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Query: UMLS:C0027066 (
myoclonus
)
4,275
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Of 842 consecutive patients with movement disorders seen over a 71 month period, 28 (3.3%) were diagnosed as having a documented or clinically established psychogenic
movement disorder
. Tremor was most common (50%) followed by dystonia,
myoclonus
, and parkinsonism. Clinical descriptions of various types are reviewed. Clinical characteristics common in these patients included distractability (86%), abrupt onset (54%), and selective disabilities (39%). Distractability seems to be most important in tremor and least important in dystonia. Other diagnostic clues included entrainment of tremor to the frequency of repetitive movements of another limb, fatigue of tremor, stimulus sensitivity, and previous history of psychogenic illness. On examination, 71% had other psychogenic features. Over 60% had a clear history of a precipitating event and secondary gain and 50% had a psychiatric diagnosis (usually depression). Twenty five per cent of patients presented with combined psychogenic
movement disorder
and organic
movement disorder
; 35% resolved and this subgroup had a shorter duration of disease than those who are unresolved. Psychogenic
movement disorder
represents an uncommon diagnosis among patients with movement disorders. The ability to make a diagnosis rests on the presence of a multitude of clinical clues and therapeutic action should be taken as early as possible.
...
PMID:Psychogenic movement disorders: frequency, clinical profile, and characteristics. 756 21
Movement disorders
(MD), other than tremor, associated with multiple sclerosis (MS) occur infrequently. We report 14 new cases of whom nine had dystonia, three parkinsonism, and two had
myoclonus
. We also reviewed 135 such cases from the literature. From an analysis of the individual MDs and the site of the lesions described, we conclude that paroxysmal dystonias (tonic spasms), ballism/chorea, and palatal
myoclonus
can be caused by demyelinating lesions. Parkinsonism, dystonia, and other types of
myoclonus
, however, often appear to be coincidental.
...
PMID:Movement disorders in multiple sclerosis. 938 76
Dentatorubropallidoluysian atrophy is a neurodegenerative disorder with characteristic pathology, chiefly described in reports from Japan, and is associated with an unstable CAG trinucleotide repeat in a gene on chromosome 12. We describe four European families, three British and one Maltese, with this mutation. All exhibited autosomal dominant inheritance, and there was evidence for anticipation associated with an increase of the expansion with paternal transmission in two families. Affected chromosomes from patients with dentatorubropallidoluysian atrophy had CAG expansions of 58 to 74 repeats, compared to 7 to 26 in control chromosomes, and the size of repeat was significantly inversely correlated with age of onset. The clinical features were diverse, even within individual families, and comprised a combination of a
movement disorder
(chorea,
myoclonus
, dystonia, or parkinsonism), cerebellar ataxia, epilepsy, psychosis, and dementia. A clinical diagnosis of Huntington's disease had been made in affected individuals from all families. Neuropathological examination of 2 patients showed no specific abnormality in one and degenerative changes predominantly affecting the spinal cord in the other. Investigation of 55 patients who might represent sporadic examples of dentatorubropallidoluysian atrophy did not detect any expanded alleles. Dentatorubropallidoluysian atrophy is likely to be more common than previously recognized in non-Japanese populations, and should be considered in any patient with a dominantly inherited neurodegenerative disorder with the above-mentioned clinical features.
...
PMID:A clinical and molecular genetic study of dentatorubropallidoluysian atrophy in four European families. 771 81
We describe three patients with Huntington's disease, from two families, in whom
myoclonus
was the predominant clinical feature. The diagnosis was confirmed at autopsy in two cases and by DNA analysis in all three. These patients all presented before the age of 30 years and were the offspring of affected fathers. Neurophysiological studies documented generalised and multifocal action
myoclonus
of cortical origin that was strikingly stimulus sensitive, without enlargement of the cortical somatosensory evoked potential. The
myoclonus
improved with piracetam therapy in one patient and a combination of sodium valproate and clonazepam in the other two. Cortical reflex
myoclonus
is a rare but disabling component of the complex
movement disorder
of Huntington's disease, which may lead to substantial diagnostic difficulties.
...
PMID:Cortical myoclonus in Huntington's disease. 784 4
A 64-year-old man presented with a three day history of progressive Broca's aphasia, followed within 3 weeks by exclusively right-sided
myoclonus
, rigidity, and dystonia. Within 4 weeks he was globally aphasic. He died within 7 weeks of onset. In the final week, rigidity and
myoclonus
became bilateral. CT and MRI were normal. SPECT showed diminished perfusion of the left hemisphere. EEG showed periodic discharges on the left. At autopsy, there were marked cortical spongiform change, neuronal loss, and gliosis throughout the left hemisphere and in the right occipital cortex. Elsewhere in the right hemisphere, spongiform change was non-existent to minimal. There was moderate spongiform change in the molecular layer of the cerebellar cortex, much more marked on the left. Clinical and pathological unilateral cerebral predominance extended to the ipsilateral cerebellum. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is an important consideration in patients with rapidly progressive unilateral cerebral signs associated with a
movement disorder
.
...
PMID:Unilateral Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease presenting as rapidly progressive aphasia. 787 20
Mild
myoclonus
is reasonably common with various cyclic antidepressants. However, antidepressants rarely cause severe
myoclonus
, and no risk or predisposing factors have been reported in the literature. We report a case of exceptionally severe
myoclonus
developing at therapeutic doses and modest serum levels of imipramine. The patient went on to experience dystonia and catatonia. Both of these were in typical settings (after haloperidol and with psychotic bipolar depression, respectively) and responded to typical treatment. On further investigation, the patient was found to have left-sided schizencephaly and a corresponding history of very mild developmental delay. We suggest that the onset of one
movement disorder
after drug therapy (eg,
myoclonus
) may predict the development of other movement disorders (e.g., catatonia). We further propose that severe tricyclic-induced
myoclonus
should prompt the physician to rule out a coexisting structural lesion of the central nervous system.
...
PMID:Severe imipramine-induced myoclonus in a patient with psychotic bipolar depression, catatonia, and schizencephaly. 795 45
We studied four patients with familial olivopontocerebellar atrophy (OPCA) who had abnormal twitching of the cheeks and perioral muscles induced by facial movements. With the muscles at rest, electromyographic (EMG) recordings of the orbicularis oris and risorius muscles revealed myokymic discharges in the absence of visible movements. With voluntary contraction, the EMG showed synchronous discharges in the orbicularis oris and risorius muscles ipsilaterally associated with visible twitching. The duration of the EMG bursts was 10 to 75 ms with a frequency of 8 to 25 Hz, which suggested that the abnormal twitching was most consistent with a myoclonic disorder. Because it was induced by activation of the facial muscles, this
movement disorder
represents a form of action
myoclonus
.
...
PMID:Facial action myoclonus in patients with olivopontocerebellar atrophy. 819 88
Movement disorders
associated with hyperthyroidism or thymoma are extremely rare. A 52-year-old woman had developed
myoclonus
since June, 1989. Hyperthyroidism and thymoma were diagnosed 1 month and 9 months later.
Myoclonus
improved after thyroid treatment and thymectomy. If the association was not only a coincident phenomenon, autoimmunity should be considered in this previously unrecognized association.
...
PMID:Myoclonus associated with hyperthyroidism and thymoma: a case report. 838 53
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.
...
PMID:Disorders of movement in Leigh syndrome. 839 42
Twenty patients with movement disorders associated with astrocytomas (grade I-IV according to the WHO tumour classification) of the basal ganglia and the thalamus were evaluated for the effects of treatment. Five patients had more than one
movement disorder
when the histological diagnosis was verified by stereotactic biopsy. Twelve had tremors, eight hemidystonia, three hemichorea, and one hemichorea/ballismus, and
myoclonus
respectively. Ten patients died during the follow up period, and for the surviving patients follow up periods ranged from 6-21 years. The movement disorders changed over long periods of time related to therapeutic interventions. CSF shunt operations and percutaneous radiotherapy had no definite effect on the movement disorders. There was a moderate response to medical treatment in a few patients. Stereotactic aspiration of tumour cysts had a marked influence on the
movement disorder
in two patients, and functional stereotactic surgery abolished tumour induced tremor in one. Interstitial radiotherapy was performed in fifteen patients for treatment of the underlying neoplasm and resulted in different and variable alterations of the movement disorders. These differences may be explained by complex interactions involving structures affected primarily by the tumour, as well as by secondary functional lesions of adjacent structures.
...
PMID:Evaluation of the effect of treatment on movement disorders in astrocytomas of the basal ganglia and the thalamus. 841 11
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