“I Thought This Was Just My Life Now”: Valerie’s Journey Back to Herself

Life in a Quiet Corner of Upstate New York

InForestport, a small town surrounded by dense woods and wildlife in upstate New York, Valerie Fox spent decades living a peaceful, structured life. She worked as a production control specialist at a local machinery plant for 42 years, raised three children, and created a home full of routine and joy. Now retired, she enjoys camping trips, crossword puzzles and caring for her four grandchildren.

But beneath that calm daily rhythm, something invisible had been growing for more than four decades.

A Tremor That Slowly Took Her Life Away

Valerie first noticed her hands shaking in her twenties. Atfirstit was subtle. Then, year after year, it became pervasive.

“My hands would shake when I was concentrating. Then it just kept getting worse,” she says. “Idzܱ’tbrush my teeth without making a mess. Idzܱ’tfeed my grandbabies. Idzܱ’twrite a check. It felt like life was slipping out of my hands.”

She tried medications, adaptivetoolsand weighted devices. Nothing restored her confidence,controlor ease.

“Sometimes I cried,” she says. “You do not realize how much the small everyday things matter until they disappear.”

Eventually, she was formally diagnosed with essential tremor, a neurological condition that affects millions of people and causes involuntary shaking of the hands, arms,voiceor head. For many, the condition worsens over time and begins to disrupt independence,identityand emotional wellbeing.Many people have not heard of essential tremor, yet it affects up to ten times as many people as the morewell knownmovement disorder Parkinson’s disease.

“I figured it was just how life would be. I thought nothing else could be done.”

Learning About Focused Ultrasound for Essential Tremor

In 2024, during a routine appointment, her cardiologist referred her to a neurologist who mentioned a treatment she had never heard of: focused ultrasound.

The procedure uses sound waves to precisely target the area of the brain responsible for tremors. There are no incisionsandno implanted devices involved. Imaging guides the treatment, allowing physicians to disrupt tremor pathways with extraordinary precision.

That referral led Valerie to Dr. MichaelKaplitt, a neurosurgeon at AVо, internationally recognized for advancing minimally invasive technologies for movement disorders. AsViceChair forResearchand Director of Movement Disorders Surgeryin the Department of Neurological Surgery, Dr.Kaplitthas led innovation inadvancedtargetedneurosurgical treatments for decadesand was the first person in New York to perform this ultrasound procedure.

“My kids researched everything,” Valerie says. “I was told I could either do focused ultrasound or undergo brain surgery with wires and a pacemaker. It was an easy choice.”

Traveling to New York City for Treatment

valerie fox


In October, Valerie made the trip fromForestportto New York City for her MRI and treatment planning.

“It was intimidating,” she explains. “They attached equipment to my head, and I got an injection in my forehead. Once that part was over, it was actuallyvery easy.”

And then the moment happened.

Immediate and Life-Changing Results

“When I went to the bathroom afterward, I looked at my hands and they were still. I just stared at them,” she recalls.

The next few days brought visible, emotional change.

She ate with a spoon.
She brushed her teeth cleanly.
Shewrote her nameclearly.

Even her voice steadied.

“People kept saying I sounded like myself again.”

Her family noticed too. Her confidence resurfaced. Daily tasks no longerrequiredadaptation,avoidanceor embarrassment.

“Now I feed my grandkids without worrying. Mealtime is fun again. I am the grandmother I always wanted to be.”

Why Dr.Kaplittand His Team Continue This Work

Dr.Kaplittsays Valerie’s experience reflects the goal of this treatment.

“Focused ultrasound allows us to restore a level of independence that many patients feared they had lost forever. It is remarkable tobe able to use sound waves to improve the function of brain circuits and see instantaneous improvement in tremor while allowing patients to return home the same day and often use their hand to eat or drink normally for the first time in years.”

Looking Ahead

Valerie will return for treatment on the opposite side of her brain.Treating the opposite side was recently FDA approved based upon a study led by Dr.Kaplittand published last year in JAMA Neurology. The approval requires a 9 month wait between treating the first and second sides,butValeriesays the wait is worth it.

Valerie and family

“I just want to live my life without thinking about my hands. I want to hold a fork, write a note, feed my grandbabies and not struggle. That is what I look forward to.”

Her message to others living with essential tremor is direct:

“Go for it. This gave me my life back.”

Learn More About Focused Ultrasound Treatment

If you or someone you know is living with essential tremor and would like to find out whether focused ultrasound isappropriate, you can contact AVо directly.

Call: 212-746-4966
Email: neurosurgery-fus@med.cornell.edu

Regaining writing, eating, speaking and identity, may be closer than you think.

In This Article

Clinical Service

Physician