Rusty PW
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Russ
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2022
- Threads
- 37
- Messages
- 11,353
- Reaction score
- 30,294
- Location
- Fayette Nam, Pennsyltucky
- Website
- www.youtube.com
- Vehicle(s)
- '22 JTRD, '11 370Z Nismo, '07 Honda VFR
- Build Thread
- Link
- Occupation
- Muff Diver
Wifey has the brain implants for her Parkinson. It's been 3 years now. They helped her a lot. Turn it off and she starts to shake really bad. To get the implants, its a 4 step process. Step 1 to install 4 small screws into your skull. These are survey pegs for when they map your skull in Step 2. They will MRI your head to map out the inside of your brain. Now they will make a drill jig that fits into your skull. This is precision drilling. This takes about 2 weeks for them to make the drill jig, Step 3, they will drill your skull and install the implants. You may get one or two implants. One on each side. This depends on where area of the brain they want to stimulate. Just before they finish up. They will wake you up to see if the implants are working. Once they do that. They will put you back out and finish. The wires from the implants are bunched up under your skin, not connected. Step 4 about 1 week later. They will implant the battery pack/controller into your chest like a pacemaker. And route the wires from the brain implants down the side of your head and neck. Then connect everything up. Step 5. You go back in about a week later and get your implants tuned. Wifey hated this part. They crank up the implants to find your upper limit. This is where you have no control on what's going on. The implants made a world of difference for the wifey.My hearing started to go goofier in the 1990s. A lot of loud noises, loud engines, tractors, you name it and possibly some hereditary bits as well.
I started to have balance issues in the 2000s, was finally diagnosed with Meniere's - like one of my brothers (who sold his motorcycle due to it, I shortly after that sold mine as well)
I had spells so bad I couldn't even sit in a chair but had to lower myself to the floor and lean against a wall. I was unable to stay upright.
It's all related - it's an inner ear function. Besides Meniere's, i've lost over 50% of the functionality of my left side inner ear (and my hearing is worse on that side, hearing aids still do wonders, though)
So it's a mix of things for me. They said that there's no fix, it would only get worse, and the dizzy and sick bits are from part of my senses saying all is fine, others saying hey, not so fast, and the right ear not agreeing with the left ear.
I've been through PT twice for it, some really intense testing as well.
I can't walk through a store and look down the aisles looking for anything. It will make me dizzy or sick. Sudden turns and so on - not good. Stairs are tricky.
I can't wait (he says sarcastically) for my Tuesday appointment with the neurologist for my essential tremor - I'm at the end of the road as far as meds that may help - and they aren't doing much these days.
Last time he said I had to make a choice or decision - live with it, accept it, or go for surgery to implant an electrode in the brain that would be attached to some sort of battery pack to help control things.
Starting a screw with a screwdriver - pretty tough. Putting a 1/4" nut on a bolt - takes some doing these days.
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