Friday, December 01, 2006

It's getting to look alot like Christmas


Merry Christmas everybody ! May the Christmas Spirit Bless your lives and bring you Joy and Happieness this Holiday Season. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year, Love Larry and Joanne.

Thursday, November 23, 2006

Sunday, November 19, 2006

Greg's Surgery update

The "honeymoon" is over for Greg Gardner, and it didn't last long. This wasn’t a long-postponed trip he and his wife, Marilyn, took. Gardner’s “honeymoon” is what doctors call a period of time after surgery when he did not experience the tremors caused by his Parkinson's disease.

The Yuma man recently underwent two surgeries at Scripps Green Hospital in La Jolla, Calif., as part of Deep Brain Stimulation therapy aimed at controlling the disease, which Gardner a year ago learned he had.

The brain swells from the trauma of the surgery, “and makes Parkinson’s disease seem better but when the honeymoon is over, the honeymoon is over,” Gardner said.

The tremors have since returned, but it’s not because the surgery wasn’t successful.

In the first surgery on Oct. 18, a lead — a type of wire — was placed on each side of the brain. The wires then were connected to a neurostimulator, a pacemaker-like device that was implanted in his chest in the second surgery a week later.

The leads implanted in the brain send out electrical signals that help control the tremors caused by Parkinson's disease. He is due to return to Scripps on Nov. 22 so his doctor can activate the neurostimulator that everyone expects will minimize the tremors.

Deep Brain Stimulation, or DBS, cannot cure nor stop the progression of Parkinson's, although it makes it easier for Parkinson's patients to live with the disease, said Gardner, the news director at KAWC radio.

Before the first surgery, Gardner's head was shaved and a metal frame was then hand-screwed in place — with screws actually going all the way to his skull. The frame was then screwed onto the table to prevent him from moving during the surgery, during which he would be awake.

"If you could have seen (my wife's) face when they wheeled me out with that frame on. She was just taken aback and so she didn't worry me, she just said ‘(gasp) oh my, they cut your hair,’ ” Gardner said.

Gardner remembers only parts of the surgery even though he was kept awake while doctors opened and drilled two holes in his skull to be able to reach the brain.

"I don't remember hearing the drill. I remember feeling the vibration of it," Gardner said.

Gardner, known to friends and acquaintances for his humor and quick wit, says he is sure a lot of people were probably as surprised as he was to "find out that when they actually drilled in, yes, there was a brain."

The only time he worried during the surgery, he said, was when he wanted to sneeze. "Imagine one of the worst things you can do when you're having surgery ... I thought, I'm gonna sneeze, I'm gonna blow these tools all over the place, you know, and he's gonna lose his grip."

The surgeon explained all the steps and conversed with him throughout the entire operation.
But more reassuring for Gardner was "the fact that I kept hearing Dr. (Thomas) Waltz say, ‘beautiful, just beautiful,’ ” and that meant everything was going according to plan.

"It could have been a whole lot worse. It probably wasn't nearly as bad as I anticipated — feared," Gardner said.

Gardener has a "good feeling" and is feeling "positive" about the results of the surgery even though he has to wait another couple of weeks for his doctor to activate and fine-tune the device.

Gardener went into surgery thinking: "I really have nothing to lose and everything to gain." He added, "I'm a believer in the Lord and I believe the Lord was with Dr. Waltz that day and the team."

Thursday, November 16, 2006

I don't know what I've been told!!!! Young Greg Gardner's looking mighty bold!!!

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

11/10/2006

Happy Birthday too you!!! Have a wonderful Day!!!!!!!!!!!!

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Happy Halloween



Watch out for that sweet stuff!