Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026837 (muscle rigidity)
1,077 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Rigidity was measured during sinusoidal passive movements of the ankle joint in 7 patients with parkinsonism. Velocity-dependent changes were observed, less marked than in spasticity and expressed in a different way in flexor and extensor muscles: a mild decrease in resistive torques at faster stretching of dorsal flexors and an increase in resistance on stretching of plantar flexors. Dorsal flexors also frequently showed shortening reactions. Passive exercises and electrical stimulation of the peroneal nerve resulted in decreased electromyographic responses to stretch, smoother passive movements and in improved voluntary contraction.
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PMID:Rigidity in parkinsonism: characteristics and influences of passive exercise and electrical nerve stimulation. 339 2

Dantrolene sodium acts primarily by affecting calcium flux across the sarcoplasmic reticulum of skeletal muscle. Recently, dantrolene has been used very successfully in the treatment of several rare hypercatabolic syndromes which have previously been associated with high mortality rates. In malignant hyperthermia, where early diagnosis and treatment usually with intravenous dantrolene in association with other supportive measures (and often subsequent dantrolene therapy) is performed, recovery is seen in virtually 100% of patients. There is a rapid resolution of hyperthermia, dysrhythmias, muscle rigidity, tachycardia, hypercapnia, mottled or cyanotic skin, and metabolic acidosis, and a slower normalisation of myoglobinuria and elevated serum creatine phosphokinase levels. In patients with family history or previous episodes of malignant hyperthermia, prophylactic treatment with dantrolene prior to anaesthesia prevents the syndrome occurring in most cases. Where malignant hyperthermia has developed patients have been successfully treated with further dantrolene therapy. Dantrolene has also been used successfully in the treatment of a few cases of heat stroke and the neuroleptic malignant syndrome--both of which have many similarities to malignant hyperthermia. Dantrolene is well established in the treatment of patients with muscle spasticity where it generally improves at least some of the components of spasticity (i.e. hyper/hypotonia, clonus, muscle cramps and spasms, resistance to stretch and flexor reflexes, articular movement, neurological and motor functions and urinary control). However, in some patients, particularly those with multiple sclerosis, dantrolene may not be effective, and in many cases muscular strength may diminish. Long term dantrolene therapy has been associated with hepatic toxicity and may cause problems in patients treated for disorders of muscle spasticity. Thus, dantrolene offers a unique advance in the therapy available for the treatment of hypercatabolic disorders and is also useful in the treatment of muscle spasticity of various aetiology.
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PMID:Dantrolene. A review of its pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties and therapeutic use in malignant hyperthermia, the neuroleptic malignant syndrome and an update of its use in muscle spasticity. 352 59

Clinical Neurophysiology brings about 2 major contributions in the study of Parkinson's disease: on the one hand, it makes it possible to measure the motor troubles; on the other, it enables their pathophysiological analysis. The 3 classical signs must be studied separately. Tremor can easily be recorded by electromyography. Moreover, its parkinsonian nature can be specified by studying the resetting of EMG bursts following electrical stimulation of the motor nerve. A pace maker has been demonstrated in the thalamus from where rhythmic messages are first sent to motor cortex and thereafter reverberated to spinal motoneurons. Rigidity can be assessed by sophisticated but not generalized methods. It is easier to evaluate it by long-loop responses evoked by proprioceptive or exteroceptive stimulations. These responses reflect activity in pathways relaying in supraspinal structures. Contrary to spasticity, rigidity is not basically due to dysfunctions in segmentary spinal circuits. It is more likely that it depends on hyperactive and hyperexcitable long loop pathways. This hypothesis is in agreement with well established facts showing that parkinsonian hypertonia vanishes after dorsal root section. Akinesia is complex semeiologically. It is made of various components some of which can be measured. Reaction times and movement times provide interesting data which however are not strictly correlated with the motor handicap. Motor programmes are assembled in normal delays but they are not "called upon" correctly, reflecting a disturbance in the motor planning. A lack of "energetization" of the motor cortex and the pyramidal tract is likely. A functional disconnection between the motor program/plan side and the execution side can be hypothesized to explain the 3 major signs; on the one hand, neural messages are not correctly transferred to the pyramidal system, on the other, spinoencephalospinal loops on the execution side become more active as they escape from the control normally exerted by the plan/program side where basal ganglia play a prominent role.
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PMID:[Clinical neurophysiology in the evaluation and physiopathology of Parkinson's disease]. 383 95

Botulinum toxin-A (botox) can improve spasticity and decrease painful spasms in the affected limbs of patients with multiple sclerosis. We report significant improvement of muscle rigidity in the upper limbs after focal administration of botulinum toxin A to 2 patients with progressive supranuclear palsy.
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PMID:Botulinum toxin-A improves the rigidity of progressive supranuclear palsy. 810 6

This study assessed the safety and efficacy of intrathecal baclofen in the treatment of intractable spasticity caused by spinal cord injury or multiple sclerosis. Twenty-three patients with severe chronic spasticity underwent bolus test dosing with 50, 75, or 100 micrograms of intrathecal baclofen administered by lumbar puncture. All patients were either refractory to oral baclofen at a dose of 120 mg/d or side effects were unacceptable at a lower dose. There was a significant decrease in tone and spasticity in all 23 patients. Nineteen patients underwent implantation of a programmable pump and intrathecal catheter designed to deliver baclofen directly to the spinal cord. Rigidity (tone) was decreased from a mean prebolus Ashworth score of 3.8 to a mean postbolus Ashworth score of 1.5 and spasms from a mean prebolus score of 3.5 to a mean postbolus score of 1.2 for a minimum of 4 hours. Patients have been observed for a mean of 16 months (range 2 to 34 months). Ashworth scores have remained reduced to an acceptable level (< or = 2 with periodic adjustment in dosage in all but three patients. There has been one pump malfunction and four catheter malfunctions; few serious medication and postoperative complications have occurred. There was one death caused by underlying disease, one patient voluntarily withdrew, and three patients developed tolerance to the extent that optimal control of spasticity tone could not be maintained. Although intrathecal baclofen is safe and effective in the majority of patients, three patients required > 1,000 micrograms/d with increasingly higher doses over time and exhibited a poor response.
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PMID:Intrathecal baclofen for treatment of intractable spinal spasticity. 829 63

A total of 93 patients with intractable spasticity due to either spinal cord injury (59 cases), multiple sclerosis (31 cases), or other spinal pathology (three cases) were entered into a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled screening protocol of intrathecal baclofen test injections. Of the 88 patients who responded to an intrathecal bolus of 50, 75, or 100 micrograms of baclofen, 75 underwent implantation of a programmable pump system for chronic therapy. Patients were followed for 5 to 41 months after surgery (mean 19 months). No deaths or new permanent neurological deficits occurred as a result of surgery or chronic intrathecal baclofen administration. Rigidity was reduced from a mean preoperative Ashworth scale score of 3.9 to a mean postoperative score of 1.7. Muscle spasms were reduced from a mean preoperative score of 3.1 (on a four-point scale) to a mean postoperative score of 1.0. Although the dose of intrathecal baclofen required to control spasticity increased with time, drug tolerance was not a limiting factor in this study. Only one patient withdrew from the study because of a late surgical complication (pump pocket infection). Another patient received an intrathecal baclofen overdose because of a human error in programming the pump. The results of this study indicate that intrathecal baclofen infusion can be safe and effective for the long-term treatment of intractable spasticity in patients with spinal cord injury or multiple sclerosis.
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PMID:Intrathecal baclofen for intractable spasticity of spinal origin: results of a long-term multicenter study. 842 Dec 5

A review of 1300 patients with spinal cord injury (SCI), over a period of 14 years, revealed 12 patients with an 'acute abdomen'. Seven events occurred during the initial admission, ranging from 10 days to 9 months from injury, and five during readmission of 'chronic' SCI patients. Four were in the acute stage 10-30 days from injury, all with peptic ulcer perforations. The remainder had either an intestinal obstruction, appendicitis or peritonitis. All of the neurological levels were above T6 except for one patient who had a low level paraplegia. The classical signs of an 'acute abdomen' may be missing in such patients thus delaying diagnosis by 1-4 days. The most important signs were autonomic dysreflexia, referred shoulder tip pain, abdominal pain, abdominal distension, increased spasticity and abdominal pain with nausea and vomiting. Less importance was given to the classical signs of abdominal tenderness, abdominal muscle rigidity, rebound, fever and of leukocytosis. Prompt diagnosis and treatment will minimise morbidity and mortality.
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PMID:The acute abdomen in spinal cord injury individuals. 892 9

We present a patient with early-onset Pick's disease in which selective nigral degeneration, KP1 expression of ghost Pick bodies and amyloid P-positive astrocytes were found. We also review the literature on early-onset Pick's disease. A 34-year-old man showed personality change including stereotypical behavior. Muscle rigidity and spasticity developed later, and he died twelve years after the onset of his illness. The brain showed lobar cerebral atrophy prominent in the temporal lobe, and to a lesser degree in the prefrontal and orbitofrontal cortex. The substantia nigra displayed profound degeneration whereas the head of the caudate nucleus and the putamen were not so seriously affected because the neurons were preserved and only slight astrocytic proliferation was seen. Many Pick bodies were found in the hippocampal formation, and ballooned neurons (Pick cells) were dispersed throughout the cerebral cortex, subcortical grey matter and hippocampal formation. The affected white matter exhibited severe fibrillary gliosis, and numerous astrocytes positive for glial fibrillary acidic protein and microglial cells positive for CR3/43 were found in the atrophied cortical lesions. The intraneuronal Pick bodies expressed ubiquitin, neurofilament and tau, and KP1 distinctly stained ghost Pick bodies. Tau-positive astrocytes were found in the striatum, hippocampal formation, pontine tegmentum, substantia nigra and affected frontotemporal cortices. These astrocytes were also positive for amyloid P. Extensive search of the literature on early-onset Pick's disease disclosed only a few cases with selective nigral degeneration, and we failed to find any differences in duration, progression of the illness and the extent of subcortical gray matter involvement between cases of early-onset and presenile onset of Pick' s disease. We conclude that the striatopallidal and nigral system can be affected independently in Pick's disease and report new immunohistochemical findings.
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PMID:KP1 expression of ghost Pick bodies, amyloid P-positive astrocytes and selective nigral degeneration in early onset Picks disease. 1050 33

In experimental and clinical studies, an objective assessment of peripheral muscle resistance represents one of the key elements in determining the efficacy of therapeutic manipulations (e.g. pharmacological, surgical) aimed to ameliorate clinical signs of spasticity and/or rigidity. In the present study, we characterize a newly developed limb flexion resistance meter which permits a semi-automated, computer-controlled measurement of peripheral muscle resistance (PMR) in the lower extremities during a forced flexion of the ankle in the awake rat. Ischemic paraplegia was induced in Sprague-Dawley rats by transient aortic occlusion (10 min) in combination with systemic hypotension (40 mm Hg). After ischemia the presence of spasticity component was determined by the presence of an exaggerated EMG activity recorded from gastrocnemius muscle after nociceptive or proprioceptive afferent activation and by velocity-dependent increase in muscle resistance. Rigidity was induced by high dose (30 mg/kg, i.p.) of morphine. Animals with defined ischemic spasticity or morphine-induced rigidity were then placed into a plastic restrainer and a hind paw attached by a tape to a metal plate driven by a computer-controlled stepping motor equipped with a resistance transducer. The resistance of the ankle to rotation was measured under several testing paradigms: (i) variable degree of ankle flexion (40 degrees, 50 degrees, and 60 degrees), (ii) variable speed/rate of ankle flexion (2, 3, and 4 sec), (iii) the effect of inhalation anesthesia, (iv) the effect of intrathecal baclofen, (v) the effect of dorsal L2-L5 rhizotomy, or (vi) systemic naloxone treatment. In animals with ischemic paraplegia an increased EMG response after peripheral nociceptive or proprioceptive activation was measured. In control animals average muscle resistance was 78 mN and was significantly increased in animals with ischemic spasticity (981-7900 mN). In ischemic-spastic animals a significant increase in measured muscle resistance was seen after increased velocity (4 > 3 > 2 sec) and the angle (40 degrees > 50 degrees > 60 degrees) of the ankle rotation. In spastic animals, deep halothane anesthesia, intrathecal baclofen or dorsal rhizotomy decreased muscle resistance to 39-80% of pretreatment values. Systemic treatment with morphine induced muscle rigidity and corresponding increase in muscle resistance. Morphine-induced increase in muscle resistance was independent on the velocity of the ankle rotation and was reversed by naloxone. These data show that by using this system it is possible to objectively measure the degree of peripheral muscle resistance. The use of this system may represent a simple and effective experimental tool in screening new pharmacological compounds and/or surgical manipulations targeted to modulate spasticity and/or rigidity after a variety of neurological disorders such as spinal cord traumatic or ischemic injury, multiple sclerosis, cerebral palsy, or Parkinson's disease.
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PMID:Measurement of peripheral muscle resistance in rats with chronic ischemia-induced paraplegia or morphine-induced rigidity using a semi-automated computer-controlled muscle resistance meter. 1630 23

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is the most common cause of progressive neurological disability in young adults. In addition to spasticity, tremors, weakness, sensory disturbances, depression, cognitive problems, and bladder or bowel dysfunction, sexual dysfunction (SD) is also a prevalent and destructive manifestation of the disease that severely affects quality of life. Evaluation of this disorder requires insight into the primary (changes that directly affect libido, sexual response and orgasm due to direct damage to the nervous system), secondary (complaints which are related to the physical disability of MS, such as fatigue, muscle rigidity, weakness and spasms), and tertiary (emotional, social and cultural aspects of MS) components of MS-associated SD. Given the complexity and multifactorial nature of SD, a multidisciplinary approach is necessary when treating patients with MS. The aim of this Review is to provide a holistic approach to the evaluation and management of SD in patients with MS, incorporating the latest data from the fields of urology, neurology, nursing, social work, and psychology. What is currently known regarding the evaluation and management of SD in patients with MS will be presented from the perspective of these specialties.
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PMID:Sexual dysfunction in patients with multiple sclerosis: a multidisciplinary approach to evaluation and management. 1919 23


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