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)

The clinical, pathophysiological and genetic features of some of the paroxysmal movement disorders are reviewed. Paroxysmal kinesigenic choreoathetosis/dyskinesias (PKC/PKD) is a condition in which brief and frequent dyskinetic attacks are provoked by sudden movement. PKC is more common in men and can be idiopathic (commonly familial) or due to a variety of causes. The pathophysiology of PKC is uncertain but it could be an ion-channel disorder. Antiepileptic drugs particularly carbamazepine are very helpful in a large proportion of cases. Paroxysmal exercise induced dystonia (PED) is a rare disorder manifesting as episodes of dystonia mostly affecting the feet induced by continuous exercise like walking or running. Although the initial cases were familial, there is a higher proportion of sporadic cases. The pathophysiology of PED is unknown and antiepileptic drugs are generally unhelpful. In paroxysmal dystonic choreoathetosis/non-kinesigenic dyskinesias (PDC/PNKD) the attacks are of long duration and induced by variety of factors including coffee, tea, alcohol and fatigue but not by sudden movement. PDC can be idiopathic (familial or sporadic) or symptomatic due to a variety of causes. The gene for familial PDC has been linked in 2 families to chromosome 2 q close to a cluster of ion channel genes again suggesting that this disorder may also be a channelopathy. Other paroxysmal disorders include paroxysmal nocturnal dyskinesia, a form of frontal lobe epilepsy in some cases which may be familial with autosomal dominant inheritance (ADNFLE). The gene for ADNFLE in one family has been found to be a mutation in the neuronal acetylcholine receptor gene (CHRNA4) on chromosome 20q. Tonic spasms in multiple sclerosis and Sandiffers syndrome producing intermittent torticollis in infants and children are other paroxysmal movement disorders.
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PMID:The paroxysmal dyskinesias. 1032 9

The clinical, pathophysiological and genetic features of some of the familial (idiopathic) paroxysmal movement disorders are reviewed. The paroxysmal dyskinesias share features and therefore may have the same pathophysiological mechanisms as other episodic neurological disorders which are known to be channelopathies. Paroxysmal kinesigenic choreoathetosis/dyskinesias (PKC/PKD) is a condition in which brief and frequent dyskinetic attacks are provoked by sudden movement. Antiepileptics particularly carbamazepine are very helpful for this condition. PKC has similarities to episodic ataxia type 1 which is caused by mutations of the KCNA1 gene. PKC and a related disorder in which infantile convulsions are associated (ICCA syndrome) have recently been linked to the pericentromic region of chromososme 16 in the vicinity of some ion channel genes. Paroxysmal exercise-induced dystonia (PED) is a rare disorder manifesting as episodes of dystonia mostly affecting the feet induced by continuous exercise like walking or running. The pathophysiology of PED is unknown and antiepileptic drugs are generally unhelpful. In paroxysmal dystonic choreoathetosis/nonkinesigenic dyskinesias (PDC/PNKD) the attacks are of long duration and induced by a variety of factors including coffee, tea, alcohol and fatigue but not by sudden movement. The gene for familial PDC has been linked to chromosome 2q close to a cluster of ion channel genes. Paroxysmal nocturnal dyskinesia is now known to be a form of frontal lobe epilepsy in some cases which may be familial with an autosomal dominant inheritance and has been given the eponym ADNFLE. ADNFLE is a genetically heterogenous condition. Mutations of the neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor gene that have chromosome 20q have been reported in some families with ADNFLE. However, another family with ADNFLE has been linked to chromosome 15 in the area of another nicotinic acetylcholine receptor gene. Thus the familial paroxysmal dyskinesias appear to be clinically and genetically heterogeneous.
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PMID:Familial (idiopathic) paroxysmal dyskinesias: an update. 1134 27

Genes involved in familial dystonia syndromes (DYT genes) are ideal candidates for investigating whether common genetic variants influence the susceptibility to sporadic primary dystonia. To date, there have been few candidate gene studies for primary dystonia and only two DYT genes, TOR1A and THAP1, have been assessed. We therefore employed a haplotype-tagging strategy to comprehensively assess if common polymorphisms in eight DYT genes (TOR1A, TAF1, GCH1, THAP1, MR-1 (PNKD), SGCE, ATP1A3 and PRKRA) confer risk for sporadic primary dystonia. The 230 primary dystonia cases were matched for age and gender to 228 controls, recruited from movement disorder clinics in Brisbane, Australia and the Australian electoral roll. All subjects were genotyped for 56 tagging SNPs and genotype associations were investigated. Modest genotypic associations (P<0.05) were observed for three GCH1 SNPs (rs12147422, rs3759664 and rs10483639) when comparing all cases against controls. Associations were also seen when the cases were stratified based on presentation. Overall, our findings do not support the hypothesis that common TOR1A variants affect susceptibility for sporadic primary dystonia, and that it is unlikely that common variants around the DYT genes confer substantial risk for sporadic primary dystonia. Further work is warranted to follow up the GCH1 SNPs and the subgroup analyses.
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PMID:Common polymorphisms in dystonia-linked genes and susceptibility to the sporadic primary dystonias. 2217 51