Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0013421 (dystonia)
8,418 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors describe 14 personal cases of progressive supranuclear palsy, 8 of them including a neuropathological study. The analysis of this material confirms the characteristics of this nosological entity, which is now well individualized amongst the apparently idiopathic degnerative diseases of the CNS. The clinical picture was characterized in all cases by a supranuclear opthalmoplegia, a pseudo-bulbar syndrome, an axial dystonia and a 'subcortical' dementia of a particular type. The average duration of the disease was 4 years for the 12 patients followed until death; the first symptoms appeared at a slightly older age than the average reported in the literature. Males are not predominantly affected in our material. Lesions are remarkably homogeneous as to their localisation in all cases but one. The nuclei of cranial curves are moderately involved, the reticular substances throughout the brain stem is more severely effected. In two cases, senile degenerative lesions of the cerebral cortex are associated with subcortical lesions of the progressive supranulcear palsy. No anamnestic or histologic feature is suggestive of any etiology of this disease. L-Dopa with or within a Dopa-decarboxylase inhibitor did after alter neither the patients condition nor the course of the disease.
...
PMID:[Supranuclear progressive paralysis (or oculo-facial-cervical dystonia)]. 115 60

We report a sporadic case of Dopa responsive dystonia and two families with different combinations of parkinsonism and dystonia. The possible relationships between Dopa responsive dystonia and early onset Parkinson's disease are discussed.
...
PMID:Dopa responsive dystonia and juvenile Parkinson's disease: two subtypes of the same disorder? 129 88

Dopa-sensitive dystonia has been recognised for twenty years. It may occur in the first years of life. It first affects the lower limbs, then generalized becomes, as in torsion dystonia. Eight clinical cases are presented in five boys and three girls. The absence of the disorder in the parents, but its presence in siblings in three cases suggests that it might be recessively inherited. The symptoms are severe enough to cause major functional disability. In some cases, the intensity of the motor disorder varies during the days being, less pronounced in the morning or after a nap and more marked in the evening. Nonetheless, this feature is not constant and thus cannot be considered as an essential diagnostic criterion. Treatment with levodopa gives remarkable and durable results, but it must be continued indefinitely. Abnormal movements accompany an overdose but regress when the dosage is decreased. Unlike Parkinson's disease, it is not necessary to increase or fragment doses to avoid fluctuations in the efficacy of treatment during the day. On the contrary, after several years of the illness a decrease in daily dosage sometimes to a single dose is possible. Discontinuing treatment leads to reappearance of dystonia after two or three days. There are no established biological criteria to aid diagnosis. However, a decrease in urine levels of homovanillic acid was observed in two cases. Dopa-sensitive dystonia should be regarded as distinct from juvenile Parkinson's disease, firstly because of its symptomatology and secondly, and more importantly, because of its particular course, since fluctuations in therapeutic efficacy are never observed. It is the only known example of dopaminergic insufficiency that is chronically almost completely controlled by a modest exogenous supply of levodopa.
...
PMID:[Dopa-sensitive dystonia]. 130 57

Striatal 18F-Dopa uptake and glucose metabolism were studied by positron emission tomography with 6-L-[18F]fluorodopa and [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose, respectively, in 8 patients with idiopathic dystonia. Patients with abnormal findings on the brain CT and MRI were excluded from this study. The clinical diagnosis consisted of torsion dystonia in 3 patients, focal dystonia limited in the arm in 3 and cervical dystonia (spasmodic torticollis) in 2. The 18F-Dopa uptake, corrected by nonspecific retention in the cerebellum, at 120 min post-administration was evaluated, and increased 18F-Dopa uptake in the putamen and in the caudate head was observed in the patients with idiopathic dystonia compared to the normal controls. The striatal glucose metabolism in the patients with idiopathic dystonia showed no difference with the normal controls. These findings suggest that pathogenetic mechanism of idiopathic dystonia involves increased presynaptic activity of the dopaminergic system in the striatum.
...
PMID:Increased striatal 18F-dopa uptake and normal glucose metabolism in idiopathic dystonia syndrome. 143 86

Dopa-responsive dystonia (DRD) is one form of childhood-onset idiopathic torsion dystonia. Adult-onset parkinsonism has appeared in several previously unaffected members in families with DRD suggesting that this may be an additional phenotypical expression of the disease. We report a family with DRD in which 2 women and 1 man, unaffected by dystonia, developed tremor-onset parkinsonism after age 50 years. The women continue on a low dosage of levodopa after 9 and 13 years of treatment, with a stable, nearly complete, symptomatic response. This contrasts to the typical long-term treatment complications observed in patients with Parkinson's disease. We assessed nigrostriatal dopaminergic function in the proband, with typical DRD, and the 2 women with parkinsonism using 6-[18F]fluoro-L-dopa positron emission tomography. All 3 had normal striatal 6-[18F]fluoro-L-dopa uptake. These observations provide compelling evidence that "benign" adult-onset parkinsonism may be an expression of the disease in some members of families with DRD and does not support consideration of the DRD gene as a risk factor for development of Parkinson's disease. There may be considerable clinical heterogeneity in DRD depending on the age at onset.
...
PMID:Long-term treatment response and fluorodopa positron emission tomographic scanning of parkinsonism in a family with dopa-responsive dystonia. 144 40

Dopa-responsive dystonia is a clinical variant of idiopathic torsion dystonia that is distinguished from other forms of dystonia by the frequent occurrence of parkinsonism, diurnal fluctuation of symptoms, and its dramatic therapeutic response to L-dopa. Linkage of a gene causing classic dystonia in a large non-Jewish kindred (DYT1) and in a group of Ashkenazi Jewish families, to the gelsolin (GSN) and arginino-succinate synthetase (ASS) loci on chromosome 9q32-34, respectively, was recently determined. Here we report the discovery of a highly informative (GT)n repeat VNTR polymorphism within the ASS locus. Analysis of a large kindred with dopa-responsive dystonia, using this new polymorphism and conventional RFLPs for the 9q32-34 region, excludes loci in this region as a cause of this form of dystonia. This provides proof of genetic heterogeneity between classic idiopathic torsion dystonia and dopa-responsive dystonia.
...
PMID:Identification of a highly polymorphic microsatellite VNTR within the argininosuccinate synthetase locus: exclusion of the dystonia gene on 9q32-34 as the cause of dopa-responsive dystonia in a large kindred. 198 54

Dystonia is a persistent attitude or posture in one or other of the extremes of athetoid movement. It may take the form of an over-extension or over-flexion of the hand, torsion of the spine, with arching and twisting of the back or forceful closure of the eyes and a fixed grimace. Dystonia is classified into idiopathic and symptomatic dystonia. Idiopathic dystonia is further divided into generalized, focal and segmental dystonia. Generalized dystonia covers classical torsion dystonia, paradoxical dystonia, myoclonic dystonia, dystonia with diurnal variation and Dopa-responsive dystonia. Dystonic tic, paroxysmal dystonia and hypnotic dystonia show a dystonic posture, although they are also accompanied by various other involuntary movements such as athetosis or chorea. Torticollis, writer's cramp or blepharospasm is assigned to the focal dystonia and Meige syndrome to the segmental dystonia. Symptomatic dystonia is observed in various neurological disorders, including cerebrovascular diseases, Parkinson's disease and Wilson's disease.
...
PMID:[Dystonia]. 827 58

Dopa-responsive dystonia (DRD) is an autosomal-dominant neurological disorder which appears to result from a genetically determined deficiency of striatal dopamine. Pathological evidence suggests that this may be due to the establishment of a reduced number of dopaminergic nerve terminals in the striatum, or to an excessive reduction (pruning) of these terminals in early development. We have mapped the DRD gene to chromosome 14 by linkage analysis in 3 families with a maximum 2-point lod score of 4.67 at 8.6 centiMorgans from D14S63; maximum multipoint lod scores > 6 were obtained for the intervals D14S47-D14S52 and D14S52-D14S63. The flanking loci D14S47 and D14S63 define a region of about 22 cM as containing the DRD gene.
...
PMID:Linkage mapping of dopa-responsive dystonia (DRD) to chromosome 14q. 829 48

We report a case of a 67-year-old woman who had dopa-responsive dystonia of late onset with diurnal fluctuations. She was well until the age of 65 years, when she noted the insidious onset of involuntary movements mainly involving the neck and trunk. She had no family history of movement disorders and had never received neuroleptics. Two years after her symptoms began, she visited our clinic. Neurological examination revealed slow repetitive extension and flexion movements of the neck and trunk, and irregular slow movements involving the mouth, tongue and limbs. The cranial nerves, cerebellar function, muscle strength, deep reflexes and sensory function were intact. Clinically and electromyographically, dystonia was characteristic of her involuntary movements. No parkinsonian features were present. The involuntary movements showed diurnal fluctuations that improved after sleep and the administration of L-DOPA and trihexyphenidyl. Dopamine receptor blocking agents aggravated her condition. Routine blood chemistry including copper metabolism, cerebrospinal fluid findings, and brain CT scan were all normal. Dopa-responsive dystonia is characterized by onset in childhood or adolescence and is frequently associated with parkinsonian features. Our patient had non-hereditary neck and trunk dystonia of late onset that responded to L-DOPA. Her disorder may constitute a specific form of dopa-responsive dystonia.
...
PMID:[A form of dopa-responsive dystonia of late onset with diurnal fluctuations]. 833

A 5-year-old Chinese boy presented with difficulty in walking and weakness of his lower limbs for one year, especially towards the evening. Bilateral equinovarus posturing of the feet and tremors of the upper limbs were noted on physical examination. Dopa-responsive dystonia was diagnosed after a remarkable symptomatic response to levodopa. This disorder is reported here to highlight an often misdiagnosed condition is children which is important because it is treatable. Dopa-responsive dystonia should be considered in the differential diagnosis of gait disturbance in children.
...
PMID:Dopa-responsive dystonia of childhood: a case report. 855 5


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>