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Tiantan Puhua Hospital → ‘I’m kind of living in the moment’ Big Isle Women
‘I’m kind of living in the moment’ Big Isle Women
By Helen Altonn "I just don't realize it at times because I'm kind of living in the moment ... dealing with what's right in front of me," Captain Cook resident Penny Thomas said. Thomas had advanced Parkinson's disease, a disorder that occurs when certain nerve cells in the brain that produce dopamine malfunction or die. Dopamine is a chemical responsible for the body's movements. "I was watching myself die," she told the Star-Bulletin in October. Her husband, Robert, and their daughter, then 15, had to help her do almost everything, she said. The stem cell therapy gave her life back, she said. Thomas resumed swimming and spent five weeks in December and January cross-country skiing, sledding and doing "other winter fun things" in Pagosa Springs, Colo. "I adjusted quite well to the 8,000-foot elevation. I didn't push myself too much, but had a lot of fun," she said. She lived 20 years in the Pagosa Springs area and has family living there, she said. Her daughter, Cheyenne, now 16, goes to school there. In October, Thomas visited friends in the Midwest and went horseback riding during a week in Colorado."I'm feeling really well," she said, noting she used to take three different medications. She now takes only Sinimet, used to increase dopamine levels in the brain, and it has been reduced to 200 milligrams per day from 800, she said. She is also taking amino acids with an herb called macuna pruriens that makes dopamine naturally. Doctors in Beijing want her to return in May or June for a scan so they can see how the stem cells are doing, she said. However, she probably will have the scan in Honolulu, she said. *Note of the Picture: Penny Thomas of Captain Cook, Big Island, enjoyed cross-country skiing in January while vacationing in Colorado. © Honolulu Star-Bulletin -- http://starbulletin.com |