Parkinson’s is difficult to cure in 80-year-olds, but active treatment can alleviate symptoms and improve quality of life.
Parkinson’s disease is a common degenerative disease of the nervous system in the elderly, which is related to genetic, environmental, and neurological aging factors, and is clinically characterized by resting tremor, bradykinesia, muscle tonus, and postural balance disorders.
Parkinson’s disease is currently incurable, but by actively seeking medical treatment, doctors can help patients relieve their symptoms, and most patients can continue to work and maintain a better quality of life with reasonable symptomatic treatment.
Therefore, once Parkinson’s disease is diagnosed, patients should be treated early in the course of the disease, and under the guidance of the doctor, the most appropriate medication should be chosen to improve their quality of life as much as possible.