Parkinson\'s



A European research team has found that eighty percent of people suffering from Parkinson’s disease usually having depressive disorders too. Five hundred patients showing fewer symptoms barely ever discussed their depression with the medical counselors.



Although two-third of doctors in the poll said that, other symptoms were more important than depression.



Almost one in 500 already have Parkinson’s disease in the UK, and ten thousand cases are found positive yearly, one in twenty of the cases being found in people under 40.



The most common symptom is jolting in the arms and legs. Sometimes, depression may stem another symptom caused by the neurological effects of the disease.



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