Medications remain the foundation of Parkinson’s treatment and are highly effective for many people, especially early in the disease. Over time, however, symptoms may become harder to control with medication alone. Fluctuations, wearing-off periods, or medication-related side effects can limit how well drug therapy continues to meet daily needs.
When medication alone is no longer providing consistent control, these advanced therapies can offer another layer of support, helping smooth fluctuations, reduce specific symptoms, and improve day-to-day function. Moving beyond medication is not a one-size-fits-all decision. It’s a thoughtful conversation between you and your movement disorder specialist, guided by your symptoms, priorities, and goals.
Parkinson’s Treatments
Parkinson’s care is rarely one-dimensional. It grows with experience and time. Each step builds a path forward.
Advanced treatment decisions take time and careful evaluation. They tend to evolve gradually. Each layer strengthens the overall plan.
Meds remain the foundation.
Sometimes another layer is needed.
That’s where advanced therapy comes in.
When Medication Isn’t Enough
For many people, medications provide strong, meaningful relief, especially early in Parkinson’s.
But Parkinson’s is progressive. Over time, even well-managed medication plans can become less predictable. Doses may wear off sooner. Symptoms may fluctuate. You might notice “on” and “off” periods that don’t feel as smooth or consistent as they once did.
This does not mean you’ve failed treatment, and it does not mean you’ve run out of options.
When medication alone is no longer providing steady control, additional therapies can offer another layer of support.
Some treatments deliver medication more continuously through pump systems.
Some use precisely targeted procedures in the brain, such as Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) or Focused Ultrasound, to help regulate movement circuits more consistently.
These approaches are not first-line treatments. They are considered thoughtfully, in partnership with a movement disorder specialist, based on symptom patterns, daily function, age, cognition, and personal goals.
The goal is not perfection.
The goal is steadier days, fewer fluctuations, and improved quality of life.
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Hope With Caution: Navigating Emerging Parkinson’s Treatments
Current research directions
Research into Parkinson’s continues to advance, including studies of stem cell therapies, gene therapies, and potential disease-modifying treatments. Many of these approaches aim to go beyond symptom management and, in some cases, target the underlying disease process itself. At present, however, most remain experimental, under active investigation, and not yet widely available.
These emerging therapies represent important areas of ongoing research and future promise, but their safety, effectiveness, durability, and long-term impact are still being carefully evaluated. As a result, access is generally limited to regulated clinical trials, where treatments are studied under strict scientific and ethical oversight, with close monitoring of dosing, outcomes, side effects, and potential risks.
Healthcare providers typically recommend discussing any experimental treatment, particularly those offered outside standard medical systems or overseas , with a Neurologist or movement disorder specialist before pursuing them. Individuals should also be cautious of social media posts, online advertisements, or direct messages that appear after internet searches and promise rapid, guaranteed, or “breakthrough” results. These targeted messages are often financially motivated, designed to exploit vulnerability and urgency, and may promote treatments that lack scientific evidence, regulatory oversight, or appropriate medical follow-up. Many such offerings are unproven at best and exploitative at worst.
When appropriate, participation in well-designed clinical trials offers the safest and most responsible way to access emerging therapies while also contributing to research that helps advance Parkinson’s care for the broader community.
After Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s is the second-most common neurodegenerative disorder in the U.S
Approximately 90,000 Americans are newly diagnosed with Parkinson’s every year, nearly double previous estimates.
After Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s is the second-most common neurodegenerative disorder in the U.S
Approximately 90,000 Americans are newly diagnosed with Parkinson’s every year, nearly double previous estimates.
mPower app: Research app (smartphone-based) that collects movement and symptom data for study purposes.
Speech and voice analysis apps: Analyze voice changes as an adjunctive marker of symptom severity.
Medication tracking apps: Reminders and logs that help correlate symptoms with medication timing.
Smartphone Apps & Digital Platforms
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Emerging or Regionally Available Tools
STAT-ON™
Waist-worn sensor that tracks ON/OFF motor states and response to Levodopa (approved in parts of Europe; used in research/ specialty settings).
Wearable gait sensors Various ankle/hip sensors tested in research to quantify stride length, balance, and freezing of gait.
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Widely Used Consumer Devices
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Already FDA-Cleared /Clinically Used
PKG® (Personal KinetiGraph) Wrist-worn sensor that tracks Bradykinesia, Dyskinesia, tremor, and motor state over days to help optimize medications
Kinesia™ ONE/Kinesia 360 Motion sensors that objectively measure tremor, Dyskinesia, and other motor features.
Mobility Lab/APDM sensors
Wearable inertial sensors used in clinics to assess gait, balance, and fall risk.
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Here are some examples of digital tools and wearables that are currently used (or studied) to help monitor and manage Parkinson’s symptoms:
Digital and wearable-guided therapies
The Phases of Research
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We have been a speaker at 3 events before we decided to start our podcast!
three.
We've traveled to all the continents and the north still holds our hearts.
two.
Our pup Murphy is liiiiiife! He may even make an appearance on the pod!
one.
Fun Details