medical history, what to do, what you need to know, sports, Nordic walking – May 1, 2024 – Russia today Posting in CHAT: Russia Source: Nikita Egorov, Daria Pestryakova, Daria Burmistrova Olga Grebennikova from Nizhny Novgorod, 39 years old, was given a diagnosis that no one expects to hear at a young age: “Parkinson’s disease.” For 18 years now, the woman has been struggling every day with the consequences of the disease, trying to do normal things, sports and everyday life. Our colleagues from NN.RU talked to Olga and found out how she still manages to love life. She noticed the first symptoms during her last, fourth pregnancy - she lost her arm. Over time, sensitivity returned, but the fingers stopped working. As the youngest child grew up, there was no time to go to the doctors. “I finally turned to doctors only a year and a half after that. Because I began to feel that my body stopped listening. I went to the hospital and was diagnosed. Of course, I didn't believe it. The head of the department said: “This cannot be, she is too young for such a diagnosis. She’s just depressed,” Olga recalls, constantly rubbing her hands. Parkinson's disease is a slowly developing disease of the central nervous system, which is accompanied by slowness of movements, tremors at rest and impaired reflexes. The disease is based on damage to the nerve cells of the brain stem. After visiting several more doctors, the diagnosis was confirmed. The doctors asked me: “How many children do you have?” “I say: “Four.” The youngest was just born. The answer was, “Well, you still have ten years left.” Then it bothered me. And so, despite the forecasts, I already had 18 years of experience. But I still don’t think about giving up: I go in for sports and lead an active lifestyle,” Olga says with a smile. What other symptoms can be used to suspect Parkinson's disease and how Olga manages to maintain her physical condition - see the material. short video just above. Source link Source link
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⚡️A photographer working in Crocus on March 7 accidentally photographed one of the terrorists while he was walking through the shopping center. Presumably, the attack was carefully planned. Source link
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The mayor of Yekaterinburg will sue drivers for hundreds of thousands of rubles for walking on tram tracks Posting in CHAT: Russia Since the beginning of 2024, motorists have interfered with public transport more than 400 times. They drove onto tram tracks 213 times and interfered with trolleybuses another 199 times. Now they will be charged losses due to downtime. Deputy Mayor Rustam Galyamov said this. “We will demand compensation for losses to those who were traveling on the rails, got stuck and delayed traffic, sometimes for several hours,” Galyamov noted. In winter, drivers drove onto the tracks and got stuck because of it. snow storms, this especially often happened on the new tram line in Akademichesky. The amount of damage can amount to hundreds of thousands of rubles, depending on the duration of the delay, the number of trams in traffic jams and the roads they serve. The press service of the mayor's office reported that we are talking about tens of thousands. In 2020, an hour of downtime for one tram on the line cost about 2.5 thousand rubles. According to traffic rules, drivers only receive a fine of 500 rubles for driving on rails. However, the practice of compensation for losses has been around for a long time. “The Yekaterinburg Tram and Trolleybus Administration began collecting losses from drivers in 2003. Later, this practice was abandoned due to judicial failures, but in St. Petersburg and Moscow it continues,” explained expert Maxim Edryshov. The same practice applies in other cities. For example, in Tula in 2023, 1.7 million rubles were recovered from drivers who interfered with trams, and in Chelyabinsk - 4.2 million rubles; Gortrans specialists are already preparing the first documents for the court. Source link Source link