On the 28th of every month, Dr. Mischley selects a topic relevant to the community and does a in-depth review.
Following her lecture, attendees have an opportunity to contribute their own experiences and ask questions.


These courses are information dense!

Lecture slides, references, and session recordings are made available for those who want to rewind or take breaks.

Hair Elements

The previous course on Hair is one of the most frequently-watched courses to date.

Dr. Mischley will provide a quick review from the prior course, and focus on what new information has become available over the past few years.



Blood

Cleveland HeartLab has made a "PD Panel" assembled by Dr. Mischley. We'll go over the components of the panel and how to interpret them.

Urine

One of the best measures of free radical body burden is a simple urine test called F2-isoprostanes. We'll discuss what it means, and how to make it better.

Hair

Hair element testing is one of the most difficult to interpret. This is a test most neurologists aren't familiar with and it raises a lot of eyebrows - join us as we dive into the usefulness.

Example Curriculum

The curriculum block is dynamic. As you add curriculum to your course, you'll see it automatically populate here.

EXAMPLE

Dr. Laurie Mischley

Laurie Mischley, ND PhD MPH studied naturopathic medicine (ND) at Bastyr University and epidemiology (MPH) and nutritional sciences (PhD) at the University of Washington and she maintains appointments at both Universities.

Her work is focused on identifying the nutritional requirements unique to individuals with Parkinson’s Disease (PD) and has published on coenzyme Q10, lithium, NAD+, and glutathione deficiency (www.lauriemischley.com). She is Principal Investigator of the Modifiable Variables in Parkinsonism (MVP) Study (MVP-study.com), which is attempting to describe why some people with PD progress slower than others. She is working on ways to study, package and deliver evidence-based lifestyle modification as a therapeutic strategy. She founded the Parkinson Center for Pragmatic Research (www.parkinson-cpr.com) and the canine scent-based PD screening tool, ParK-9 (www.Park-9.com), developed a patient-reported outcome measure to assess PD severity (www.PD-symptoms.com), built the Parkinson Symptom Tracking (PRO-PD) App, and is instructor of the online series, Parkinson School (www.Parkinson-School.com). Dr. Mischley maintains a small clinical practice at Seattle Integrative Medicine focused on nutrition and neurological health of patients with Parkinsonism.