No scalpel, no drill: Medical procedure to treat uncontrollable hand tremor a 'game changer'
Ontario woman 1 of 40 patients to receive procedure that will 'revolutionize' treatment of brain disease
In a room at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto, Brian Smith gives one last hug to his wife, Noreen.
"You're doing really well, sweetheart," he says to her.
Doctors have finished prepping the 76-year-old patient. She's clad in a blue hospital gown, her head has been shaved and metallic headgear is attached to her skull.
- Google's latest a spoon that steadies tremors
- New technology could help seniors stay independent longer
She's ready to be wheeled into an MRI room, where she'll undergo a procedure that her doctors believe will revolutionize the way brain diseases are treated.
Before that happens, Noreen leans into her husband for a kiss.
"Best buddy," she whispers.
Noreen Smith is among the three per cent of the Canadian population who suffer from a nervous system disorder called essential tremor. It causes uncontrollable shaking, most often in a person's hands.
Smith noticed the first signs when she was 33.
"It started developing in my dominant hand, which is my right hand," she said the day before her medical procedure from her home in Bobcaygeon, Ont.
She went to a specialist who delivered the diagnosis: essential tremor.