My hands are shaking. Is it Parkinson's disease?

Not necessarily. Before, my second aunt kept shaking her hands and thought it was calcium deficiency. She ate calcium tablets and stewed bone soup every day and almost got diabetes. Then I went to the hospital for examination. It was Parkinson's disease and I prescribed some medicine. The trembling of this disease is very strange. When you don't understand, you will shake, and when you do something, you will lighten or disappear. Generally, hands and feet shake more and head shakes less. Besides shaking hands, I gradually feel slow and stiff. I have been taking drugs for six or seven years, and I often feel sick in my stomach. It won't be as immediate as before, so my second aunt went to the doctor to ask what to do. The doctor also suggested that either changing a drug or going on the market can better control the symptoms, but Parkinson's disease is incurable. Considering that I'm only in my sixties, it's not worth losing the joy of my early age if I can't get treatment. And I heard that the earliest brain pacemaker was developed by Medtronic, a medical technology company, 30 years ago, and it has been implanted by1750,000 people all over the world. The products have also been certified and audited by the European Union, the United States and China, and the safety is guaranteed, so my second aunt finally decided to have surgery to control them. This kind of operation is called brain pacemaker operation, which is implanted into the brain, so that some symptoms of Parkinson's patients can be well controlled and it is very useful to improve the quality of life. It's really good.