, Tuero took as many as 30 pills a day and the shaking was so bad that she had to lie on the floor to protect herself from getting hurt. "Now, sometimes I feel like a robot, because it (the device) is constantly on, but I had gotten to the point that nothing was working," she said, adding, "I was in the late stage of Parkinson’s.
 
I had to be fed." She knew going into the surgery that it was risky and complicated. "According to my doctors, there is more of a chance that something can go wrong than there is with any other surgery. I was so scared. I had to be awake. I forced myself to remember my family and friends who were praying for me.
 
I started to sing out loud a song from my childhood in Peru so that I would not hear the drill. "God of the miracles, here we come jointly, in a procession, to witness your miracle. I sang it for about two hours like in a trance. I have so much faith in God. He always comes back and helps you," she said. Tuero was 28 when she was diagnosed with Parkinson’s.
 
The doctors attributed the early onset of the disease to being repeatedly kicked in the head by an abusive husband from the time she was 19. He eventually abandoned her; her oldest daughter went with her father and Tuero was left to raise her two younger daughters.
 
"I learned that you have to let go of things and live. I have no hostile feelings against anybody. When I was so sick, I would think of all of the good things that happened in my life," she said. The disease has progressed steadily. Eight years ago, when walking became too strenuous, she decided it was easier to use a wheelchair.
 
Then in 1996, she entered Columbia Presbyterian Hospital’s fetal cell transplant research program and went to Denver to have surgery. "I was one of the first 40 people in the program. I didn’t know if I had a placebo or the real thing. I found out about a year later that I had the cell transplant, but it didn’t work," she said.
 
On her easel is a work in progress. It is a black cat that she is painting for her daughter’s friend’s birthday. She laughed when she said that her daughter’s friends are always giving her ideas for paintings. But Tuero has many ideas of her own. Up and down the walls of her small studio are the paintings that she has done since September.
 
There is no room on the walls, so Tiffany is hanging them from a molding just below the ceiling. "I would like to begin selling some of my work. My painting supplies are so expensive," she said. Tuero recently spoke to an artist at a local gallery. "I asked him for some secrets of painting. He told me to use a finer brush for a lighter brush stroke. I found out that he used tape to make fine lines," she said, adding, "I don’t need tape. I can make fine lines now without shaking."
 
Tuero knows the Parkinson’s is still progressing in her body, but, she said, "I’m at a point in my life where I want to survive."

Sept 24, 2005 http://nwpf.com/news/news_story.asp?id=913


Asbury Park Park
http://tritown.gmnews.com/News/2004/0129/Front_Page/004.htm




                Parkinson's and Dental Care



I know for a fact that it pays to have a dental plan to cover everything that has to do with dental care (cleaning, x-rays, fillings, extracts,etc.) I have medicare cover for my Parkinson treatment but it does not cover for dental care. For years I could not afford to go for a dental check-up because I would put everyone in the office nerveous with my shaking. I used to tell them that I was (and I am truly) scared of dentist but is necessary to have your teeth up-to-date. I requested laughing gas to relax me, it did no harm to my condition but it was very expensive!

I suggest to buy a plan on which will allow to get discount and avoid regular dental fees.
I learned about this after paying hundreds of money, went on the internet and I purchased a plan. Be smart and start saving and I assure you will have a brighter smile.

No forms to be filled, save at least 25% off regular prices!






For any donations, questions, packages, etc. please send a postal mail to:
 
 
                                                                          Elena Tuero
                                                                         68 Manchester Ct.
                                                                         Apt A
                                                                         Freehold, NJ 07728 
                                                                         U.S.A.