Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027066 (myoclonus)
4,275 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Five patients presenting with focal abnormal involuntary movements of the abdominal wall are described. One was shown to have diaphragmatic flutter, which may represent a variant of the palatal myoclonus syndrome. The other four had writhing movements and contractions of the abdominal wall at frequencies of approximately 30 per minute. In two of the latter cases, these abdominal movements were profoundly influenced by respiratory manoeuvres. They were quite unlike the movements of spinal myoclonus or axial torsion dystonia. None of the patients were taking drugs that might have provoked their abnormal movements, or had any other evidence of neurological deficit. No cause was established in any of the cases.
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PMID:Diaphragmatic flutter, the moving umbilicus syndrome, and "belly dancer's" dyskinesia. 213 30

The ability of the selective GABA-receptor agonist, progabide, to suppress abnormal involuntary movements was evaluated in a preliminary open pilot study. 17 patients, 10 males and 7 females, aged 10-78 years, with hyperkinetic movement disorders were included in the study. Daily doses of progabide ranged from 900 to 3600 mg (median 2400 mg) corresponding to 14-45 mg/kg (median 45 mg/kg), while the duration of treatment varied from 2 to 52 weeks. Improvement, with a reduction of involuntary movements exceeding 25%, occurred in two of four patients with Gilles de la Tourette's syndrome, and in two of three patients with postanoxic intention myoclonus, while no consistent beneficial effects were registered in ten patients with Huntington's chorea, postanoxic choreoathetosis, torsion dystonia, tardive dyskinesia, action tremor, essential myoclonus, or oro-branchio-respiratory myoclonus.
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PMID:Progabide in the treatment of hyperkinetic extrapyramidal movement disorders. 386 33

We studied 14 patients who had a combination of idiopathic torsion dystonia and myoclonic jerks. In many cases, the same muscles were involved in both the myoclonus and the dystonia. This made observation of the crucial dystonic postures difficult and led to misdiagnosis of other dyskinesias. The jerks usually were brief (50 to 200 msec) and occurred irregularly, often showing cocontraction in antagonist muscles. Frequently, they were superimposed upon sustained dystonic contractions in the same or distant muscles. We found no time-locked EEG event before the jerks. The myoclonus probably arises from a subcortical focus, and the visible jerks probably are part of the spectrum of involuntary movements that accompany torsion dystonia.
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PMID:Myoclonic dystonia. 668 67

Two related girls had the onset of unilateral leg dystonia in the neonatal period and at 13 months, respectively. The dystonic signs subsided with motor development and resolved completely in one of the girls by the age of 5 years. There was no response to L-dopa. From 2-3 years of age segmental myoclonus with a shoulder girdle distribution appeared. Family investigation results were compatible with autosomal dominant myoclonic dystonia responsive to alcohol. The onset and resolution of dystonia have not been described previously. This disorder is genetically separate from torsion dystonia. No linkage has been found to the dopamine beta-hydroxylase gene locus. Genetically determined disorders of neurotransmission may add to our knowledge of the normal development of motor control and thus merit further study.
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PMID:Early onset dystonia decreasing with development. Case report of two children with familial myoclonic dystonia. 825 Jan 53

It is known that EEG findings reveal various abnormalities in patients with involuntary movement. But these findings are not specific. It has been reported to be related to myoclonus and spike. The other involuntary movement is unknown to the relation to EEG findings. The involuntary movement usually disappears during sleep, but a certain involuntary movement appears only during sleep. In the patient with Huntington's chorea and dystonia musculorum deformans, PSG reveals an increase in interspersed wakefulness, decrease of deep sleep and prolongation of REM latency. Periodic limb movement and nocturnal paroxysmal dystonia appear only during sleep. Nocturnal sleep studies are important for exploring the pathophysiology in involuntary movement.
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PMID:[EEG and polysomnography findings in patients with dyskinesia]. 827 65

Leigh syndrome (LS) is the clinical prototype of a genetically-determined mitochondrial encephalopathy. Twenty-two of 34 patients with LS had evidence of a movement disorder (MD). Dystonia, the most common MD, was present in 19 cases, rigidity in 4, tremor in 2, chorea in 2, hypokinesia in 2, myoclonus in 1, and tics in 1. Dystonia was most commonly multifocal at onset and showed progression in six patients. In half of the cases an enzymatic defect was detected, most commonly cytochrome C oxidase. The neuroradiologic findings showed prominent basal ganglia lesions in 20/21 patients. Putamen, caudate, substantia nigra and globus pallidus were involved in this order of frequency. This experience was reflected in a literature review encompassing 284 cases of LS. However, only 26.4% had MD. Eleven patients, including one of our cases, presented as the primary torsion dystonia phenotype. There are clinical and pathological similarities between LS and other metabolic diseases affecting the central nervous system. The enhanced vulnerability of the nervous system to metabolic stress and the resemblance in the distribution of the pathology of these diverse conditions suggests a common pathogenetic mechanism. An excitotoxin-mediated mechanism is favored, one which might account for the frequent involvement of the basal ganglia in LS.
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PMID:Disorders of movement in Leigh syndrome. 839 42

Three siblings of a consanguineous parents with involuntary movements are reported. The mother had only a very slight neck tremor, without any other neurological abnormality, and the father had died. The 38-year-old son (Case 1) complained of involuntary movements at the age of 6. His involuntary movements were observed in the tongue, perioral region and upper and lower extremities: jerky movements with dystonic features. The 46-year-old elder brother (Case 2) experienced involuntary movements at the age of 18. Involuntary movements were observed in the upper extremities; he also had torticollis and tremulous movements in the neck, and jerky movements in the perioral region. They showed gait disturbance and dysarthria. The 35-year-old sister (Case 3) also experienced involuntary movements. When she was writing, her involuntary movements were obvious: dystonia and myoclonic jerks. Tremor in the neck was also seen. Their intelligence was below average. We concluded that this family had hereditary torsion dystonia, with myoclonus, and low intelligence. This condition may be associated with an autosomal recessive gene.
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PMID:Hereditary non-progressive torsion dystonia with intellectual disturbance. 858 May 54

Pathophysiologies of disorders with dystonia or myoclonus were studied by evaluating the effects of treatment. Naturally, the main lesion of the dystonia responding to levodopa is in the nigrostriatal dopamine neuron. The target of stereotaxic operations is ventrolateral palladium for postural dystonia and the nucleus ventralis oralis posterior (Vop) thalamus for action dystonia. Torsion dystonia with lesion in the striatum and/or the pallidum causes axial torsion, it may be postural through the descending pathway and action through Vop. Stereotaxic operations on these pathways have shown to be effective. Focal dystonia is a reflection of abnormal co-activation of cortical motor neurons, occurring in a particular voluntary movement. Botulinus toxin injected into the affected muscle should be effective. Of myoclonus with epilepsy, cortical reflex myoclonus or cortical induced reticular myoclonus responds to valproic acid. However, no antiepileptic drugs are effective on those with primary brainstem lesion. Reticular reflex myoclonus due to asphyxia responds to ventralis intermedius thalamotomy. Idiopathic myoclonus associated with dystonia is particular because it responds to ventrolateral thalamotomy. Myoclonus except for idiopathic myoclonus with dystonia is associated with atonic NREM suggesting dysfunction of the dorsal raphe serotonergic neuron or the brainstem nucleus reticularis gigantocellularis, the causative neuron for experimental uremic myoclonus. Treatment for these neurons is necessary.
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PMID:[Pathophysiologies of dystonia and myoclonus--consideration from the standpoint of treatment]. 875 7

We report three members of a single family with an apparently autosomal dominant, nonparoxysmal, hyperkinetic movement disorder with onset in adolescence. The proband, a 56-year-old woman, manifested dystonia, tremor and myoclonus; one of her daughters exhibited myoclonus with tremor, and the other demonstrated myoclonus with chorea later accompanied by tremor and dystonia. The slowly progressive but not debilitating symptoms were restricted to the head, arms and hands and were only moderately affected by alcohol. Laboratory investigations failed to identify any abnormality, and linkage analysis excluded the region containing the DYT1 locus, indicating that the gene responsible for idiopathic torsion dystonia was not implicated in this family. While this disorder shares manifestations with myoclonic dystonia, essential myoclonus and benign chorea, the marked intrafamilial heterogeneity and the sex-limited phenotype expressed only in females of two generations appear to be unique.
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PMID:Intrafamilial heterogeneity of movement disorders: report of three cases in one family. 926 60

To date, at least 12 types of primary dystonia can be distinguished on a genetic basis. A 3-bp deletion in the DYT1 gene causes early onset, generalized torsion dystonia (TD), and mutations in the GTP cyclohydrolase I and the tyrosine hydroxylase genes result in dopa-responsive dystonia (DYT5). A missense change in the D2 dopamine receptor in one large family (DYT11) has recently been implicated in myoclonus-dystonia. Furthermore, seven other loci for dystonia genes have been mapped to chromosomal regions, including a locus for a mixed dystonia phenotype (DYT6), one form of focal dystonia (DYT7), three types of paroxysmal dystonia (DYT8-10), X-linked dystonia-parkinsonism (DYT3), and rapid-onset dystonia-parkinsonism (DYT12). No positive linkage results have yet been obtained for autosomal recessive TD (DYT2) and several other families of different types of dominantly inherited TD (DYT4). In addition, hereditary secondary dystonia may occur as part of familial diseases of the basal ganglia, metabolic and storage disorders, and various X-linked and other familial neurodegenerative syndromes affecting the basal ganglia. It may be anticipated that the traditional clinical and etiological classifications of dystonia will increasingly be replaced by a genetic one and that the identification of more dystonia genes may lead to a better understanding of these largely nondegenerative disorders.
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PMID:[Genetics of dystonia]. 1091 37


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