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)

We have seen 32 patients with "apraxia of lid opening" (ALO) in the following clinical settings: as an isolated condition (3 patients), idiopathic blepharospasm (BSP, 20 patients, including 4 familial cases), progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP, 7 patients), and dystonic parkinsonian syndrome (2 patients). Twenty-nine patients treated with botulinum toxin into the orbicularis oculi muscle were rated before and after treatment and 83% of the patients improved on a clinical scale. Best results were obtained with injections directed toward the junction of the preseptal and pretarsal parts of the palpebral orbicularis oculi. Several patients also improved on anticholinergic drugs. Besides medical treatment, lid crutches, in conjunction with botulinum toxin injections, were useful in some patients. ALO is not a true apraxia; it constitutes an eyelid dystonia as shown by its clinical and electrophysiological features as well as pharmacological reactions and is encountered in a clinical spectrum ranging from an isolated form to predominant BSP. It was an important cause of treatment failures in botulinum toxin-treated BSP but by modifying our injection strategy and by adding anticholinergic drugs and also lid crutches, we obtained a good functional benefit.
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PMID:"Apraxia of lid opening," a focal eyelid dystonia: clinical study of 32 patients. 855 31

The Steel-Richardson-Olszewski syndrome (progressive supranuclear palsy: PSP) was described over a quarter of a century age. Although the full expressed form is very typical, it is overlooked due to unusual ways without axial dystonia and opthalmic signs, with akinesia and dysequilibrium. The many reports of PSP suggested that the abnormalities of it were vaster than Parkinson's disease. The abnormalities of neurotransmitters or neuromodulators were found not only dopamine system but also serotonin and acetylcholine system. On the basis of them, the various trials of neurotransmitter replacement were done without very successful results so far. Transplantation and nerve growth factor are also tried to treat PSP now.
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PMID:[Steele-Richardson-Olszewski syndrome]. 790 88

OBJECTIVE--To analyse the natural history of progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP or Steele-Richardson-Olszewski syndrome) and clinical predictors of survival in 24 patients with PSP confirmed by necropsy, who fulfilled the NINDS criteria for a neuropathological diagnosis of typical PSP. METHODS--Patients were selected from the research and clinical files of seven medical centres involving tertiary centres of Austria, England, France, and the United States. Clinical features were analysed in detail. The patients' mean age at onset of PSP was 63 (range 45-73) years. RESULTS--The most frequent clinical features (occurring in at least 75% of the patients) were early postural instability and falls, vertical supranuclear palsy, akinetic-rigid predominant parkinsonian disorder characterised by symmetric bradykinesia and axial rigidity unrelieved by levodopa, pseudobulbar palsy, and frontal release signs. Occasionally, segmental dystonia or myoclonus were described, but neither aphasia nor alien limb syndrome was reported. Fractures occurred in 25% of the patients but were unrelated to the severity of the gait or to the presence of falls. Median survival time was 5.6 (range 2-16.6) years. Onset of falls during the first year, early dysphagia, and incontinence predicted a shorter survival time. Age at onset, sex, early onset of dementia, vertical supranuclear palsy, or axial rigidity had no effect on prognosis of survival. Pneumonia was the most common immediate cause of death. PSP was most often clinically misdiagnosed as Parkinson's disease. Errors in diagnosis suggest that PSP is underdiagnosed. CONCLUSION--Progressive onset of early postural instability with falls or supranuclear vertical palsy in the fifth decade, should suggest the diagnosis of PSP. Onset of falls during the first year are emphasised, as they could lead to an early diagnosis and influence the prognosis of patients with PSP. Whether appropriate treatment of the dysphagia could prolong the survival of PSP patients needs to be explored.
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PMID:Natural history of progressive supranuclear palsy (Steele-Richardson-Olszewski syndrome) and clinical predictors of survival: a clinicopathological study. 864 26

The accuracy of the clinical diagnosis of corticobasal degeneration (CBD) is unknown. To determine its diagnostic accuracy, we presented 105 cases with known neuropathologic diagnoses, including CBD (n = 10), progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP, n = 24), Parkinson's disease (n = 15), diffuse Lewy body disease (n = 14), multiple system atrophy (n = 16), postencephalitic parkinsonism (n = 7), Pick's disease (n = 7), Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (n = 4), Alzheimer's disease (n = 4), vascular parkinsonism (n = 3), and Whipple's disease (n = 1), as clinical vignettes to six neurologists unaware of the autopsy findings. Reliability was measured with the kappa statistics. The neurologists' clinical diagnoses were compared with clinicopathologic diagnoses for sensitivity, specificity, and positive predictive values at first and last clinic visits. The group reliability for the diagnosis of CBD significantly improved from moderate for the first visit (mean = 34 months after onset) to substantial for the last (68 months after onset). For the first visit, mean sensitivity for CBD was low (35%), but specificity was near-perfect (99.6%). For the last visit, mean sensitivity minimally increased (48.3%), and specificity remained stable. False-negative misdiagnoses mainly occurred with PSP. False-positive diagnoses were rare. The extremely low sensitivity of the clinical diagnosis of CBD suggests that this disorder is markedly underdiagnosed. Although the validity of the clinical diagnosis might have been improved if neurologists could have examined these patients, more important is that this disorder was misdiagnosed by the primary neurologists. In our data set, the best predictors for the diagnosis of CBD included limb dystonia, ideomotor apraxia, myoclonus, and asymmetric akinetic-rigid syndrome with late onset of gait or balance disturbances.
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PMID:Accuracy of the clinical diagnosis of corticobasal degeneration: a clinicopathologic study. 900 6

We describe an autopsy case of parkinsonism with bradykinesia, muscle rigidity, and dementia as major symptoms. The patient had developed bradykinesia at the age of 62, and then muscle rigidity, a parkinsonian posture, bradylalia, and dementia gradually appeared. Neurological examination revealed rigidity in the neck and limbs, with motion and speech being generally slow. He lacked involuntary movements including alien hand, tremor, chorea, and dystonia. Vertical gaze palsy, both upward and downward was noted, but other cranial nerves were intact. He was diagnosed as suffering from PSP clinically based on vertical gaze palsy, bradykinesia, instability on standing and gait, and dementia. Levodopa was only transiently effective. Within three years he became bed-ridden and in a state of akinetic mutism. At age 65 he died from pneumonia. Neuropathology revealed severe neuronal degeneration and gliosis in the substantia nigra. Because atrophy of the tegmentum of brainstem, dentate nuclei, inferior olivary nuclei was very mild and Alzheimer neurofibrillary tangles in the brainstem were relatively few, PSP was ruled out. Cortical neuronal degeneration was not apparent, but in the deep layer of cingulate gyrus, frontal lobe, and insula, there were several ballooned neurons. Gallyas-Braak silver staining showed no tuft-shaped astrocytes, specific for PSP, but it disclosed astrocytic plaques in the basal ganglia and the cerebral cortex. At present, astrocytic plaques are recognized as a hallmark of corticobasal degeneration (CBD), along with ballooned neurons in the cerebral cortex. The present case thus illustrates that CBD has a wide spectrum and may include cases in which degeneration of cerebral cortex is very mild.
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PMID:[An autopsy case of corticobasal degeneration without prominent cortical pathology--an imitator of progressive supranuclear palsy]. 1096 56

A neurological syndrome characterized by levodopa unresponsive bradykinesia, retropulsion with falls backwards, dysarthria, gait disturbance, dystonia, and emotional lability was identified in 13 male opiate addicts following the prolonged intravenous use of ephedrone (methcathinone), a central nervous stimulant prepared from pseudoephedrine, potassium permanganate, and vinegar. The natural history, response to treatment, and clinical features has been studied, and MR and dopamine transporter SPECT brain imaging were carried out. Pubic hair was sampled for manganese. The clinical and radiological picture closely resembled previous reports of chronic manganese poisoning and increased mean manganese level in pubic hair observed for at least 1 year after cessation of ephedrone. Odor identification was intact. Cognitive assessment showed a mild executive dysfunction and a mild depression. DaTSCANs were all normal. The neurological syndrome bears some similarities to PSP but differs from Parkinson's disease. Delayed neurological progression despite discontinuation of ephedrone occurred in one-third of cases. Ephedrone poisoning should be considered as a possible cause of secondary Parkinsonism in young adults, particularly from Eastern Europe.
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PMID:Parkinsonism and dystonia caused by the illicit use of ephedrone--a longitudinal study. 1878 45

A 57-year-old man presented with acute signs and symptoms mimicking PSP (bradykinesia, supranuclear ocular palsy, dysphagia, neck dystonia, and apraxic gait) on the day after a graft replacement surgery, which was performed for aortic arch aneurysm under deep hypothermic circulatory arrest (rectal temperature, 18 degrees C). Dysphagia improved temporarily, but relapsed after a few months. Symptoms did not change during 2 years of antiparkinsonian drug administration. Brain images obtained before the surgery revealed slight atrophy of the midbrain tegmentum and frontal lobes, but the patient was asymptomatic. No findings of cerebral vascular disease and hypoxic encephalopathy were observed on brain images after the surgery. These clinical features resembling PSP might have been caused by deep hypothermia and the patient's predisposition for PSP. This is the first case report in Japan of a syndrome resembling PSP that occurred after aortic arch replacement under deep hypothermic circulatory arrest.
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PMID:[A case of a syndrome resembling PSP after aortic arch replacement under deep hypothermic circulatory arrest]. 2138 99

Corticobasal syndrome (CBS) is a clinical syndrome presenting with progressive asymmetric bradykinesia, rigidity, and dystonia accompanied by cortical signs, such as apraxia, alien limb phenomena, cortical sensory loss, myoclonus, and mirror movements. CBS is associated with different pathological conditions including FTLD-tau (corticobasal degeneration, CBD; progressive supranuclear palsy, PSP: and Pick disease), FTLD-TDP, Alzheimer disease, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, and Parkinson disease/dementia with Lewy bodies. Among these, the most common pathology is CBD. In patients with familial and sporadic FTLD, MAPT, GRN and C9orf72 mutations are the three main causes of the disease, even though the C9orf72 mutation is rare in Japan. Patients with MAPT mutations present with FTLD-tau, and patients with GRN and C9orf72 mutations exhibit FTLD-TDP. FTLD is also associated with VCP, CHMP2B, TARDBP and FUS mutations, but each of these account for <1% of familial FTLD cases. In sporadic cases, the H1c haplotype and the rare p.A152T variant of MAPT are known to be associated with FTLD-tau, and the common genetic variant (rs5848) in the 3'-UTR of GRN is associated with FTLD-TDP. A recent genome-wide association study identified TMEM106B as a potential risk-modifying factor for FTLD-TDP, and STX6, EIF2AK3 and MOBP, for PSP. Despite major advances in genetic studies in recent years, the majority of sporadic CBS cases are genetically unsolved. Further studies are needed to unveil the genetic background of CBS. In this review, we discuss the recent advances related to the genetics of CBS, particularly about the genetics of FTLD.
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PMID:[The genetics of corticobasal syndrome]. 2330 Jan

While nocturnal disturbances of Parkinson's disease (PD) are increasingly recognized as being part of a continuum that includes daytime manifestations, there is still little analysis in the medical literature that assesses these complex phenomena in patients with atypical (AP) and vascular parkinsonisms (VP). The objective of our study was to determine the prevalence of these disturbances in patients with AP and VP and to determine the range of nighttime symptoms that occur compared with those in patients with PD. This comparison was done using a semi-structured interview and self-rated questionnaires in 63 AP and VP patients (PSP 24, MSA 24, CBD 5, and VP 10), and 208 PD patients. 61 AP and VP patients (96.8%) and 201 PD patients (96.6%) reported at least one nocturnal symptom with a score of less than 6 on the Modified Parkinson's Disease Sleep Scale (MPDSS). Nocturnal akinesia, as measured on the Nocturnal Akinesia, Dystonia, and Cramp Score, was found to be significantly greater in patients with PSP (p = 0.006), MSA (p = 0.002), and CBD (p = 0.012) than PD patients, but not VP patients (p = 0.428). Like those with PD, patients with AP and VP identified the problem of getting up at night to urinate (MPDSS item 8) as being the most frequent and troublesome nocturnal symptom. MSA and PSP patients reported more frequent (p = 0.001) and troublesome (p < 0.001) urinary incontinence (MPDSS item 9) than PD patients and MSA patients had more severe problems with unexpectedly falling asleep during the day (MPDSS item 15) than PD patients (p = 0.003). In summary, our study determined that nocturnal manifestations are commonly experienced by patients with AP and VP and highlighted specific nocturnal symptoms, which are more prevalent and troublesome in certain AP syndromes. The concept of 24-h control of symptoms should not be limited to only PD and we recommend that all who are involved in the care of AP and VP patients should realize that many nocturnal symptoms are experienced by these patients and a multidisciplinary approach should be utilized to address these problems.
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PMID:Nocturnal manifestations of atypical and vascular parkinsonism: how do they differ from Parkinson's disease? 2466 47