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Query: UMLS:C0013421 (
dystonia
)
8,418
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thirty-one patients with
Wilson's disease
were evaluated with detailed neurologic and medical examinations. Mean age (+/- SD) at onset was 21 +/- 5 years and at examination was 28 +/- 6 years. Of the 90% of patients who were first treated with penicillamine, 31% deteriorated initially despite therapy, and half never recovered to pretherapy baseline. At the time of our evaluations, the most common neurologic findings were dysarthria (97%),
dystonia
(65%), dysdiadochokinesia (58%), rigidity (52%), gait and postural abnormalities (42%), and tremor (32%). Chorea and dementia were rare. Twenty-two patients underwent magnetic resonance imaging. All but one of the 19 symptomatic patients had abnormal scans. The three asymptomatic patients had normal scans. Most lesions were seen in the caudate, putamen, subcortical white matter, midbrain, and pons. Generalized brain atrophy was also common. Lesions were less common in the thalamus, cerebellar vermis, midbrain tegmentum, globus pallidus, red nucleus, and dentate nucleus.
Dystonia
and bradykinesia correlated with putamen lesions, and dysarthria correlated with both putamen and caudate lesions.
...
PMID:Clinical assessment of 31 patients with Wilson's disease. Correlations with structural changes on magnetic resonance imaging. 382 91
The authors report an experiment undertaken with trazodone in the treatment of different forms of pathological involuntary movements. Forty-five subjects were treated for two months; 15 were affected with L-DOPA + decarboxylase inhibitor induced dyskinesias, 9 with choreic or choreoathetosic syndromes, 6 with primary buccolingual dyskinesias, 4 with ticks, 9 with tremors--3 of whom had delirium tremens--and 1 case of
Wilson's disease
with severe postural
dystonia
. At the end of treatment there was a considerable improvement in 40 cases (88.9%), 17 of whom (37.8%) had a reduction of over 65% of symptoms. The results were good in all the groups considered; particularly interesting were those obtained in delirium tremens, alcoholic induced tremor, primary buccolingual dyskinesias, L-DOPA + decarboxylase inhibitor induced dyskinesias. Emphasis is placed on the efficacy of the drug in inhibiting postural
dystonia
in the one case of
Wilson's disease
. The good tolerance of the drug was confirmed.
...
PMID:[Trazodone in involuntary pathologic movements]. 671 59
The purpose of this study was to evaluate MRI findings in a group of patients with
Wilson's disease
, trying to establish possible correlations between clinical and image data. Sixteen patients (8 males and 8 females), with ages ranging from 11 to 50 years, and duration of illness ranging from 5 months to 32 years, were submitted to MRI in a 1.5T System. Four patients were asymptomatic, 4 had mild neurological findings, 2 were moderately affected and the remaining 6 had a severe form of the disease. All patients were receiving D-penicillamine by the time of the study. The most symptomatic patients presented five or more sites of abnormalities on MRI. The putamen was affected in all symptomatic individuals and one asymptomatic and 11 of them presented
dystonia
on neurological examination. A striking feature was the peripheral localization of putaminal hyperintense lesions on T2 weighted images. In eight cases, striatum or "substantia nigra" lesions explained parkinsonism observed on neurological examination. MRI seems to be an efficient method to study neurological involvement of
Wilson's disease
allowing some interesting anatomo-clinical correlations.
...
PMID:Wilson's disease: magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with clinical correlations in 16 cases. 810 34
We tried to establish possible correlations between clinical data and MRI in a group of patients with
Wilson's disease
. Eleven patients (6 male, 5 female), aged between 11 and 50 years old, with a duration of illness from 5 months to 32 years, were submitted to MRI on a 1.5 T System. Three patients were asymptomatic, two had mild neurological disturbances, two were moderately affected and the remaining four had a severe form of the disease. All were receiving D-penicillamine at the time of the study. In the most symptomatic patients there were abnormalities in five or more sites on MRI. The putamen was affected in all symptomatic patients, including five with
dystonia
. A striking feature was the peripheral location of high signal putaminal lesions on T2-weighted images. In five cases, lesions in the corpus striatum or substantia nigra explained the patient's Parkinsonian features. MRI is an efficient method for studying involvement of the central nervous system in
Wilson's disease
, and allows some interesting anatomoclinical correlations.
...
PMID:Wilson's disease: MRI with clinical correlation. 818 67
Dystonia
is a persistent attitude or posture in one or other of the extremes of athetoid movement. It may take the form of an over-extension or over-flexion of the hand, torsion of the spine, with arching and twisting of the back or forceful closure of the eyes and a fixed grimace.
Dystonia
is classified into idiopathic and symptomatic
dystonia
. Idiopathic
dystonia
is further divided into generalized, focal and segmental
dystonia
. Generalized
dystonia
covers classical torsion dystonia, paradoxical
dystonia
, myoclonic
dystonia
,
dystonia
with diurnal variation and Dopa-responsive
dystonia
. Dystonic tic, paroxysmal
dystonia
and hypnotic
dystonia
show a dystonic posture, although they are also accompanied by various other involuntary movements such as athetosis or chorea. Torticollis, writer's cramp or blepharospasm is assigned to the focal
dystonia
and Meige syndrome to the segmental
dystonia
. Symptomatic
dystonia
is observed in various neurological disorders, including cerebrovascular diseases, Parkinson's disease and
Wilson's disease
.
...
PMID:[Dystonia]. 827 58
A variety of inheritable metabolic disorders produce movement disorders. A lists of conditions associated with tremor, athetosis, chorea,
dystonia
and myoclonus are presented as a guide for the differential diagnosis of such abnormal involuntary movements. The list includes aminoacidopathies, lipidoses, mucopolysaccharidoses, mucolipidoses, organic acidemias, mitochondrial cytopathies and disorders of carbohydrate, purine, and metal metabolism. Clinical, pathological and biochemical features of movement disorders of three typical examples,
Wilson's disease
, Lesch-Nyhan syndrome and glutaric acidemia type 1, are described.
...
PMID:[Movement disorders in miscellaneous disorders--inherited metabolic diseases]. 827 72
Four patients with neurological
Wilson's disease
were investigated using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET). All patients had
dystonia
as their major clinical manifestation but also had dysarthria and at the presentation of the disease had choreoathetoid movements in at least one limb. A multitracer approach with PET was used to visualize various aspects of dopaminergic function; [11C]-(+)-nomifensine (NMF), [11C]raclopride (RAC) and [11C]-L-DOPA (one patient). Correlation analysis of RAC and NMF binding as well as putamen/caudate uptake ratios showed corresponding reductions. The patient investigated with [11C]-L-DOPA had a normal striatal uptake. Generally, structural changes as shown by MRI corresponded to reductions both in NMF and RAC binding. There was no evident correspondence between PET findings and the severity of clinical symptoms seen in the individual patient. In two patients with discrete neurological impairment at the time of investigation, PET showed serious presynaptic dopaminergic lesions in the putamen. Our data suggest that the striatal degeneration seen in
Wilson's disease
comprises a complex pathology involving both afferent and efferent projections. The discrete neurological impairment seen in some patients with gross striatal pathology might be due to concomitant lesions in functionally counteracting basal ganglia circuits.
...
PMID:Neurological Wilson's disease studied with magnetic resonance imaging and with positron emission tomography using dopaminergic markers. 855 11
Wilson's Disease
is an inherited disorder of copper metabolism. We report 16 patients (6 males) with the disease; 6 had hepatic involvement exclusively, 4 had neurological involvement, 3 had a neurological and hepatic involvement and 3 were asymptomatic. The age onset was 9 years for hepatic and 17 years for neurologic involvement. The mean delay in diagnosis was 14 months. Chronic hepatitis, cirrhosis and fulminant hepatic failure were the clinical forms of liver disease. Patients with neurologic disorders had behavioral disturbances and extrapyramidal manifestations such as
dystonia
and parkinsonism. Patients had a good response to penicillamine, except 3 that died of liver complications, in whom the treatment was delayed or discontinued. We conclude that this metabolic disease must be suspected in pubertal children and in adults of less than 30 years old with liver disease of unknown origin or behavioral alterations associated to an extrapyramidal syndrome.
...
PMID:[Wilson's disease: a review apropos of a clinical experience in 16 patients]. 872 33
A 28-year-old man with
Wilson's disease
developed neurological deterioration after a low-dose of d-penicillamine treatment for 2 weeks. He showed an akinetic rigid syndrome with generalized
dystonia
. Brain magnetic resonance images (MRI) on T2 and proton weighted images showed an increased signal intensity over the thalamus, basal ganglia and brainstem, especially the midbrain and pons. After treatment had been changed to zinc sulphate, the akinetic-rigid syndrome and
dystonia
were improved slowly in the following 4 years. Serial MRI studies showed a gradual resolution of the lesions. His current neurological status was almost normal except for dysarthria and mild intention tremor.
...
PMID:Wilson's disease: resolution of MRI lesions following long-term oral zinc therapy. 874 Nov 47
Chronic acquired
hepatocerebral degeneration
(CAHD) is a heterogeneous disorder that can occur with a primary neurologic, hepatic, or combined presentation. Little has been added to the understanding of this disorder since the detailed, early clinical and pathological descriptions. The spectrum of clinical presentations can be neuropsychiatric (apathy, lethargy, excessive somnolence), a movement disorder (ataxia, tremor, chorea, parkinsonism, myoclonus,
dystonia
), or both. Cortical laminar necrosis and polymicrocavitation in the cortex and basal ganglia are combined with cerebral and cerebellar atrophy. Microscopically, Alzheimer type II astrocytes and cytoplasmic glycogen granules are characteristic. Recent neuroradiological observations in patients with liver failure have shown a specific magnetic resonance (MR) imaging appearance with a hyperintense T1 signal in the pallidum, putamen, and, rarely, mesencephalon. Using clues from a similar MR appearance in patients receiving total parenteral nutrition as well as animals given parenteral manganese, and the knowledge that manganese is cleared by the hepatobiliary system, deposition of manganese in the brain is postulated in patients with CAHD. In this review we describe three cases of CAHD with detailed clinical and radiological documentation and discuss the aforementioned pathogenetic mechanisms.
...
PMID:Chronic acquired hepatocerebral degeneration: case reports and new insights. 886 9
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