Social media and me – Rheumatologist shares his experience

This is a presentation by Dr. Ronan Kavanagh, Rheumatologist, Blogger, and Social Media in Healthcare advocate at Western Rheumatology, Galway, Ireland. His website is at ronankavanagh.wordpress.com

Socmed and me

View more presentations from Ronan Kavanagh

Comments from Twitter:

Dr. Ronan Kavanagh @RonanTKavanagh: @DrVes Thanks! You may notice I pinched a slide idea of two from you. Thanks for that too...

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Blood Management Summit and App – Transfuse 2012

Announcement: Blood Management Summit - Transfuse 2012 will be held on April 19-20, 2012 at the JW Marriott in Scottsdale, Arizona.

This conference has been developed with collaboration between Mayo Clinic and Hartford Hospital, building upon the success of three previous national conferences. "Transfuse 2012" is a unique multi-disciplinary conference focused on exploring the current state-of-the-art techniques and programs to reduce allogeneic blood utilization in hospitals. This international conference will feature national and international blood management experts from China, New Zealand and Australia along with a unique iPad app launch and one-of-a-kind hands-on animal lab.

Mayo Clinic's Mark H. Ereth, M.D. introduces the conference and the iPad app in this 3-minute video:

This conference is designed for all physicians, including surgeons and anesthesiologists, perfusionists, nurses and leaders in quality and patient safety. The conference is a CME accredited activity for physicians, nurses and perfusionists.

The Conference Website is: http://www.mayo.edu/cme/anesthesiology-2012r780

One of the course directors is Dr. Ajay Kumar, Chief of Division of Hospital Medicine at Hartford Hospital, and a good friend of mine. Another friend from the time I worked at Cleveland Clinic is also on faculty, Dr. Moises Auron.

It should be a great conference. Go check it out.

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Egg shells to protect eggs

Happy Easter everyone! As the bank holiday draws near we thought we’d leave you with a little seasonal news about how egg shells are being investigated as a new material for, um, protecting eggs. I think the phrase here is meta.

Eggs!

So yes, egg shells surround the egg, either protecting a growing chick embryo or the makings of a yummy breakfast, but they aren’t all that great. After all, we don’t buy eggs and just chuck them in our shopping bags without the protection of an egg box do we? Egg shells are brittle – they’re mainly calcium carbonate held together with a protein matrix, but it’s the starch within the shells that’s relevant for our tale today. The University of Leicester, and more particularly Andrew Abbott’s group of chemists, are now investigating how to extract the glycosaminoglycans in the shells and turn them into starch-based plastics.

Abbott has already created starch based plastics using salts as plasticisers that break up the hydrogen bonding between the glucose rings. So it’s likely that something similar will be used on the extracted glycosaminoglycans.

And why egg shells? Well, because the food industry uses millions of eggs and creates tonnes and tonnes of waste in the form of egg shells. Leicester firm Just Egg, for example, sends about 480 tonnes of egg shells to landfill every year, at a cost of around £30,000. So saving money and reducing oil based plastic consumption sounds like a doubly good idea. The ultimate in recycling – turning eggs’ protective shells into protective packaging for eggs.

Mumble mumble, reborn, mumble mumble…

Laura Howes


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The April edition of the CW podcast is now online

In the April podcast, we’re tackling the big questions: How do you make a diamond out of an onion? What’s a ’salt burst’? Where did Lewis and Clark go to the toilet? What does Patrick sound like? The answers are all here in the podcast. Plus, we’ve got Michael Hamblin on the lighter way to treat disease with photodynamic therapy, and Volker Hessel discusses the future of flow. Your auditory edification awaits…

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Science writer internship

Interns wanted

We are looking for a student member to join us this summer for a science writing internship.  The selected candidate will gain experience as a science journalist on both Chemistry World and Education in Chemistry and will receive a hands-on introduction to the complete editorial process from picking what news to report, through writing and editing, right up to final web and print publication.

This eight-week position is supported by the Marriott Bequest Trust with a bursary of £1750. Applicants should have an interest in science communication, demonstrate an enthusiasm for writing and are also (probably) coming towards the end of a chemical science undergraduate degree or postgraduate course. Visit the RSC recruitment pages to find out more and/or apply.

Past interns Josh Howgego and Akshat Rathi have recently confirmed they’ll be heading for The Times Higher and The Economist for some work experience this summer so it really is a once in a life time opportunity. We are looking forward to hearing from you!

Bibiana Campos-Seijo

PS: The deadline is 25 May

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Jordan Eagles Blood Medium

LFC Jordan Eagles 2008

Hemoglyphs Jordan Eagles 2011

Hemoglyphs Jordan Eagles 2011

URBCLF Jordan Eagles 2012

BARC Jordan Eagles 2010

IF FK3 Jordan Eagels 2008

It’s blood.  NYC artist, Jordan Eagles, works solely with gallons upon gallons of blood obtained from a slaughterhouse.  By manipulating the blood through heating, burning, aging, mixing with copper, adding foreign materials, and then encasing it in plexiglass and UV resin, Jordan is able to capture an array of organic designs.  His large pieces are uncomfortably beautiful, especially when lit, the blood seems to glow against the clean white walls of a gallery.

View all of Jordan Eagles’ work at jordaneagles.com.

 

Current and upcoming shows of Jordan Eagles:

April 5, 2012 – May 25, 2012
HAEMOSCURO–SOLO EXHIBITION

Mark Wolfe Contemporary Art
1 Sutter Street, Suite 300  San Francisco, CA 94104

http://www.wolfecontemporary.com

 

May 3, 2012 – May 6, 2012
PULSE NEW YORK–IMPULSE (SOLO)
The Metropolitan Pavilion
125 West 18th Street Chelsea, New York, NY 10011
Causey Contemporary

http://www.pulse-art.com
http://www.causeycontemporary.com

 

February 1, 2013 – July 2, 2013
THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE: VAMPIRES IN ART & NATURE
Everhart Museum
1901 Mulberry Street
Scranton, PA 18510-2390
570-346-7186

http://www.everhart-museum.org

 

[spotted by Michael Goodman]

 

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Calavera

Santiago Nicola De Jager

Snowflake Nicola De Jager

Felizita Nicola De Jager

Rose Nicola De Jager

Jesus-Ernesto Nicola De Jager

Frida Nicola De Jager

Cape Town-based artist, Nicola De Jager hand embroiders Day of the Dead skulls with a bit of a twist. She wants to change society’s view on skulls and their association with the macabre by making them bright, colorful, and beautiful. Starting her stitching with the eyes and then moving on to the colors, nose, mouth, etc., each skull begins to take on a personality and slowly develops into the finished piece. Nicola says, “I embrace embroidery as an art form as there is something powerful about creating something so intimate. The use of thread as a medium and embroidering as the application grounds me and slows me down to become more aware and present.”

I think she definitely succeeded in making the macabre beautiful. These skulls certainly make me happy.

View more of Nicola’s embroidered skulls at calavera.za!

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Yet Cut Breath – Hinges

Hinges Yet Cut Breath

Hinges Yet Cut Breath

Hinges Yet Cut Breath shirts

Brooklyn band, Yet Cut Breath, headed up by Anna Morsett, put out an album in fall of 2010 with some rad anatomical art to back up the title Hinges. A pretty perfect match if you ask me. And they produced a sweet anatomical shirt to boot, with art by the talented Kate Hanrahan. Listen on spotify, buy a shirt/album, and be sure to watch their hilarious kickstarter video (seriously, it’s really funny (and kudos on making your goal, guys!)).

 

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SHOK-1?s Danse Macabre

Danse Macabre SHOK-1 Meeting of Styles at The Studio Holloway in London

Danse Macabre SHOK-1 Meeting of Styles at The Studio Holloway in London
Photo by Urban Escapades

Danse Macabre SHOK-1 Meeting of Styles at The Studio Holloway in London
Photo by Urban Escapades

Inspired by the artistic genre of late-medieval allegory that unites every human being by the simple fact that we will all die, London-based street artist SHOK-1 created his own lively interpretation wanting to “turn it more into a celebration of life, hence it has a little party atmosphere.“  I can definitely see this gracing the walls of a dance club.

This x-ray style piece was created at the Meeting of Styles at The Studio, Holloway in London back in November of 2011. Since then SHOK-1 has been hitting the streets, refining his fantastic x-ray style, the likes of which I haven’t seen any other street artist do (correct me if there are others out there!).

Explanations SHOK-1
Explanations


An Experiment SHOK-1 London

An experiment…

View more of SHOK-1′s work via his Flickr.

 

[spotted by @victoireboudoir via Wooster Collective]

 

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Armadillo: Heart Grenade

Armadillo poster anatomical heart grenade

Armadillo poster anatomical heart grenade detail

Armadillo is a documentary film about Danish soldiers in the war in Afghanistan.  Director Janus Metz speaks of Armadillo as being a documentary of ambivalence, “trying to create peace with one hand and war with the other.“  This theme of ambivalence is depicted in the documentary poster as a grenade and anatomical heart fused together.  While I can’t say that it’s the best rendering of an anatomical hear that I’ve seen, it’s certainly a nice concept that differentiates from many other war movies/documentaries out there.

 

[spotted by Manuel]

 

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Activating Stilled Lives: The Aesthetics and Politics of Specimens on Display; International Conference at the Department of History of Art, UCL


This exciting conference--free and open to all!--just announced! Looks like a good one; so wish I could go!

Cultures of Preservation
Prepared specimens appear in many guises: as monstrous or typical organs preserved in formaldehyde and kept in glass jars not unlike pickled food, as stained and fixed tissue slices, or as skilfully arranged mounted animals. They may be found in cabinets of curiosities, in the laboratories of histologists, in anatomy theatres or in natural history collections, but nowadays equally in art galleries, the shop windows of fashionable boutiques, or horror films. This research network is concerned with such kinds of preserved natural objects, in particular with anatomical wet or dry preparations and taxidermy. It explorses the hybrid status of these objects between nature and representation, art and science and studies their fabrication, history and display.

The network is a collaboration between the UCL Department of History of Art, UCL collections, in particular the Grant Museum of Zoology, the Hunterian Museum, London and the Natural History Museum, London.

Activating Stilled Lives: The Aesthetics and Politics of Specimens on Display
International conference at the Department of History of Art, UCL
Thursday 17 May - Friday 18 May 2012

The past twenty years saw an explosion of exhibitions fathoming the relations between art and science as well as numerous refurbishments of natural history or former colonial museums. Many of these displays and gallery transformations mobilised specimens, be it taxidermied animals or preserved human body parts. Objects were put into new contexts opening up their meanings, others disappeared in storage or travelled back to the countries where they were once collected. The conference will address the challenges institutions face when dealing with formerly living entities and consider the aesthetics and politics of their display. The idea is to discuss the use of specimens in temporary exhibitions, museums or university collections and the role curators, art and artists have been playing in the transformation of these spaces. We also would like to consider how preserved specimens have changed through the altering contexts in which they have been displayed. One could name the initial transformation of organisms into objects, the more recent re-definition of pathological specimens as human remains, or the dramatic rearrangements that took place when natural history, anthropology or anatomy collections (many dating from the nineteenth century) were updated – coinciding with a shift in audiences, from specialists to a broader public. Often the historical displays were significantly altered, or even destroyed and replaced by „techy“ but at times also sentimentalised, „post-modern“ installations that still await a critical assessment.

Beyond that, the question of preservation shall be considered in a more expanded sense, as this subject area offers a unique opportunity to reflect more broadly on issues of conservation and their ethics and to raise a variety of questions such as: How and why do various cultures preserve elements of what is considered as nature? How does this relate to environmental notions of conservation and extinction? Should flawed specimens be disposed of? Can museums as a whole be considered cultural preserves? Should we preserve the preserves? And last but not least: Do we really need to embalm everything?

Confirmed speakers: Claude d'Anthenaise (Director, Musée de la chasse et de la nature, Paris), Steve Baker (Artist and Art Historian, Norfolk), Christine Borland (Artist, Glasgow), Mark Carnall (Curator, Grant Museum of Zoology, London), Nélia Dias (Anthropologist, Lisbon), Anke te Heesen (Museology / European Ethnology, Berlin), Petra Lange-Berndt (Art Historian, London), John MacKenzie (Professor Emeritus of Imperial History, Lancaster), Robert Marbury (Artist / Minnesota Association of Rogue Taxidermy, Baltimore), Angela Matyssek (Art Historian, Marburg / Maastricht), Lisa O'Sullivan (Curator, Science Museum/art-history/events/culture_of_preservation London), Hans-Jörg Rheinberger (Historian of Science, Berlin), Rose Marie San Juan (Art Historian, London), Johannes Vogel (Director, Museum für Naturkunde, Berlin)

Detailed programme: For further information please contact
Mechthild Fend m.fend(@)ucl.ac.uk or Petra Lange-Berndt p.lange-berndt(@)ucl.ac.uk

More information available here.

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"O Death Where Is Thy Sting?" or Happy Easter Everyone!

Easter week celebrates the moment when, in Christian metaphysics, mortality is overcome by everlasting life. The crucifixion of Jesus Christ redeems mankind from the sinful state into which mankind fell through Adam's disobedience to the will of God in the garden of Eden. His resurrection liberates us from eternal perdition: in Saint Paul's famous words (I Corinthians, XV.54-55) "So when this corruptible shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written, 'Death is swallowed up in victory'. O death where is thy sting? O grave where is thy victory?".

These concepts were articulated with fresh force in the later sixteenth century through the Counter-Reformation, in media such as altarpieces, sermons, the educational work of the Jesuit Order, and through devotional prints which were widely disseminated. Here we present four such prints from the holdings of the Wellcome Library...

Read the entire article from which this excerpt is drawn--and see more images!--on the excellent Wellcome Library blog by clicking here; click on image to see a much larger, more detailed view.

Image: Engraving after Maerten de Vos, late 16th century. Wellcome Library no. 23283i.

As described on the blog:

Finally in this sequence, we have the powerful figure of Christ triumphing over death. The upper part combines two scenes: Christ is simultaneously resurrected from the tomb and ascends into heaven. In the lower left corner, Death itself is about to be swallowed up by a monster, while in the centre the snake that led Adam and Eve astray, and who is entwined around the secular world, is about to be trampled down by the wounded foot of Christ. On the right a tablet engraved with the Ten Commandments faces upwards, indicating that Christ is triumphing over righteousness of the law, replacing it with righteousness of faith...

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"Ouija: The Talking Board" A New Episode of The Midnight Archive, Featuring Mitch Horowitz

A new episode of The Midnight Archive--the web-based documentary series centered around Observatory--has just been uploaded and can be viewed above. Here is what the series creator--film-maker and many-time Observatory lecturer Ronni Thomas--has to say about this episode:

Episode 11 : Ouija: The Talking Board -- And we’re back - with the fascinating Mitch Horowitz (see Occult NY parts 1 and 2) and the incredible history of the Ouija Board. Learn about its early roots as a sort of ‘telegraph’ to the other side - to its evolution into the board game to outsell Monopoly. Get a haunting glimpse into some of the celebrities who used the board and learn about its ominous warning to poet Sylvia Plath. Its more than just a toy and a Morrissey song. So enjoy this latest installment and make sure to ‘like’ us on Facebook. Also for a more detailed history make sure to check out Mitch’s book Occult America (which can and should be purchased here).

For more on the series, to see former episodes, or to sign up for the mailing list and thus be alerted to future uploads, visit The Midnight Archive website by clicking here. You can also "like" it on Facebook--and be alerted in this way--by clicking here. You can find out more about the amazing work of Sigrid Sarda by clicking here.

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Over-expression of AtPAP2 in Camelina sativa leads to faster plant growth and higher seed yield

Background:
Lipids extracted from seeds of Camelina sativa have been successfully used as a reliable source of aviation biofuels. This biofuel is environmentally friendly because the drought resistance, frost tolerance and low fertilizer requirement of Camelina sativa allow it to grow on marginal lands. Improving the species growth and seed yield by genetic engineering is therefore a target for the biofuels industry. In Arabidopsis, overexpression of purple acid phosphatase 2 encoded by Arabidopsis (AtPAP2) promotes plant growth by modulating carbon metabolism. Overexpression lines bolt earlier and produce 50% more seeds per plant than wild type. In this study, we explored the effects of overexpressing AtPAP2 in Camelina sativa.
Results:
Under controlled environmental conditions, overexpression of AtPAP2 in Camelina sativa resulted in longer hypocotyls, earlier flowering, faster growth rate, higher photosynthetic rate and stomatal conductance, increased seed yield and seed size in comparison with the wild-type line and null-lines. Similar to transgenic Arabidopsis, activity of sucrose phosphate synthase in leaves of transgenic Camelina was also significantly up-regulated. Sucrose produced in photosynthetic tissues supplies the building blocks for cellulose, starch and lipids for growth and fuel for anabolic metabolism. Changes in carbon flow and sink/source activities in transgenic lines may affect floral, architectural, and reproductive traits of plants.
Conclusions:
Lipids extracted from the seeds of Camelina sativa have been used as a major constituent of aviation biofuels. The improved growth rate and seed yield of transgenic Camelina under controlled environmental conditions have the potential to boost oil yield on an area basis in field conditions and thus make Camelina-based biofuels more environmentally friendly and economically attractive.Source:
http://www.biotechnologyforbiofuels.com/rss/

Understanding the science of cannabis is integral to appropriate regulation and use

by: Raw Michelle

Cannabis is a plant with demonstrable
antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties, both aspects that point to
its potential to be used as an anti-cancer drug. Cannabinoids have been
used in tentative studies, demonstrating their ability to greatly
reduce tumours, and cure cancer, in mice.

A controlled substance

The
medical establishment continues to reinvent their justification for the
demonization of marijuana as more and more of the claims made against
cannabis are disproven. The justification currently holding the most
ground is that cannabis is a plant, and cannot be carefully regulated
because of the great chemical variability that is found between
individual plants. Read more...

Ayurtox for Body Detoxification

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Recruits for Research

Despite researchers’ best efforts, Parkinson’s disease remains incurable. While there are treatment options that mitigate some symptoms, assigning the right treatment approach can be hit or miss. To better predict the response of Parkinson’s patients to therapy, the Cleveland Clinic has joined consumer genomics company 23andMe in its Parkinson’s Community Research Project. Enrollment in the program will also allow the clinic’s patients to take advantage of 23andMe’s Personal Genome Service.

23andMe began its Parkinson’s disease collaboration in 2009 when it teamed up with the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research and the Parkinson’s Institute and Clinical Center. After roughly 18 months, the collaboration had assembled and analyzed genetic data from more than 3,400 Parkinson’s patients, found 20 previously known genetic associations, and identified two novel loci rs6812193 near SCARB2 and rs11868035 near SREBF1/RA11. Ultimately, the collaboration aims to enroll 10,000 people. To date, 23andMe has enrolled roughly 6,500 patients, and the Cleveland Clinic is planning to add another 1,000 patients.

For clinicians like Andre Machado, director of the Cleveland Clinic’s Center for Neurological Restoration, the ideal scenario is that this large-scale collaboration can produce a roadmap to advance treatments for Parkinson’s patients. “We’re hoping to get data on the progression or responsiveness to a given type of treatment, things that can help us understand maybe in the future how to select treatments that are more likely to work for some patients versus others,” Machado says.

The process starts by reaching out to patients diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease by their neurologists and inviting them to participate. “Because this study aims to find novel genetic variants associated with Parkinson’s disease by way of genome-wide association studies, it is crucial that the group of whose genes are being analyzed have a pure diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease, as opposed to parkinsonism,” says Kathryn Teng, director of the Center for Personalized Healthcare at the Cleveland Clinic. “As with all genome-wide association studies, in order to get pure results, you need to have pure data going into the study.”

One enrollment challenge, Teng says, is that participants might be older, and therefore less comfortable with computers. “The 23andMe model requires electronic enrollment and participation in surveys, so family members may need to assist with the enrollment and data collection if the patient requires assistance,” she adds.

Reaching the desired sample size is also made difficult by a lack of -familiarity with genetic research in some pockets of the target population. “Many may not be aware of the protections offered by the GINA law which protects against discrimination based on genetic information for health insurance and employment,” Teng says. To assuage any anxieties, potential recruits are told that they and their DNA samples will only be identified by a unique code. They are also told that the reports that they receive through 23andMe’s website summarizing the genes identified in their DNA will not be part of their medical record.

To make participation as easy as possible, the Cleveland Clinic has dedicated computer portals set up at locations where Parkinson’s patients are likely to visit, including its various campuses.

Ultimately, Machado says he does not know if 10,000 patients will be a large enough sample size to effectively interrogate the data to make a difference on treatment. However, he adds, the collaboration with 23andMe provides “an opportunity for doing exploration and there is a chance that it will benefit patients down the line.”

More here:
Recruits for Research

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Local Knowledge: Living with Parkinson’s disease

BILL Jones, 76, a retired sheep shearer, former horse racer and trainer and vintage car enthusiast from Williamstown, has been living with Parkinsons disease for more than 10 years.

How did you find out you had Parkinsons disease?

Roughly 11 years ago, I was experiencing a lot of trouble swallowing, so I visited my GP who then referred me to an ear, nose and throat specialist.

The specialist thought I might have Parkinsons disease, so he referred me to a neurologist.

The next day I visited a neurologist, who performed a brain scan, which confirmed I had Parkinsons disease.

How does the disease effect you?

Im a bit slower with my movements, for example, my right leg tends to freeze every now and then.

My leg doesnt receive the message to step forward at times.

Without management, I also experience hand tremors.

How is the disease treated?

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Local Knowledge: Living with Parkinson's disease

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Opinion: Answers to autism elusive

By Catherine Lord, Special to CNN

updated 5:08 PM EDT, Sun April 1, 2012

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Editor’s note: Catherine Lord is the director of the Center for Autism and the Developing Brain, a subsidiary of Weill Cornell Medical College and New York Presbyterian Hospital.

(CNN) — This week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released its newest study on the rate of autism among 8-year-olds, showing that 1 in 88 has some form of the disorder. Previously, it was 1 in 110. Does the new figure indicate that we are seeing an epidemic of autism, as some have speculated?

At this point, it’s not clear.

One possibility is that we are seeing the result of better detection rather than a real surge in autism.

Catherine Lord

However, there are some striking parts about the study, which used data from 2008 collected in 14 sites across the United States. The rate of autism increased by more than 45% from 2002 to 2008 in numerous sites. It was a larger and more consistent increase than from 2002 to 2006. Also intriguing is that the increase was very uneven in terms of geography, gender, race and ethnicity.

Some sites had nearly five times as many children with autism as others. In several sites, almost 1 in 33 8-year-old boys were diagnosed with autism. This seems difficult to believe, particularly when these sites had smaller samples and children with less severe intellectual disabilities.

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Opinion: Answers to autism elusive

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Fox turned to alcohol to cope with Parkinson’s disease

A devastated Michael J. Fox initially turned to alcohol to cope with his Parkinson’s disease diagnosis.

The Family Ties star discovered he had the degenerative disorder back in 1991 and confesses he took to the bottle to drown his sorrows.

He tells Parade magazine, “For a time I dealt with it with alcohol, which turned out to be a disaster. I’d always been kind of a partier, but this was the first time I was drinking in order not to feel something. It had a dark purpose.”

The actor eventually quit drinking for good and now Fox credits his wife of 23-years, Tracy Pollan, with helping him get sober.

He continues, “About a year after my diagnosis, I woke up one morning and saw (wife) Tracy’s face…She said, ‘Is this what you want?’ Instantly I knew – no, this isn’t what I want or who I am. So I quit drinking in ’92.

“I recognised I had choices about drinking, and that made me realise I had choices about Parkinson’s as well… Acceptance doesn’t mean resignation; it means understanding that something is what it is and that there’s got to be a way through it.”

Fox has been a longtime Parkinson’s disease advocate and in 2000 he founded The Michael J. Fox Foundation, which funds research programmes in the hopes of finding a cure.

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Fox turned to alcohol to cope with Parkinson's disease

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East Texas Optimism Walk for Parkinson’s disease set for April 28

Posted: Sunday, April 1, 2012 4:00 am | Updated: 4:55 pm, Wed Mar 28, 2012.

OPTIMISM is the focus of this years annual American Parkinson Disease Association East Texas OPTIMISM Walk 2012, scheduled April 28 at the Rose Rudman Recreational Trail in Tyler.

The East Texas Parkinsons walk is an annual effort to raise money for education, research and support services for those affected by Parkinsons disease. The event is sponsored by the APDA East Texas Chapter and the ETMC Movement Disorder Center.

Individuals living with Parkinsons or those whose friends or loved ones have been diagnosed and all individuals who want to support a good cause are invited to join in by registering for or donating to our event today, said Kelly Boutin, walk chairperson and Tyler-area APDA Information and Referral Center coordinator. When everyone works together, great things can be accomplished to ease the burden and find the cure for Parkinsons disease.

The Tyler walk is open to all East Texas residents, and it starts at 11:30 a.m. on April 28 in the Robert E. Lee parking lot near the REL track. Check-in starts at 10 a.m. All activities will conclude at 2 p.m.

Approximately 3.6 million Americans have been diagnosed with Parkinsons disease. Approximately 50,000 new cases are diagnosed each year, and many more may have Parkinsons without realizing it yet.

It predominantly affects older adults, but healthcare providers also see early onset cases, which are estimated at between five and 10 percent of the total Parkinsons population.

For more information, or to support or participate in the Optimism Walk for Parkinsons, visit our chapter website at http://www.etapda.org or contact: Kelly Boutin at 903-596-3618 or kmboutin@etmc.org.

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East Texas Optimism Walk for Parkinson’s disease set for April 28

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