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Podcasts

You can listen to these items in either of two formats:

MP3 files which are better for downloading to an IPOD or Windows Media files which will stream better on your computer.


Listen to the speakers of the 2008 "What's in the PD Piepeline" Symposium held in Charlotte. Click here to listen

MP3 Files
Windows Media Files

April 18, 2007 Radio Interview with Executive Director Debbie Huffman, Board Member Anne Udall, and Dr. Sanjay Iyer, Director of Movement Disorders Center, Carolinas Medical Center, Neuroscience and Spine Institute, Charlotte, NC.

LISTEN / DOWNLOAD

Length 16:30 / 7.8MB

 

April 18, 2007 Radio Interview with Executive Director Debbie Huffman, Board Member Anne Udall, and Dr. Sanjay Iyer, Director of Movement Disorders Center, Carolinas Medical Center, Neuroscience and Spine Institute, Charlotte, NC.

LISTEN / DOWNLOAD


Length 16:30 / 4.0MB

     
2007 Charlotte Symposium
 
2007 Charlotte Symposium

Sympsium Introduction - PAC Executive Director Debbie Huffman

Length 3:30 / .5 MB

 

Sympsium Introduction - PAC Executive Director Debbie Huffman

Length 3:30 / .8 MB

Huffman Introduction of Dr. Daniel Weintraub

Length 1:30 / .2MB

 

Huffman Introduction of Dr. Daniel Weintraub

Length 1:30 / .3MB

Dr. Daniel Weintraub - "Assessment & Diagnosis in Parkinson's Disease"

Length 1:05:20 / 9.5MB

 

Dr. Daniel Weintraub - "Assessment & Diagnosis in Parkinson's Disease"

Length 1:05:20 / 15.5MB

Dr. Daniel Weintraub - "Cognitive and Pyschiatric Treatment of Parkinson's Disease and Dimentia with Lewy Bodies"

Length 41:50 / 6.1MB

 

Dr. Daniel Weintraub - "Cognitive and Pyschiatric Treatment of Parkinson's Disease and Dimentia with Lewy Bodies"

Length 41:50 / 10.0MB

Huffman Introduction of Dr. Sanjay Iyer

Length 1:00 / .2MB

 

Huffman Introduction of Dr. Sanjay Iyer

Length 1:00 / .2MB

Dr. Sanjay Iyer - "The Evolution of Parkinson's Disease"

Length 41:50 / 6.1MB

 

Dr. Sanjay Iyer - "The Evolution of Parkinson's Disease"

Length 41:50 / 6.1MB

  PAC Sidebar
 

Parkinsonism

Any person who has the signs and symptoms characteristic of Parkinson's disease is said to have "parkinsonism", but not every person with parkinsonism has Parkinson's disease, it's only one of the possibilities.

Patients and their families need to understand parkinsonism, because some 20 to 25 percent of people diagnosed with Parkinson's disease will eventually be discovered to have some other form of parkinsonism. Parkinsonism may look like Parkinson's disease, but over time it does not act like it.

For this reason, if you have been diagnosed with Parkinson's disease it is important to see a neurologist who has experience diagnosing and treating this disorder.

 
 
 
     
 
©Parkinson Association of the Carolinas, 2008.