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Query: UMLS:C0013421 (dystonia)
8,418 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The origins of dystonia musculorum deformans are now considered to be organic. However, misdiagnosis of dystonia as a functional psychiatric disorder--usually conversion reaction--has persisted. The present study describes personality traits as measured by the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory in 30 persons with dystonia and in a control group of 37 persons with cerebral palsy. The data, examined by diagnosis, level of disability, and sex, showed no differences for diagnostic groups or levels of disability. Males scored in the direction of greater psychopathology than did females. The male dystonics showed the highest elevations of MMPI scales of all the groups. Although only one person with dystonia musculorum deformans and none with cerebral palsy produced the profile usually associated with conversion reaction, 36% of all profiles showed two scales above a T score of 70. This finding suggested that young adults with a physically disabling disease may be at higher risk for developing maladaptive personality traits.
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PMID:MMPI characteristics associated with cerebral palsy and dystonia musculorum deformans. 48 13

The authors studied the records of 84 patients who had idiopathic torsion dystonia. Thirty-seven cases had originally been misdiagnosed as primarily psychiatric illness. Only 1 patient presented with dystonic movements that were clearly part of a more general psychiatric disorder. The authors believe her to be the first reported patient whose dystonia is undeniably of psychogenic origin.
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PMID:Dystonia: a disorder often misdiagnosed as a conversion reaction. 62 28

Investigated were 55 patients with slow-progredient schizophrenia and cyclothymia aged 17 to 25 with the syndrome of vaso-autonomic dystonia (VAD) accompanying their mental disorder. VAD was found in 80% of the depressive cases, hypomaniac syndromes and psychopath-like (residual) states. Each of these disorders correlated with a distinct type of VAD. In a majority of the cases VAD manifested after several years of mental disease. The study provides grounds for combined psychotropic and rational psychotherapy with an early social rehabilitating assistance. The study substantiated the necessity of psychiatric services aimed at specialized psychiatric aid to these patients in the general out-patient clinic network.
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PMID:[Autonomic vascular asthenia as a component of the psycho- autonomic syndrome in slowly progressing schizophrenia and cyclothymic disorder in young patients]. 258 4

Follow-up data from the first 100 patients with early dyskinesia are presented. After an average of 40.9 months, the cohort showed statistically significant decreases in tardive dyskinesia (TD) ratings. After TD onset, ratings decreased for 4 years, then plateaued and rose during the 7th year. Age was not a negative prognostic factor in this cohort. Improvement in TD correlated significantly with fewer neuroleptic-free periods before and more neuroleptic-free periods after TD onset. Neuroleptic dosage correlated negatively with improvement in trunk and dystonia ratings. Improvement in TD is the usual finding in longitudinal studies of TD cohorts. Follow-up studies of neuroleptic-treated groups with varying proportions of patients showing TD, by contrast, tend to show increased TD because new TD cases more than offset improvement. A naturalistic study with pharmacotherapy tailored to the underlying psychiatric disorder and conducted long-term from TD onset is the ideal design for investigating the natural history of TD.
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PMID:The natural history of tardive dyskinesia. 290 68

Concurrent administration of lithium (Li) significantly attenuates the dopamine (DA) depleting effects of reserpine and tetrabenazine, but does not change alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine (AMPT) induced DA depletion in rat brain. This effect of Li is probably mediated, in part, by inhibiting the magnesium-dependent binding of both reserpine and tetrabenazine to their specific receptor sites. Such interaction between these drugs may attenuate the beneficial effects of tetrabenazine and reserpine on patients with tardive dyskinesia or tardive dystonia who are treated concurrently with lithium for their psychiatric disorder.
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PMID:Lithium attenuates dopamine depleting effects of reserpine and tetrabenazine but not that of alpha methyl-p-tyrosine. 686 53

The objective of this study was to determine the putative risk factors for the development of tardive dystonia (TDt) in contrast with tardive dyskinesia (TD). Fifteen TDt patients seen in the Movement Disorders Clinic were compared with 2 groups of 15 TD controls each. The first control group was drawn from the Clinic and matched with the TDt cases for severity, using degree of dysfunction as the matching variable. The second control group comprised mild TD cases drawn from a separate study of drug-induced movement disorders in chronic schizophrenia and were matched for age and sex with the TDt cases. A number of demographic, treatment-related, diagnosis-related and historical variables suggested in the literature were examined. Most risk factors for TDt that have been suggested by previous studies were not supported. The first control group was significantly older than the TDt cases. The TDt patients had a more frequent past history of acute drug-induced dystonia and of postural tremor prior to the onset of the mental illness, although only the former reached statistical significance. The results suggested that TDt and TD do not differ in most putative risk factors, although the small sample size increases the likelihood of a type II error. It is inconclusive on the role of young age and male sex as risk factors. TDt cases may, however, be individuals vulnerable to the development of dystonia, with neuroleptics probably bringing out such a vulnerability. This finding needs to be examined in larger studies.
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PMID:Risk factors for tardive dystonia: a case-control comparison with tardive dyskinesia. 810 38

The diagnosis of neurovegetative dystonia (NVD) is commonly made by general physicians in Brazil, but its precise meaning is unclear. Anecdotal evidence suggests that it is used to describe patients with a wide range of psychological and physical symptoms and is often used pejoratively, in a similar way to "crocks" in the USA. Forty patients who had been diagnosed as having NVD by general physicians working in a triage department of a general public hospital were compared with 40 non-NVD patients, matched for age and gender, from the same department. Patients were evaluated by a psychiatrist who was blind to the diagnosis that had been made. The assessment included a structured sociodemographic questionnaire, the Clinical Interview Schedule (CIS), and a routine psychiatric interview using DSM-III-R criteria. Using the CIS, the "reported symptoms" that most distinguished NVD patients from controls were somatic and anxiety, whereas for "manifest abnormality" NVD patients displayed more anxiety, histrionic behavior, hypochondriasis, and depressive thoughts. A total of 92.5% of NVD patients received diagnoses using DSM-III-R criteria compared to 37.5% of controls. The relative risk of NVD patients subsequently receiving a psychiatric disorder was 8.3 (95% CI = 2.5-43.1, p < 0.001). Although general physicians correctly identify most patients with psychiatric disorder they miss many others. Furthermore, they use an obsolete diagnostic category which has no psychiatric currency. Medical students and residents need better psychiatric training so that they can correctly identify patients in general medical settings who are suffering from mental disorders and make a diagnosis using accepted psychiatric terminology.
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PMID:Neurovegetative dystonia--psychiatric evaluation of 40 patients diagnosed by general physicians in Brazil. 939 65

Idiopathic cervical dystonia (ICD) is the most common form of adult-onset focal dystonia. Previously, disagreement existed about whether ICD was a psychiatric illness, but the disorder is now viewed as a neurological illness and large clinical series have clarified the clinical features of the disease. At the time of diagnosis, extracervical dystonia is found in approximately 20% of patients, and there may be a concomitant head or hand tremor. Importantly, adult-onset ICD does not become generalized, although there may be segmental spread and pain may increase independently of the dystonia. While 10-20% of patients may experience remission, nearly all patients relapse within 5 years and are left with persistent disease. The aetiology of ICD is unknown, but there has been much progress in clarifying the genetic abnormality in families with inherited adult-onset cervical dystonia; linkage to chromosome 18p has been demonstrated in one family, and the DYT1 locus has been excluded in two other families. Painful trauma may be involved in the pathogenesis of ICD. Painful stimuli are received and processed by the basal ganglia, and the synaptic changes provoked by pain may lead to the abnormal physiology underlying dystonia. Consistent with this idea are experiments which demonstrate that altered sensory input leads to plasticity of the motor cortex, and those that explore the 'tonic vibration reflex' in patients with dystonia. Another theory suggests that a primary vestibular abnormality is responsible for ICD. Botulinum toxin is the most effective treatment for ICD. Roughly 75% of patients improve, and a response is generally seen within the first week. However, many questions remain regarding the optimal technique of administration. The development of neutralizing antibodies occurs in at least 5-10% of patients, and appears to be related both to dosage and to the interval between treatments. Side-effects are generally mild and result from the action of the toxin in the periphery. If the response to botulinum toxin is not adequate, anticholinergics, benzodiazepines, baclofen and other medications are used as adjunctive therapy. Surgical therapies are available for the treatment of ICD but are reserved for patients refractory to conservative measures.
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PMID:Current concepts on the clinical features, aetiology and management of idiopathic cervical dystonia. 957 84

Antipsychotic-induced extrapyramidal adverse effects continue to be a serious problem in the treatment of psychotic disorders. While the pathophysiology of these adverse effects is not well understood, much recent research has focused on improving our ability to use available pharmacotherapy in the most effective and least toxic manner. Acute dystonic reactions only occur within the first days of antipsychotic treatment. They are often distressing and frightening for the patient and may even be dangerous. However, they can be effectively prevented or reversed with anticholinergics. Furthermore, the growing use of the new atypical antipsychotics will lead to a significant decrease in the rate of acute dystonic reactions. In contrast, tardive dystonia is a long-lasting menace in the course of antipsychotic treatment, for which there is no established therapy. Tardive dystonia is sometimes disabling or disfiguring and, like other tardive disorders, is potentially irreversible. Because, in most cases, patients need to continue taking the antipsychotic that has caused the adverse effect to prevent relapse of the mental illness, preventive measures are crucial. Antipsychotics should be prescribed only for patients affected by psychotic disorders, when definitely indicated and at the lowest effective dosage. The use of clozapine and other novel antipsychotic agents is also likely to represent an important step in the prevention and treatment of tardive dystonia. Compared with traditional antipsychotics, most of the new antipsychotics are characterised by a low acute extrapyramidal adverse effects liability and they also bring the hope of reducing the risk of tardive disorders. If tardive dystonia has occurred, switching to clozapine or another atypical antipsychotic and treatment with tetrabenazine, reserpine and botulinum toxin are possible options.
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PMID:Managing antipsychotic-induced acute and tardive dystonia. 967 58

Several studies have reported raised levels of psychopathology based on self-rating scales in patients with spasmodic torticollis. Recent publications have also proposed that psychopathology, especially symptoms of depression, might be a reaction to dystonia or constitute a nonspecific reaction pattern. To determine the actual frequency of psychiatric disorders, we evaluated 44 patients with spasmodic torticollis (20 female, 24 male; mean age 43.6 years, SD 10.4) using the standard instrument for psychiatric diagnosis in the DSM-III-R (Structured Clinical Interview Schedule, SCID). The SCID permits retrospective diagnosis for most of the major psychiatric disorders, including the time before onset of dystonia. SCID criteria for at least one psychiatric disorder were fulfilled in 65.9% of patients, including both lifetime and current diagnosis. The most frequent diagnostic categories were panic disorder with or without agoraphobia (29.5%), major depressive disorder (25%), substance abuse (13.6%), and obsessive compulsive disorders (6.8%) were diagnosed less frequently. The patient-recalled onset of psychiatric symptoms preceded onset of torticollis symptoms in 43.2% of those investigated.
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PMID:Psychiatric comorbidity in patients with spasmodic torticollis. 967 50


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