Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0013421 (dystonia)
8,418 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Tetrabenazine (TBZ) is a catecholamine depletor used for the treatment of a variety of movement disorders. The purpose of this study was to assess the efficacy of TBZ in a retrospective chart review in 3 tertiary care movement disorders centers over long-term treatment. Of 150 patients to whom TBZ was prescribed, 118 were followed up and assessed using the Clinical Global Impression of Change (CGIC), (-3 to +3), a composite grade from a patient and caregiver scale over variable periods. The patients had a variety of hyperkinetic movement disorders including dystonia (generalized and focal: axial, Meige syndrome, torticollis, blepharospasm, bruxism), Huntington disease (HD) or other choreas, tardive dyskinesia (TD) or akathisia, and Tourette syndrome. Mean patient age was 48.8 +/- 18.7 years; 48 were men (40.7%) with a mean disease duration of 93 months. The mean follow-up time was 22 months and the mean TBZ dose was 76.2 +/- 22.5 mg/d (median 75 mg, range 25-175 mg/d). The mean CGIC score was +1 (mild improvement). The group of patients who scored +3 on the CGIC (very good improvement) represented 18.6% (n = 22) of all patients. They had HD or other types of chorea 7.6% (n = 9), facial dystonia/dyskinesia (n = 7, 5.9%), 1 with TD, 2 with trunk dystonia, 2 with Tourette syndrome, and 1 with tardive akathisia. This group had the longest treatment duration and received a mean TBZ dose of 70.5 mg/d (median 75 mg/d) for a mean of 25.4 +/- 21.3 months. The report concludes that TBZ is a moderately effective treatment of a large variety of hyperkinetic movement disorders, with excellent effects in a subgroup with chorea and facial dystonia/dyskinesias.
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PMID:Tetrabenazine treatment in movement disorders. 1560 4

The cause of primary Meige syndrome is unknown, and although gender and age predilections are different from idiopathic torsion dystonia, most investigators consider Meige syndrome a variant of that disorder. Interest in the use of stereotactic brain surgery for refractory forms of dystonia is thus increasing. There is little experience with the use of deep brain stimulation (DBS) in focal dystonias, and reports of its use in Meige syndrome are very rare. We report on a case of Meige syndrome successfully treated with bilateral pallidal DBS.
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PMID:Meige syndrome and pallidal deep brain stimulation. 1595 26

Blepharospasm is a focal dystonia characterized by involuntary eye closure due to abnormal contraction of orbicular eyelid muscles. When blepharospasm is associated to the presence of involuntary oromandibular movements, it is termed Meige syndrome. The aim of this study was to investigate the presence of deglutition alterations in patients with concurrent blepharospasm and Meige syndrome. Twenty consecutive patients were studied by video fluoroscopy using a barium technique. The 4 stages of deglutition were investigated. Ninety percent of patients (18 cases) presented deglutition disorders. The more commonly found alterations were premature food drop, 15 cases (83%) and vallecuale residuals, 14 cases (78%). Sixty seven percent of abnormal findings occurred in the third stage of deglutition. Eighty-nine percent of patients (16) presented more than one swallowing alteration. There was a positive and significant correlation between the number of alterations and patient's age or disease duration. Prevalence of swallowing disorders in the healthy elderly population is reported to be 44%. In our series it reached 90%, suggesting that our findings might be related not only with age but also with a more widespread dystonia exceeding the orofacial muscles.
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PMID:Swallowing disorders in patients with blepharospasm. 1607 4

Previous studies showed cortical dysfunction and impaired sensorimotor integration in primary generalized and focal hand dystonia. We used a whistling task and silent event-related fMRI to investigate functional changes in patients with blepharospasm and patients with a combination of blepharospasm and oromandibular dystonia (Meige's syndrome). Whistling served as a model for a skilful orofacial movement with a high demand on sensorimotor integration. It allowed us to study the oromandibular motor system that is clinically affected in Meige's syndrome but not in isolated blepharospasm. In Meige's syndrome, functional MRI revealed deficient activation of the primary motor and ventral premotor cortex within the mouth representation area during whistling. Compared with healthy controls, both forms of orofacial dystonia had increased activation of bilateral somatosensory areas and the caudal supplementary motor area (SMA) in common. While overactivity of somatosensory areas and caudal SMA in Meige patients was partly reversed by botulinum toxin treatment, impaired motor activation was not. We conclude that impaired motor activation appears to be specific for the clinically affected oromandibular motor system in Meige's syndrome while enhanced somatosensory activation is a common abnormality in both forms of orofacial dystonia independent of the affected motor system. Somatosensory overactivity indicates an altered somatosensory representation in orofacial dystonia while impaired motor activation may be a functional correlate of reduced cortical inhibition during oromandibular motor execution in Meige's syndrome.
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PMID:Silent event-related fMRI reveals deficient motor and enhanced somatosensory activation in orofacial dystonia. 1637 4

The spontaneous occurrence of blepharospasm and dystonic movements in face muscles, particularly those of the perioral and mandibular regions, has been named as Meige's disease which was first described by Henry Meige in 1910. We report the case of a woman with Meige's syndrome whose symptoms improved with the use of levetiracetam.
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PMID:Levetiracetam in Meige's syndrome. 1677 30

We profiled 141 consecutive patients of writer's cramp (WC). Simple WC (n=108) had a mean (SD) disease duration of 3.65 (2.7) years and a severity score of 2.8 (0.91) by Burke-Fahn-Marden (BFM) scale (handwriting score: 0-4 ), whereas complex WC (n=33) had a disease duration of 5.8 (2.81) years and severity score of 3.6 (0.52). Compared with focal WC, generalized WC cases had longer disease duration, severer disability, and were older. Mirror dystonia was seen in 65 patients (46.1%). Co-existent Meige's syndrome (n=4) and cervical dystonia (n=6) were seen. Some patients had abnormal posturing of the neck (n=5) and of the oromandibular region (n=3) only while writing. Those receiving botulinum toxin fared significantly better than those on oral therapy, at 1 month post treatment.
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PMID:Clinical profile of various sub-types of writer's cramp. 1740 19

We describe the unusual clinical course of a patient with cranial dystonia (i.e., Meige syndrome) and additional upper limb involvement, who developed sustained relief of motor symptoms following cessation of a prolonged course of bilateral pallidal deep brain stimulation (DBS). Early response to therapy proved titratable and reversible; however, the patient gained independence from DBS in the fifth postoperative year and has since been more than a year without treatment or exacerbation of motor symptoms. Among the potential explanations for these neurological benefits lies the intriguing possibility that DBS therapy may have the capacity to induce plastic change that lessens or obviates the need for further treatment in susceptible patients.
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PMID:Sustained relief of dystonia following cessation of deep brain stimulation. 1767 9

Meige syndrome, a rare form of cranial dystonia, is characterised by bilateral involuntary activity of facial and perioral muscles combined with blepharospasms. A case of a 15-year-old boy with Meige syndrome who was managed with injection of botulinum toxin is presented.
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PMID:Meige syndrome: a rare form of cranial dystonia that was treated successfully with botulinum toxin. 1834 25

A 42-year-old farmer developed persistent mid-facial segmental pain and Meige's syndrome several months after suffering facial trauma and a fracture of the nose. He was not afflicted by systemic ailments, had no family history of movement disorder and no history of exposure to neuroleptic drugs. He was capable of suppressing his facial pain by performing a ritual that included forcefully tilting his head backwards, lowering of his eyelids and applying strong pressure to his nasion. Exceptionally dystonic movements and elaborate behavioral rituals may serve as a mechanism of pain suppression.
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PMID:Posttraumatic mid-facial pain and Meige's syndrome relieved by pressure on the nasion and retrocollis. 2018 27

Surgical treatment of dystonia has experienced a tremendous change over the past decade. Whilst selective peripheral denervation is reserved for cervical dystonia refractory to botulinum toxin injections, deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the pallidum has gained a wide scope and presents an elementary column in the treatment of medically refractory patients, nowadays. There is consensus that idiopathic generalized, cervical and segmental dystonia are good indications for DBS, although there is still a paucity of studies providing high-level data according to EBM criteria. Efficacy is maintained on longterm. Several other forms of primary dystonia are still under investigation but it appears that patients with Meige syndrome and myoclonus-dystonia gain also marked benefit. Study of the outcome in secondary dystonia disorders is more complex, in general, but patients with tardive dystonia gain similar improvement than patients with idiopathic dystonia. Overall, the risk profile of pallidal DBS is quite low, and it has been shown to be cognitively safe. The effect of pallidal DBS on non-dystonic extremities has not received much attention, albeit there are hints for a pro-akinetic mechanism. Several questions remain to be solved including optimal programming of stimulation settings, battery drain with high stimulation energies and the elucidation of the mechanisms of DBS in dystonia.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of dystonia. 2059 Aug 15


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