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Rebecca King-Crews reveals Parkinson's diagnosis after symptoms were called 'anxiety'
Summary
Rebecca King-Crews said she has Parkinson's disease and that an MR-guided focused ultrasound procedure in March reduced tremor on her right side.
Content
Rebecca King-Crews told the TODAY show that she has Parkinson's disease and recently underwent a newly approved, noninvasive procedure to manage symptoms. Her first symptoms began around 2012 and she received a formal diagnosis in 2015 after several years of uncertain signs. Early providers at times described her symptoms as anxiety before a Parkinson's specialist recognized the condition. She reports improvement after a focused ultrasound treatment earlier this year and plans another procedure later in 2026.
What we know:
- Rebecca King-Crews announced a Parkinson's diagnosis that dates to 2015 and said initial symptoms started about 2012.
- Some early evaluations described her symptoms as anxiety before a Parkinson's specialist made the diagnosis.
- On March 4 she had a unilateral MR-guided focused ultrasound procedure and reports that her right-side tremor resolved and her balance improved.
- She plans to have the procedure on the other side of the brain in September; the treatment is described as an adjunct therapy and not a cure.
Summary:
The March procedure produced noticeable symptom relief on the treated side, and King-Crews reports being able to perform tasks she had struggled with. She intends to have the treatment on the opposite side in September, and broader issues such as cost and coverage remain part of the ongoing conversation.
