Rebecca King-Crews and husband Terry Crews smiling together, celebrating her Parkinson's treatment breakthrough

Rebecca King-Crews: Ultrasound Erases Parkinson's Tremors

🦸 Hero Alert

After hiding her Parkinson's diagnosis for a decade, Rebecca King-Crews can finally write her name again thanks to a breakthrough ultrasound procedure. She's going public to help others access the life-changing treatment.

For the first time in three years, Rebecca King-Crews picked up a pen and wrote her name with her right hand. The singer, designer, and wife of actor Terry Crews had almost forgotten what that simple act felt like.

Rebecca first noticed something was wrong in 2012 when her foot went numb and her arm stopped swinging naturally when she walked. A tremor in her hand while applying lip gloss one morning confirmed her fears, but doctors dismissed her concerns as stress or anxiety for three years.

When she finally received her Parkinson's diagnosis in 2015, Rebecca didn't slow down. She launched a women's conference, wrote a book, released a record, and started a clothing line. She kept her diagnosis private, refusing to let the disease define her story.

But now she has a reason to speak up. Rebecca recently underwent Bilateral Focused Ultrasound at Stanford Hospital, a cutting-edge procedure that uses sound waves to target the brain areas causing tremors without making a single incision.

Rebecca King-Crews: Ultrasound Erases Parkinson's Tremors

The results have been life-changing. Rebecca can now write her name, balance on her right leg, and use her right hand with control she hasn't experienced in years. She plans to have the procedure done on the left side of her brain next.

Her husband Terry spent years researching treatments, watching helplessly as his wife struggled with tremors and balance issues. Seeing her write her name again left him speechless. "She's the rock of our lives," he said through tears on the Today show.

Why This Inspires

Rebecca isn't sharing her story for sympathy. She wants to make this procedure accessible to everyone fighting Parkinson's, even though it's currently expensive and rarely covered by insurance.

Focused ultrasound represents a new frontier in medicine, treating tumors and cancers without the risks of traditional surgery. Rebecca believes this technology will lead to a cure, and she wants other Parkinson's patients to have hope and access to these breakthrough treatments.

The couple, married nearly 37 years and stronger than ever through this challenge, proves that sharing our struggles can light the way for others.

Based on reporting by Google News - Medical Breakthrough

This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.

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