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Query: UMLS:C0013421 (
dystonia
)
8,418
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Dystonia
is a term used to describe a specific set of abnormal movements that can occur as a symptom of a variety of
neurologic disorders
, but also as a disease entity in its own right. This review focuses on the primary dystonias and delineates the genetic contribution to these disorders. Included is a description of the well recognized forms of primary dystonias which manifest autosomal dominant inheritance, especially the "classic" type of early onset, generalized torsion dystonia, but also other clinically distinct forms such as myoclonic
dystonia
, paroxysmal
dystonia
, and DOPA-responsive
dystonia
. Also, a summary of the molecular genetic studies pertinent to these disorders and a discussion of the implications of recent genetic research for delineating the wide spectrum of this phenotypically and genetically heterogeneous group of diseases are forthcoming.
...
PMID:The autosomal dominant dystonias. 134 64
Onset of a
neurological disease
was coincidental in two members of a family. The mother died at the age of 57 and her daughter at the age of 27 years. Clinically the disease was manifested by cerebellar ataxia, visual disturbances,
dystonic movements
and intellectual impairment which appeared very later in the course of the disease in the younger patient. Myoclonus was only observed in the mother. The EEG examination revealed non-specific abnormalities. CT scans disclosed severe cerebellar atrophy and reduced size of the pons in the daughter. The duration of the disease was 7 months in the mother and 3 years in her daughter. The neuropathological examination showed degeneration of the thalamus, substantia nigra and inferior olives, together with loss of Purkinje cells and axonal torpedos in the granular layer of the mother. Olivopontocerebellar atrophy, atrophy of the thalamus and substantia nigra, associated to typical spongiform encephalopathy of the cerebral cortex, amygdaloid complex and striatum occurred in the daughter. These observations let us to comment whether multisystemic atrophies may be fortuitously associated to different prion-induced encephalopathies, or may be found in the context of spongiform encephalopathies.
...
PMID:[Spongiform encephalopathy and multisystemic degeneration]. 186 55
Nineteen cases are described, including 12 cases from three different families and 7 nonfamilial cases, in which multisystem
neurological disease
was associated with acanthocytosis in peripheral blood and normal plasma lipoproteins. Mild acanthocytosis can easily be overlooked, and scanning electron microscopy may be helpful. Some neurologically asymptomatic relatives with significant acanthocytosis were identified during family screening, including some who were clinically affected. The mean age of onset was 32 (range 8-62) yrs and the clinical course was usually progressive but there was marked phenotypic variation. Cognitive impairment, psychiatric features and organic personality change occurred in over half the cases, and more than one-third had seizures. Orofaciolingual involuntary movements and pseudobulbar disturbance commonly caused dysphagia and dysarthria that was sometimes severe, but biting of the lips or tongue was rarely seen. Chorea was seen in almost all symptomatic cases but
dystonia
, tics, involuntary vocalizations and akinetic-rigid features also occurred. Two cases had no movement disorder at all. Computerized tomography often demonstrated cerebral atrophy. Caudate atrophy was seen less commonly, and nonspecific focal and symmetric signal abnormalities from the caudate or lentiform nuclei were seen by magnetic resonance imaging in 3 out of 4 cases. Depression or absence of tendon reflexes was noted in 13 cases and neurophysiological abnormalities often indicated an axonal neuropathy. Sural nerve biopsies from 3 cases showed evidence of a chronic axonal neuropathy with prominent regenerative activity, predominantly affecting the large diameter myelinated fibres. Serum creatine kinase activity was increased in 11 cases but without clinical evidence of a myopathy. Postmortem neuropathological examination in 1 case revealed extensive neuronal loss and gliosis affecting the corpus striatum, pallidum, and the substantia nigra, especially the pars reticulata. The cerebral cortex appeared spared and the spinal cord showed no evidence of anterior horn cell loss. Two examples of the McLeod phenotype, an X-linked abnormality of expression of Kell blood group antigens, were identified in a single family and included 1 female. The genetics of neuroacanthocytosis are unclear and probably heterogeneous, but the available pedigree data and the association with the McLeod phenotype suggest that there may be a locus for this disorder on the short arm of the X chromosome.
...
PMID:Neuroacanthocytosis. A clinical, haematological and pathological study of 19 cases. 199 79
A girl of first cousin parents presented in the 1st year of life with a progressive
neurological disease
with muscle weakness and hypotonia, accompanied later by
dystonia
. Investigations, including gas chromatography of urine, showed no abnormality. Autopsy showed marked neuronal loss and gliosis in the putamen and globus pallidus. The activity of glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase in cultured fibroblasts was normal, but the activity of electron transfer flavoprotein was markedly diminished. Retrospective study of urine by capillary gas chromatography/mass spectrometry showed small amounts of glutaric and other organic acids. This is the first report of striatal degeneration in association with glutaric acidaemia type II. The neuropathological changes were milder than those in glutaric acidaemia type I.
...
PMID:Striatal degeneration in glutaric acidaemia type II. 271 49
A woman aged 21 with a variant form of metachromatic leucodystrophy (MLD) combined with another form of leucodystrophy is described. The clinical symptoms were retinitis pigmentosa and progressive neurological deficits such as mental retardation,
dystonia
, pyramidal tract involvement and peripheral neuropathy. The biochemical findings were marked deficiency of arylsulfatase-A and cerebroside-sulfatase in cultured fibroblasts and excretion of sulfatides in the urine. Sulfatide-loading of cultured fibroblasts showed almost normal uptake and degradation of sulfatides. The patient's sister suffers from a clinically similar
neurological disease
, but normal activity of arylsulfatase-A was found in her leucocytes. A severe oral-facial
dystonia
in the patient was successfully controlled by l-dopa.
...
PMID:A variant form of metachromatic leucodystrophy in a patient suffering from another congenital degenerative neurological disease. 285 48
Anticholinergic drugs are used to treat a number of
neurologic disorders
, including parkinsonism, vestibular disturbances, and
dystonia
. Traditionally, these drugs have been thought to act in similar fashion, as competitive antagonists at a single class of muscarinic receptors, and not to differ significantly in their therapeutic efficacy. Recently, however, pharmacologic studies have shown that the novel antagonist pirenzepine is capable of recognizing heterogeneity among muscarinic receptors; high-affinity pirenzepine sites have been classified as M1 sites and low-affinity sites as M2. This study examined whether the anticholinergics currently available for treatment of neurologic symptoms have selectivity for these subtypes and whether they differ in their degree of selectivity; the study showed that these drugs do demonstrate selectivity. All had greater affinity for the M1 site, indicated by higher affinity for rat forebrain membranes, where M1 predominates, than hindbrain preparations, where M2 predominates. The degree of selectivity varied greatly; some compounds, such as ethopropazine, had little M1 selectivity, whereas others, such as scopolamine, trihexyphenidyl, and biperiden, were quite selective, like pirenzepine. It is unknown whether these differences in selectivity have any immediate therapeutic implications. However, these results support the emerging concept of muscarinic receptor subtypes and the prospect of developing more selective agents, with enhanced therapeutic efficacy.
...
PMID:The relative selectivity of anticholinergic drugs for the M1 and M2 muscarinic receptor subtypes. 290 17
The dynamics of postural control of the head were investigated in normal human subjects and patients with
neurological disease
. The technique adopted was to measure the head movements provoked by passive, unpredictable oscillations of the trunk in the frequency range 0-6-7 Hz when subjects were required (a) to try to stabilise their head "in space" and (b) to try to make their heads move "en bloc" with the trunk. Head movement responses were characterised by the gain and phase with respect to trunk movement (transfer function) and degree of linear relationship between head and trunk (coherence). The normal transfer function approximated a cascade of two second-order, underdamped, systems representing the passive inertial, viscous, and elastic properties of the muscle and joints of the head and neck. Stabilisation of the head "in space" produced about 40% reduction in transmission of body movement, was only evident at frequencies less than 1 Hz and was affected partly by voluntary movements. An alabyrinthine patient could also achieve some spatial stabilisation. The findings indicate a weak role for vestibular-collic reflexes and emphasise that the primary control of head posture during unpredictable movement is through the tonic visco-elastic properties of neck muscles that work to stabilise the head on the shoulders. In patients with
dystonia
of the neck and essential and cerebellar head tremor, the head showed a tendency to unstable oscillation (resonance). The instability and
dystonia
could be measured in terms of visco-elastic constants and damping ratios. The head movements of some tremor patients did not linearly follow the trunk movement, showing that the motion stimulus provoked abnormal phasic muscle activity at frequencies other than those of the tremor. The technique quantifies head control in movement disorders and is sensitive to abnormal function.
...
PMID:Stability of the head: studies in normal subjects and in patients with labyrinthine disease, head tremor, and dystonia. 350 48
The therapeutic responses of seven children with Wilson's disease who presented with
neurological disease
were evaluated. Neurological abnormalities comprised intellectual deterioration in 7, conduct disorder in five,
dystonia
in three, choreoathetosis in three, seizures in one and hemiparesis in one. Lethargy and weight loss were present for several months in 6 children. Four children had clinically demonstrable liver disease which was fatal in two. Electroencephalography performed in two children was normal. Computed tomography (CT) of the brain in three children showed cerebral atrophy in all and areas of low attenuation in the basal ganglia which resolved on treatment in one. All patients were treated with penicillamine but, in four, triethylene tetramine (TETA) was substituted because of adverse effects. Neurological abnormalities in these patients were reversible.
...
PMID:Neurological abnormalities in Wilson's disease are reversible. 356 99
Two children are described with postnatally acquired acute rubella which induced
neurological disease
. The first patient with restricted transverse myelitis (Th 11-12) was remarkable for the positive result obtained by the magnetic response (MR) technique of the spinal cord. In the second patient the clinical examination demonstrated a circumscribed, however severe, lasting defect in the extrapyramidal motor system with facial muscle
dystonia
and complete anarthria; in the latter case the CSF contained rubella specific IgM five days after the onset of exanthema. No abnormalities were noticed by MR five weeks after the clinical onset. The possible significance of MR imaging in virus-induced encephalomyelitis is discussed.
...
PMID:Rubella myelitis and encephalitis in childhood. A report of two cases with magnetic resonance imaging. 360 Oct 2
We describe a case of an adult-onset progressive
dystonia
with external ophthalmoplegia, occurring in a black man without a family history of
neurologic disorders
. Neuropathologic examination demonstrated neuronal loss and gliosis in the anterior horn and Clarke's column in the spinal cord, nuclei of cranial nerves III, VI, X, and XII, vestibular complex, lateral cuneate nucleus, lower pontine tegmentum, red nucleus, substantia nigra, and dentate nucleus. The cerebral cortex, corpus striatum, basis pontis, inferior olives, and cerebellum were spared. The clinical and pathologic findings closely resemble autosomal-dominant motor system degeneration or "Azorean disease," without, however, demonstrable familial transmission. In addition to the absence of a family history, unique features of the case include the presence of Alzheimer type II glial cells in the red nucleus and an unexplained persistent elevated concentration of serum amylase.
...
PMID:Sporadic case resembling autosomal-dominant motor system degeneration (Azorean disease complex). 382 87
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