Michael J. Fox: 20 Years With Parkinsons

Scientists still arent sure what causes Parkinsons. But four people on the set of Leo and Me, Michael J. Foxs first television series, developed the progressive, incurable disease. The fifth person, of course, was Fox himself, an amiable comic actor who starred in the comedy Family Ties and the Back to the Future movies before he got the illness, around 1990. (Leo and Me aired in 1981.)

Fox wont speculate about why his coworkers on Leo and Me became ill, though researchers have focused on environmental hazards as a possible cause for Parkinsons. (They are also looking at a genetic factor.) Speaking to CNNs Dr. Sanjay Gupta, Fox said, I am not concerned about a few people. I am focused on everyone who has the disease. His organization, the Michael J. Fox Foundation, has raised more than $200 million to fund efforts toward finding a cure.

Fox, 49, has shown a lot of courage in living for two decades with an illness that is painfully difficult and frightening. But hes had the support of Tracy Pollan, his wife of 22 years, and their four kids. Fox told Gupta that his medicine enables him to do things hes always done, like golfing and playing the guitar.

But in the interview, Fox didnt pretend that the adjustment to his illness was easy at first. About two years after my diagnosis, he said, I just accepted it. My happiness was in direct proportion to my acceptance. The only thing I dont have a choice about is whether I have Parkinsons. Everything else is my choice.

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