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Query: UMLS:C0013421 (dystonia)
8,418 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To investigate some of the pathophysiological mechanisms in cerebral palsy, surface electromyograms (EMG) were recorded from pairs of flexor/extensor muscles during both voluntary and passive flexion/extension of upper and lower limbs of 20 patients. Elbow, knee, or ankle joint angles were measured simultaneously, as well as the force required to flex/extend the limbs passively at frequencies of 0.1--1.0 Hz. In addition, single motor units were recorded from the first dorsal interosseous muscles of six of the patients. Almost all patients showed resistance to passive movements (hypertonia). This hypertonia did not necessarily impair voluntary flexion/extension movements if alternating EMG activity was maintained in at least one of the pairs of flexor/extensor muscles involved in the movement. In six severly involved patients, there was a complete breakdown in the reciprocal relationship between reciprocally acting pairs of flexor/extensor motoneurones, which resulted in synchronous activation (co-contractions) of flexor/extensor muscles during both voluntary and passive movements. In these patients the hyperactive segmental reflex added to the disabling effects of co-contractions during voluntary movements. Single motor units recorded from patients with dystonic movements were recruited with variable delays (2--10 s) and usually discharged intermittently at high frequencies (60--120/s). This abnormla motor unit discharge pattern may relate to pathology of the basal ganglia.
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PMID:Pathophysiological mechanisms in cerebral palsy. 47

The origins of dystonia musculorum deformans are now considered to be organic. However, misdiagnosis of dystonia as a functional psychiatric disorder--usually conversion reaction--has persisted. The present study describes personality traits as measured by the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory in 30 persons with dystonia and in a control group of 37 persons with cerebral palsy. The data, examined by diagnosis, level of disability, and sex, showed no differences for diagnostic groups or levels of disability. Males scored in the direction of greater psychopathology than did females. The male dystonics showed the highest elevations of MMPI scales of all the groups. Although only one person with dystonia musculorum deformans and none with cerebral palsy produced the profile usually associated with conversion reaction, 36% of all profiles showed two scales above a T score of 70. This finding suggested that young adults with a physically disabling disease may be at higher risk for developing maladaptive personality traits.
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PMID:MMPI characteristics associated with cerebral palsy and dystonia musculorum deformans. 48 13

A 4 year old girl with mild mental retardation presented with convulsions, coma and hepatomegaly. She died rapidly. The main biochemical findings were hypoglycaemia, metabolic acidosis, generalised aminoaciduria, elevation of the plasma and urine alpha-amino adipic acid, massive urine excretion of glutaric and glutaconic acids with traces of alpha-hydroxyglutaric acid. The diagnosis of glutaric aciduria was confirmed by the low activity of glutaryl CoA dehydrogenase in liver tissue. This diagnosis should be considered in children with progressive neurological disorders (dystonia, choreoathetosis) and in children with an illness similar to Reye's syndrome.
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PMID:[Glutaric aciduria. 1 new case]. 49 39

We studied 40 patients in 15 families from the Portuguese Azores Islands. Each family was affected by an autosomal dominant genetic disorder. Symptoms began between ages 20 and 50. Ataxia, ophthalmoplegia, pyramidal signs, dystonia, rigidity, and distal atrophy were the major clinical findings. Evidence suggested that this was a single genetic disease, with variable phenotypic expression. Machado disease, nigrospinodentatal degeneration with nuclear ophthalmoplegia, and autosomal dominant striatonigral degeneration may be variations of this same genetic disease.
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PMID:Autosomal dominant system degeneration in Portuguese families of the Azores Islands. A new genetic disorder involving cerebellar, pyramidal, extrapyramidal and spinal cord motor functions. 56 69

Ventricular fluid concentrations of homovanillic acid (HVA) and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA), the respective metabolites of dopamine and serotonin, were measured in 57 patients undergoing thalamotomy for relief of movement disorders. The diseases included were Parkinson disease, dystonia, cerebral palsy, multiple sclerosis, and posttraumatic or posthypoxic encephalopathy. Untreated parkinsonian patients had the lowest mean HVA level (119 ng per milliliter). Patients with multiple sclerosis or with posttraumatic or posthypoxic encephalopathy with both intellectual impairment and bilateral motor involvement had lower mean HVA levels (197 and 177 ng per milliliter, respectively) than cerebral palsy patients with bilateral motor disease (233 ng per milliliter), dystonia patients (246 ng per milliliter), or multiple sclerosis patients with normal intellect (376 ng per milliliter). The data suggest that diffuse cerebral disease may lead to diminished dopaminergic activity. Ventricular fluid 5-HIAA levels were similar in all groups of patients. Chronic cerebellar stimulation markedly increased ventricular fluid HVA and 5-HIAA levels, indicating that cerebellar stimulation affected cerebral dopaminergic and serotonergic systems.
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PMID:Ventricular fluid homovanillic acid and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid concentrations in patients with movement disorders. 56 83

Homovanillic acid (HVA) and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA), the respective metabolites of dopamine and serotonin, were measured in ventricular fluid obtained from 20 patients with torsion dystonia at the time of ventriculography prior to thalamic surgery. The patients could be divided into two distinct types of dystonia--childhood-onset and adult-onset--which were identifiable on clinical and biochemical grounds. In the 14 patients with childhood-onset dystonia, the first symptom appeared in one limb in early childhood and the disease usually progressed rapidly. In the six patients with adult-onset dystonia, the first symptom usually appeared in axial muscles after adolescence and the disease progressed slowly. Ventricular fluid HVA levels were significantly lower in the patients with adult-onset dystonia than in those with childhood-onset dystonia. The differences suggest diminished dopaminergic activity, possibly secondary to nigrostriatal dysfunction, in adult-onset dystonia.
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PMID:Diminished ventricular fluid dopamine metabolites in adult-onset dystonia. 56 84

Dizygotic twins developed a progressive neurologic disorder at age 6 months. When examined at age 7 1/2 years each had spastic quadriparesis and dystonia. Neither had ever spoken a complete sentence. The fundi showed bone spicule formation, a conspicuous choroidal circulation, and a striking accumulation of yellowish-white globular masses of varying sizes and shapes. Because our patients developed both the pigmentary degeneration and clinical signs of Hallervorden-Spatz syndrome at a much younger age than patients without retinopathy, we believe this case demonstrated a distinct nosologic entity.
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PMID:Pigmentary degeneration of the retina in the Hallervorden-Spatz syndrome. 57 56

Thirteen infants and children with proved gastroesophageal (GE) reflux had complaints that suggested a CNS disorder. Symptoms began in early infancy in ten cases, but accurate diagnosis and proper treatment were not instituted in three cases until three to five years of age. A CNS basis for their disease was suspected because they exhibited specific signs or because the importance of associated gastrointestinal (GL) and respiratory tract symptoms was not appreciated. The presenting CNS symptoms and signs included dystonia in 11, developmental retardation in ten, dysphagia in nine, seizures in six, and extreme irritability in ten. We believe that the diagnosis of symptom-causing GE reflux is being missed regularly. The effects of proper medical or surgical therapy are often dramatic, and the consequences of missed diagnosis or improper treatment are potentially lethal.
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PMID:Childhood gastroesophageal reflux. Neurologic and psychiatric syndromes mimicked. 57 80

A case of glutaric aciduria, a recently discovered inborn error of tryptophan-lysine metabolism, is reported. Development was normal during the first year of life. Signs of dyskinesia and dystonia associated with developmental regression occurred twice during gastrointestinal disease. By two years of age, a dystonic syndrome with a severe motor and language disability had resulted.
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PMID:Intermittently progressive dyskinetic syndrome in glutaric aciduria. 57 37

Space-occupying lesions of the basal ganglia are a rare cause of extrapyramidal dysfunction in children. Metastatic pineal germinoma in both basal ganglia produced dystonia in a 12-year-old boy. The literature is reviewed. Extrapyramidal manifestations in the child are compared with previously reported cases of basal ganglia neoplasms.
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PMID:Extrapyramidal disorder with pineal germinoma. Case report. 61 10


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