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)

Botulinum toxin has become the initial treatment of choice for the management of essential blepharospasm, hemifacial spasm and other craniocervical dystonias. Numerous studies have confirmed a 90% to 95% response rate. Although a number of common side effects have been reported, the occurrence and incidence of rare local complications remains poorly understood. More importantly, the acute and chronic distant effects of botulinum toxin have not been clearly elucidated. A better understanding of such effects is essential if clinicians are to appropriately advise patients on the use of this therapeutic modality. This article is based on the Duke University experience in the management of over 500 patients with craniocervical spasm disorders, combined with a review of the published literature. These disorders include essential blepharospasm, oromandibular dystonia, hemifacial spasm, and torticollis. The incidence of side effects following more than 6000 treatments with botulinum toxin is presented. Pertinent research relating to the causes of these complications is also reviewed. The most common complications of treatment with botulinum toxin are related to acute local effects resulting from chemodenervation. The most important clinical effect in this group is weakening of the levator muscle resulting in ptosis, and the corneal consequences of lagophthalmos. The latter includes exposure keratitis, dry eyes, blurred vision, and hypersecretion epiphora. Less common local effects include facial numbness, diplopia, and ectropion. Some distant effects are being observed with increasing frequency. These include pruritus, dysphagia, nausea, and a flu-like syndrome. Most significant, however, are the rare reports of generalized weakness and the documentation of EMG abnormalities distant to the site of toxin injection. This has been seen with injections for both blepharospasm and torticollis. Until further studies on the long-term distant complications of botulinum toxin are available, it is recommended that patients receive as few life-time doses of toxin as possible, consistent with adequate management of their spasms. The practice of reinjecting patients routinely every three months, or at the first return of mild spasms should be discouraged.
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PMID:Botulinum-A toxin in the treatment of craniocervical muscle spasms: short- and long-term, local and systemic effects. 882 30

One hundred patients (9.09 per cent) with blepharospasm from a grand total of 1,100 patients (at the Movement Disorders Clinic at Siriraj Hospital) who had been treated with botulinum A toxin (BTX-A) injection between 1989 and 1996 were analysed. The 100 patients comprised 65 females and 35 males with a female to male ratio of 1.86:1. Their mean age was 53.3 years (S.D. 12.03). Sixty patients had idiopathic blepharospasm, 31 patients were diagnosed with Meige syndrome (blepharospasm plus oromandibular dystonia) and nine patients with segmental dystonia (Meige syndrome plus cervical dystonia). The mean duration of suffering was 39.22 months (S.D. 44.83). Each patient received 30-50 IU of BTX-A injections according to the standard Siriraj injection pattern. Nine patients were lost to follow-up. The results of BTX-A injection were classified as: excellent result (an improvement of more than 75 per cent) in 83.51 per cent; a good response (an improvement of 50-75 per cent) in 13.19 per cent; a moderate response (an improvement of 25-50 per cent) in 2.20 per cent; and minimal or no response in 1.10 per cent. The complications of BTX-A injection were transient minimal ptosis (9.89 per cent), transient double vision (1.10 per cent) and excessive lacrimation (1.10 per cent). The efficacy of BTX-A injection lasted one to two months in 1.10 per cent, two to three months in 23.08 per cent, three to four months in 45.05 per cent, four to five months in 16.48 per cent, five to six months in 4.40 per cent and more than six months in 9.89 per cent. Botulinum A toxin injection is a simple and effective out-patient treatment for patients with blepharospasm, causing no systemic side-effects and minor transient local complications. The only drawback of this treatment is its high cost (100 IU cost 300 US dollars).
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PMID:Botulinum A toxin treatment for blepharospasm and Meige syndrome: report of 100 patients. 907 10