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    In the Loop: Staying ahead of Parkinson’s disease one ping pong game at a time

In the Loop patient Steve Grinnell playing ping pong

Since being diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, Steve Grinnell has worked hard to stay active, stepping up his table tennis game and, thanks to co-workers, testing his skills outside his home.


Four years ago, Steve Grinnell's life was forever changed when doctors at Mayo Clinic in Rochester diagnosed him with early-onset Parkinson's disease. Since that time, the progressive nervous system disorder has begun to take a toll on Steve and his family, just as it does on the millions of other Americans living with the disease. "It has greatly diminished his quality of life, leaving him with tremors, physical exhaustion, impaired balance, troubled grasping things with his right hand, slow right-arm movement and problems sleeping," the Rochester Post-Bulletin recently reported. "That's to name just a few of his symptoms."

Reading that, one might assume the disorder is winning. And to Steve, sometimes it feels like it is. But much of the time, he tells us he also feels like he's staying one step ahead of the disease by staying as physically active as possible. "Parkinson's presents such a conundrum because it wears you down physically, and yet exercise is so valuable," Steve says. "My legs, feet and right arm are always cramping, so it takes mental effort to get moving."

Read the rest of the story.

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This story originally appeared on the In the Loop blog.