December 26, 2013 13:00 — 0 Comments
Deep Brain Stimulation May Help Parkinson’s Patients Drive
According to a new study recently published in the online issue of Neurology, deep brain stimulation may benefit the driving ability of people with Parkinson’s disease. Using driving simulation in the experiment, the study involved those with deep brain stimulators, those with Parkinson’s disease who did not have stimulators and a group who did not have Parkinson’s disease, all of whom had been driving at least once a week for more than 30 minutes within the previous three years. “Up until now, we weren’t sure how deep brain stimulation would affect driving,” said study author Carsten Buhmann, MD, of University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf in Hamburg, Germany. Evaluating driving errors, the people with Parkinson’s without stimulators performed worse than the control participants in every category except one, while the people with deep brain stimulators did not perform significantly worse than the controls in any category, even performing better in the category of slight errors. Click here to read the full article.


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106th Meeting of the Senior Society of Neurological Surgeons
June 6-9, 2015; Miami
Neuromonitoring in Neurosurgery
European Association of Neurosurgical Societies (EANS)
June 14-16, 2015; Verona, Italy
Rocky Mountain Neurosurgical Society 50th Annual Meeting
June 20-24, 2015; Colorado Springs, Colo.
CARS 2015 - 29th International Congress and Exhibition
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