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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0013421 (
dystonia
)
8,418
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A profound analysis of morbidity with temporary disability (MTD) revealed low health states of the women engaged in coal preparation plants in both Northern and Southern regions of the country. The results obtained proved the major role of labour conditions in the structure of the MTD levels, particularly in such diseases as acute respiratory (dust, hazardous microclimate), hypertension (noise), vascular
dystonia
(noise and vibration), radiculitis and
myositis
(poor microclimate). The data proposed a basis for planning health improvement measures.
...
PMID:[Morbidity with temporary disability of the workers of coal-processing factories]. 206 Aug 8
Rhabdomyolysis is a relatively common condition that may occur intermittently in chronic and inflammatory myopathy, muscular dystrophy, and metabolic myopathy. Rhabdomyolysis can also present acutely in otherwise healthy individuals. The list of etiologies for acute muscle cell lysis is enormous, with new causes described yearly. Series on acute pediatric rhabdomyolysis have not yet been published. This article describes a retrospective review of children admitted to the authors' institution during an 8-year period in whom rhabdomyolysis was recognized as a complication during their hospital stay. Patients with intermittent or relapsing rhabdomyolysis were excluded. Nineteen children were identified. Trauma (five cases), nonketotic hyperosmolar coma (two cases), viral
myositis
(two cases),
dystonia
(two cases), and malignant hyperthermia-related conditions (two cases) were the most common causes of rhabdomyolysis. Acute renal failure was the most frequent complication, occurring in 42% of cases. The mean age of renal failure patients was 13.9 years, compared to 8 years for non-renal failure children. Careful assessment of the initial urinalysis would have suggested a diagnosis of rhabdomyolysis in 9 of 16 patients tested.
...
PMID:Acute pediatric rhabdomyolysis. 1080 87
Camptocormia is defined as a forced posture with a forward-bent trunk which appears during standing and sitting. It was first described in 1818 by Brodie. In the last 100 years, numerous cases were observed. A psychogenic origin was presumed in most cases. We describe four patients with typical symptoms of camptocormia who present with the clinical and electromyographical criteria of a segmental
dystonia
. A new classification of camptocormia is proposed including (1) the primary form, a segmental
dystonia
of the abdominal wall muscles and (2) secondary forms. Among other conditions (psychogenic disorder, neurosis, myopathy,
myositis
, Parkinson's disease, multiple-system atrophy, thoracolumbar kyphosis, paraneoplastic syndrome), camptocormia is to be considered in essential tremor. A combination of
dystonia
of the abdominal wall muscles and essential tremor seems possible.
...
PMID:[Camptocormia--segmental dystonia. Proposal of a new definition for an old disease]. 1132 Aug 63
"A propensity to bend the trunk forward" and "the chin is now almost immovably bent down upon the sternum" were described by James Parkinson in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). The term "dropped head" was first reported in "Gerlier disease" in Switzerland and 'kubisagari' in Japan and since then also reported in
myositis
, myopathy, myasthenia gravis, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, neuropathy, and hypothyroidism. Disproportionate antecollis occurs in about half cases of multiple system atrophy (MSA) and is considered dystonic in nature. Dropped head is considered rare in PD, both in advanced and early stages of PD. However, it is known to progress subacutely over a period of several days. In my experience, dropped head is relatively common in PD. The mechanism of dropped head in PD is either
dystonia
of flexor neck muscles or weakness of extensor neck muscles. The response of dropped head to various anti-parkinsonian medications is rather inconsistent. Levodopa is reported to induce amelioration in some patients while dopamine agonists can cause deterioration. Muscle afferent block with lidocaine and ethanol is reported to be effective, while the effect of botulinum toxin injection into the affected muscles is limited. The effect of stereotaxic neurosurgery on dropped head is controversial. Early diagnosis and prompt treatment is necessary to prevent muscle damage associated with longterm overstretch of extensor neck muscles.
...
PMID:Dropped head in Parkinson's disease. 1713 Dec 24
In this society with an ever increasing number of the elderly there is an increasing number of causes of a bent spine syndrome (camptocormia/dropped head syndrome). The causes include neurological, neuro-orthopedic, rheumatological and psychiatric disorders. Parkinson's disease,
dystonia
and neuromuscular diseases (motor neuron disease,
myositis
and muscular dystrophy) with weakness of the axial muscles may result in bent spine syndrome and is often combined with a dropped head. Disc herniation, hypertrophic spondylosis or pseudospondylolisthesis with spinal narrowing may lead to an abnormal flexion of the trunk. Ankylosing spondylitis can produce a disabling bent spine syndrome. Camptocormia may also be mimicked by osteoporotic fractures of the vertebral bones with wedge-shaped vertebrae. In some cases camptocormia is related to a psychogenic disorder.
...
PMID:[Causes of camptocormia]. 2390 96
Camptocormia is a disabling pathological, non-fixed, forward bending of the trunk. The clinical definition using only the bending angle is insufficient; it should include the subjectively perceived inability to stand upright, occurrence of back pain, typical individual complaints, and need for walking aids and compensatory signs (e.g. back-swept wing sign). Due to the heterogeneous etiologies of camptocormia a broad diagnostic approach is necessary. Camptocormia is most frequently encountered in movement disorders (PD and
dystonia
) and muscles diseases (
myositis
and myopathy, mainly facio-scapulo-humeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD)). The main diagnostic aim is to discover the etiology by looking for signs of the underlying disease in the neurological examination, EMG, muscle MRI and possibly biopsy. PD and probably myositic camptocormia can be divided into an acute and a chronic stage according to the duration of camptocormia and the findings in the short time inversion recovery (STIR) and T1 sequences of paravertebral muscle MRI. There is no established treatment of camptocormia resulting from any etiology. Case series suggest that deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the subthalamic nucleus (STN-DBS) is effective in the acute but not the chronic stage of PD camptocormia. In chronic stages with degenerated muscles, treatment options are limited to orthoses, walking aids, physiotherapy and pain therapy. In acute myositic camptocormia an escalation strategy with different immunosuppressive drugs is recommended. In dystonic camptocormia, as in
dystonia
in general, case reports have shown botulinum toxin and DBS of the globus pallidus internus (GPi-DBS) to be effective. Camptocormia in connection with primary myopathies should be treated according to the underlying illness.
...
PMID:Pathophysiological Concepts and Treatment of Camptocormia. 2731 57
Head drop, or having a dropped head, is an uncommon condition in which patients present with a disabling inability to lift their head. It may arise in many neurological conditions that can be divided into those with neuromuscular weakness of neck extensors and those with increased tone of neck flexors. The most common neuromuscular causes include myasthenia gravis, motor neurone disease and
myositis
, while neck
dystonia
secondary to movement disorders can cause an increased tone. Investigations should include blood tests, imaging, muscle biopsy and neurophysiological studies. Here, we present a man with dropped head and discuss the investigation and management of this condition.
...
PMID:A practical approach to the patient presenting with dropped head. 2812 Jul 88