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Query: UMLS:C0013421 (
dystonia
)
8,418
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a young adult female case of
Wilson's disease
presenting with mental disorder and frontal lobe signs. The patient was admitted to our neurological unit on October 4, 1999 because of schizophrenia-like symptom, dysphagia, dysarthria and gait disturbance. She showed slowly progressive rigidity and
dystonia
. Her parents were the second cousins. Neurological examination revealed bilateral pyramidal and extrapyramidal signs, frontal lobe signs (include the imitation behavior). Tendon reflexes were slightly exaggerated in all extremities. Bilateral Babinski, Chaddock and Hoffmann signs were positive. Her verbal IQ on the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-revised was 49. Biochemical examination revealed low plasma copper and ceruloplasmin concentration. Cerebrospinal fluid was normal. Cranial MRI demonstrated diffuse brain atrophy and enlargement of the lateral ventricles. T2-weighted images of the MRI demonstrated hyperintense signal in both thalamus and basal ganglia. SPECT showed hypoperfusion in the left frontal lobe, both thalamus and basal ganglia. EEG revealed diffuse theta wave. The diagnosis of
Wilson's disease
was made and the treatment of D-penicillamine 900 mg per day was started. This hypoperfusion of SPECT and EEG findings improved after 2 months under D-penicillamine therapy. Neurological findings showed slight improvement. A few
Wilson's disease
patients presenting with mental disorder have been reported.
Wilson's disease
should always be considered in differential diagnosis of mental disorders. We emphasize the importance of early diagnosis and treatment of
Wilson's disease
.
...
PMID:[A young adult female case of Wilson's disease presenting with mental disorder and frontal lobe signs]. 1108 96
Therapy for most people with
dystonia
is symptomatic, directed at lessening the intensity of the dystonic contractions. For a small minority of patients (eg, those with dopa-responsive dystonia,
Wilson's disease
, or psychogenic
dystonia
), specific therapy directed at one of the many causes of
dystonia
is available. Before initiating treatment, clinicians need to decide if a patient has a form of
dystonia
amenable to such therapy. The most sensitive and least costly method to diagnose DRD is a therapeutic trial of levodopa. It is, therefore, recommended to treat all those with
dystonia
beginning in childhood or adolescence with low-dose levodopa. For patients with generalized or segmental signs who do not respond to levodopa, other oral medications, including anticholinergics, baclofen, and benzodiazepines, may provide mild to moderate relief; these medications are often given in combinations. For those with focal
dystonia
, most having adult-onset disease, botulinum toxin A injections often effectively control contractions. The injections produce transient weakness and need to be repeated, generally every 3 to 5 months. There is growing renewed interest in surgical treatment. Peripheral denervating procedures may be helpful for patients with torticollis who do not obtain adequate benefit with botulinum toxin A. The central procedures of pallidotomy and pallidal stimulation are under study; their place in the treatment of the many
dystonia
subtypes (eg, limb vs axial, generalized vs focal, primary vs secondary) still needs to be established. There are very few studies evaluating physical and psychological therapies or the impact of diet or lifestyle in
dystonia
. Most clinicians consider physical therapy, including massage, a potential adjunct to medical therapy, and psychological support and stress reduction may help individuals cope with this chronic and frequently disabling condition.
...
PMID:Dystonia. 1109 54
Neurologic manifestations are rarely described in hereditary hemochromatosis (HH). We describe three patients with HH and movement disorders. Patient 1, a 69-year-old man, had a 13-year history of disabling cerebellar syndrome, action tremor and myoclonus, and secondary dementia. Patient 2 was a 40-year-old man with a 9-year history of cerebellar syndrome, head and arm tremor, and cervical
dystonia
. Patient 3, a 75-year-old woman, had a 5-year history of rapidly disabling parkinsonian syndrome unresponsive to levodopa. The diagnosis of HH was established in the three patients by iron tests, evidence of a C282Y mutation, and, in two patients, by liver biopsy. High-field T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging showed hyperintense signals in hemispheric white matter in patient 1, cerebellar atrophy in patient 2, and cerebellar and cerebral atrophy in patient 3 and no significant hypointense signals in the three patients. Phlebotomies and symptomatic treatments did not change the course of the disease. Our cases are compared with the five previously reported observations of HH with movement disorders. This rare association is one cause of the chronic acquired non-Wilsonian
hepatocerebral degeneration
syndromes and represents a separate entity from aceruloplasminemia. The pathophysiologic mechanism of movement disorders in HH is unresolved. No hepatic insufficiency and portosystemic encephalopathy is evidenced in our cases, whereas the putative role of abnormal iron load remains to be ascertained. HH should be investigated more systematically in patients with movement disorders.
...
PMID:Clinical report of three patients with hereditary hemochromatosis and movement disorders. 1110 6
The frequency and type of
dystonic movements
, as well as brain abnormalities, as depicted with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), which might correlate with
dystonia
, were studied in 27 consecutive patients with a neurologic form of
Wilson's disease
(WD) and optimized treatment.
Dystonia
was found in 10 patients (37%), being generalized in half of them, while two patients had segmental, two patients multifocal
dystonia
, and one patient bilateral foot
dystonia
.
Dystonia
was a presenting sign in four patients and developed later in the course of the disease in six patients, despite the administered therapy for WD. Putamen was the only structure significantly more frequently lesioned in dystonic (80%) in comparison to WD patients without
dystonia
(24%), suggesting a relation between abnormalities in this brain region and
dystonic movements
in WD.
...
PMID:Dystonia in Wilson's disease. 1148 98
A few patients with an affected CNS involving abnormalities in copper metabolism have been described that do not fit any known nosological entities such as
Wilson's disease
or Menkes' disease. Three sporadic patients (two men and one woman) were examined with involuntary movements and dysarthria associated with abnormal concentrations of serum copper, serum ceruloplasmin, and urinary copper excretion. The onset of neurological symptoms occurred at the age of 15 to 17 years. The common clinical symptoms were involuntary movements and dysarthria. The involuntary movements included
dystonia
in the neck, myoclonus in the shoulder, athetosis in the neck, and rapid orobuccal movements. The dysarthria consisted of unclear, slow, and stuttering speech. Two of the three patients did not have dementia. A cousin of the female patient had been diagnosed as having
Wilson's disease
and had died of liver cirrhosis. Laboratory findings showed a mild reduction in serum copper and ceruloplasmin concentrations, whereas urinary copper excretion was significantly reduced in all three patients. Two of the three patients showed a high signal intensity in the basal ganglia on T2 weighted brain MRI. In conclusion, the unique findings of involuntary movements, dysarthria, and abnormal serum copper and urinary copper concentrations suggest that the three patients may constitute a new clinical entity that is distinct from either Wilson's or Menkes disease.
...
PMID:A new neurological entity manifesting as involuntary movements and dysarthria with possible abnormal copper metabolism. 1172 1
Dystonia
is not uncommon in childhood, and identification of its etiology is an ultimate aim in the clinical evaluation of
dystonia
. Advances in neuroimaging, recent identification of gene or loci implicated in dystonic syndromes, and characterisation of new pathological entities (creatine deficiency, biotin-responsive basal ganglia disease) enlarge our understanding of childhood
dystonia
, and expend its diagnosis spectrum. Awareness of the diverse etiologic categories of childhood-onset
dystonia
is necessary to accurate diagnosis approach. Clinical examination and cerebral magnetic resonance imaging are the keys of this diagnosis approach. Primary
dystonia
is defined as syndromes in which
dystonia
is the sole phenotypic manifestation (especially no cognitive deterioration is observed, and brain MRI is normal); DYT1
dystonia
, in which the abnormal gene is located on chromosome 9, is the most frequent childhood-onset primary
dystonia
; progressive generalisation of the abnormal movements occur in 70p.cent of the patients. Dopa - Responsive
Dystonia
are characterized by marked diurnal fluctuations of the dystonic symptoms and by their marked and sustained response to dopaminergic therapy; associated parkinsonian signs are usually observed later in the course of the disease. Clinical presentation of DRD might be atypical (mimicking cerebral palsy or isolated limb pain without diurnal fluctuation). DRD is rare, but a trial of L-dopa should be performed on all patients with childhood-onset
dystonia
, lasting at least one month. Secondary dystonias or heredodegenerative diseases are the most frequent etiology of childhood-onset dystonic syndromes. Among a huge range of heredodegenerative disease, those that are amenable to a specific treatment, such as
Wilson's disease
or creatine deficiency, should be particularly investigated. The main objective of investigation of
dystonia
is to identify secondary dystonias or heredodegenerative diseases. Further investigations will be performed according to the clinical characteristics of the
dystonia
, to the presence of associated neurological or extraneurological symptoms, and according to brain imaging; this approach must be discussed for each single patient. The aim of the diagnosis strategy is the rapid identification of the etiology of
dystonia
which will lead to accurate treatment and pertinent genetic counselling.
...
PMID:[The varied etiologies of childhood-onset dystonia]. 1198 83
THALAMUS: The human thalamus is a nuclear complex located in the diencephalon and comprising of four parts (the hypothalamus, the epythalamus, the ventral thalamus, and the dorsal thalamus). The thalamus is a relay centre subserving both sensory and motor mechanisms. Thalamic nuclei (50-60 nuclei) project to one or a few well-defined cortical areas. Multiple cortical areas receive afferents from a single thalamic nucleus and send back information to different thalamic nuclei. The corticofugal projection provides positive feedback to the "correct" input, while at the same time suppressing irrelevant information. Topographical organisation of the thalamic afferents and efferents is contralateral, and the lateralisation of the thalamic functions affects both sensory and motoric aspects. Symptoms of lesions located in the thalamus are closely related to the function of the areas involved. An infarction or haemorrhage thalamic lesion can develop somatosensory disturbances and/or central pain in the opposite hemibody, analgesic or purely algesic thalamic syndrome characterised by contralateral anaesthesia (or hypaesthesia), contralateral weakness, ataxia and, often, persistent spontaneous pain. BASAL GANGLIA: Basal ganglia form a major centre in the complex extrapyramidal motor system, as opposed to the pyramidal motor system (corticobulbar and corticospinal pathways). Basal ganglia are involved in many neuronal pathways having emotional, motivational, associative and cognitive functions as well. The striatum (caudate nucleus, putamen and nucleus accumbens) receive inputs from all cortical areas and, throughout the thalamus, project principally to frontal lobe areas (prefrontal, premotor and supplementary motor areas) which are concerned with motor planning. These circuits: (i) have an important regulatory influence on cortex, providing information for both automatic and voluntary motor responses to the pyramidal system; (ii) play a role in predicting future events, reinforcing wanted behaviour and suppressing unwanted behaviour, and (iii) are involved in shifting attentional sets and in both high-order processes of movement initiation and spatial working memory. Basal ganglia-thalamo-cortical circuits maintain somatotopic organisation of movement-related neurons throughout the circuit. These circuits reveal functional subdivisions of the oculomotor, prefrontal and cingulate circuits, which play an important role in attention, learning and potentiating behaviour-guiding rules. Involvement of the basal ganglia is related to involuntary and stereotyped movements or paucity of movements without involvement of voluntary motor functions, as in Parkinson's disease,
Wilson's disease
, progressive supranuclear palsy or Huntington's disease. The symptoms differ with the location of the lesion. The commonest disturbances in basal ganglia lesions are abulia (apathy with loss of initiative and of spontaneous thought and emotional responses) and
dystonia
, which become manifest as behavioural and motor disturbances, respectively.
...
PMID:Functional anatomy of thalamus and basal ganglia. 1219 99
The inherited movement disorders comprise a rapidly growing category of human disease. Advances in genetics have led to the identification of the gene mutation in Huntington's disease and three different gene mutations, which may lead to Parkinson's disease. In addition, gene mutations have been identified in less common movement disorders including
Wilson's disease
, Hallervorden-Spatz syndrome, paroxysmal kinesogenic choreoathetosis, neuroacanthocytosis, and some forms of
dystonia
. This article summarizes what is known about the genetic mutations that cause these movement disorders, as well as the clinical features of each disease and the symptomatic treatments currently available.
...
PMID:Inherited movement disorders. 1243 29
The author reviews the applications of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in a series of movement disorders--namely, Parkinson's disease, corticobasal degeneration, multiple system atrophy, progressive supranuclear palsy, essential tremor,
dystonia
, Huntington's chorea, myoclonus, the ataxias, Tourette's syndrome, restless legs syndrome,
Wilson's disease
, Rett syndrome, and stiff-person syndrome. Single- and paired-pulse TMS studies have been done mainly for pathophysiologic purposes. Repetitive TMS has been used largely for therapy. Many TMS abnormalities are seen in the different diseases. They concur to show that motor cortical areas and their projections are the main target of the basal ganglia dysfunction typical of movement disorders. Interpretation has not always been clear, and sometimes there were discrepancies and contradictions. Largely, this may be the result of the extreme heterogeneity of the methods used and of the patients studied. It is premature to give repetitive TMS a role in treatment. Overall, however, TMS gives rise to a new, outstanding enthusiasm in the neurophysiology of movement disorders. There is reason to predict that TMS, with its continuous technical refinement, will prove even more helpful in the near future. Then, research achievements are reasonably expected to spill over into clinical practice.
...
PMID:Applications of transcranial magnetic stimulation in movement disorders. 1243 85
Childhood dystonias are a heterogeneous group of disorders with strong inherited basis. This review describes the clinical characteristics, classification, genetic basis, pathophysiology, biochemistry, pathology, and treatment of dystonias, including the primary dystonias, the
dystonia
-plus syndromes, secondary dystonias, and heredodegenerative disorders. Conditions discussed in detail include idiopathic torsion dystonia, dopa-responsive dystonia,
Wilson's disease
, myoclonus
dystonia
, rapid-onset
dystonia
parkinsonism, neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (Hallervorden-Spatz syndrome), mitochondrial dystonias, Niemann-Pick type C, and neuroacanthocytosis.
...
PMID:Childhood dystonia. 1278 48
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