May 24, 2016
I'm on the heavy bag, throwing left jabs, ignoring the
relentless blare of Kanye's "Drive Slow, Homie" played at a volume
that would raise the dead. I punch to a one-two count: left jab, right cross.
I'm working as hard as I've ever worked, and even in this unheated gym I sweat
as if it's a sauna. - Finally, the bell rings. It feels as if I've been at it
for an hour; actually, three minutes have passed. The ensuing one-minute break
seems to last four seconds. Let's be clear: Boxing, even when the opponent is
only a heavy bag, is a brutal sport. But brutality is needed, even welcome,
when you're facing a progressive, incurable neurological disease. I have
Parkinson's disease, and it causes my body to just freeze up. Weirdly enough,
boxing helps me get unstuck.
All 12 of us in this class bear the unmistakable signs of
Parkinson's disease. I spot a dapper, cheerful white-haired fellow shaking like
a leaf (tremor). Next, a balding, heavyset guy stumbling forward awkwardly on
his toes (dystonia, or muscle cramping). Then I see myself in a mirror: a man
in a white T-shirt, khaki shorts and Nike running shoes, standing still,
seemingly paralyzed. I'm in the midst of a Parkinson's freeze (an extreme form
of bradykinesia, or slow movement).
Although Parkinson's is generally thought of as an old-person's
disease, I was diagnosed with a young-onset version 18 years ago, at age 35.
Since then, I've taken every sort of medication known to science. I've had
brain surgery - two tiny electrodes were implanted deep in my brain to
stimulate an area affected by Parkinson's - which unquestionably has helped
treat some of my symptoms. But medicine and surgery have not cured my freezing
and falling, my gait and balance issues that worsen as my disease progresses:
When walking across a busy street, I may suddenly, inexplicably come to a full
stop as the light is about to change. Even the slightest downhill slope of a
path causes me to fall forward.
Exercise, researchers have learned, is essential for
Parkinsonians, and since being diagnosed I have embraced that therapy. But as
time has gone on, my exercise options dwindled. After hundreds of falls, which
left my knees more scar than skin, I gave up running. Frozen and jerky
movements meant that tennis and skiing were no longer options. So last year,
when I learned about a boxing program for people with Parkinson's, I had to
investigate.
A decade ago, Scott Newman, an Indiana prosecutor and
early-onset Parkinsonian, took up boxing and found it improved his agility and
daily functioning. He eventually founded Rock Steady Boxing, a program for
Parkinson's patients that now operates in 89 sites around the country,
including the one I discovered last year in Los Angeles.
Research finds benefits
Boxing demands balance, timing, gait, speed and hand-eye
coordination - all of which are challenged by Parkinson's. The Rock Steady
program also encompasses other exercises, such as squat jumps, heel walking,
agility drills, raised-knee walking, trampoline work, jumping rope and
skipping. The boxing portion is noncontact, thankfully, and includes work on
heavy bags and speed bags, and aiming punches at the moving targets provided by
a trainer's padded "focus mitts."
Does boxing actually improve Parkinson's symptoms? A 2011 study
in the journal of the American Physical Therapy Association looked at a small
sampling of Parkinson's patients who participated in two to three 90-minute
Rock Steady training sessions per week for nine months. The researchers found
that the patients showed "short-term and long-term improvements in
balance, gait, activities of daily living, and quality of life after the boxing
training program." While these results can't be considered conclusive
proof, the reported improvements mirror my own experience. Although I have not
stopped freezing or falling, I do so less frequently, and my balance and gait
seem to have improved.
Exactly why boxing workouts may help people with Parkinson's is
not clear. The study noted that Rock Steady's "whole body approach"
might be the key to its success, due to its "dynamic balance activities
and multidirectional reaching and stepping ... agility drills within the
circuit training regimen, such as jumping rope, and footwork activities,
focused on the initiation of movement and fast-paced changes in
direction." All help parts of the body affected by Parkinson's.
A 2013 review in Lancet Neurology made a compelling case for the
role of exercise that incorporates "goal-based" components - where
people need to pay constant attention to what their body is doing and make
adjustments in response to external feedback. Boxing, tai chi, tango and
similar activities, the review said, seem to improve the brain function of
people with Parkinson's, which improves movement.
Ordinarily, human movement relies on the interaction of
unconscious (automatic) and conscious (cognitive) control. But in Parkinson's,
automatic control is diminished as nerve cells in an area of the brain that
controls movement begin to die off and stop producing an important neurotransmitter
called dopamine. This means that people with Parkinson's must make a conscious
effort to accomplish such simple tasks as walking or lifting an object - things
that healthy people do automatically. Parkinson's medications, such as
synthetic dopamine, alleviate some motor symptoms. But their effectiveness is
limited and they do not address the cognitive problems that many Parkinsonians
can develop, which range from becoming easily distracted and disorganized to
having trouble focusing or remembering words when speaking.
The brain has a remarkable ability to adapt to damage caused by
disease or injury by growing new brain cells, the review noted, and goal-based
exercise facilitates this ability. Boxing training is definitely goal-based. It
forces my brain to think about and then make simple movements - such as
walking, jogging, jumping, bending, reaching, stepping in all directions - that
a healthy person does with no thought.
Rock Steady's training program has given me regular, hands-on
practice in dealing with movement challenges, giving me more confidence. Boxing
trains me to do things consciously that once came naturally: initiate movements
from my core, move my legs and arms simultaneously, plan my next move, stay
aware of my body's alignment and position to maintain balance.
Plagued by a fear of falling
What Parkinsonians call "balance confidence" is
critical. It is fear of falling, rather than the falls themselves, that most
limits my ability to perform the activities of daily living - to go to a
restaurant, volunteer at my kids' schools, walk downhill. It is fear of falling
that causes me to take tiny, rapid, uncontrolled steps or makes my feet freeze
in place while my upper body keeps moving forward. It is fear that makes me do
the very things that make me fall - and one does not need to have Parkinson's
to know that the psychology of fear can drive us directly into what we want to
avoid.
For many years, the only perceived link between boxing and
Parkinson's was that the former caused the latter; in fact, Muhammad Ali, who
took far too many punches, may be the world's most visible Parkinsonian. Today,
a neurologist might actually prescribe boxing training - with no contact, of
course - as therapy for Parkinson's.
So I pound away on the heavy bag, not training for a fight
because I am already in the thick of one. It's a fight for my life.
http://health.einnews.com/article/327626100/KwpvDU5BbtFGGp7B
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