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Query: UMLS:C0027066 (
myoclonus
)
4,275
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The frequency of sleep complaints in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) is estimated to be between 60-90% and a variety of either disease-related or secondary mechanisms and the dopaminergic treatment itself contributes to the development of different sleep disturbances. These comprise slight, fragmented sleep with increased number of arousals and awakenings, and PD-specific motor phenomena such as nocturnal immobility, rest tremor, eye-blinking, dyskinesias, and other phenomena such as periodic and nonperiodic limb movements in sleep, restless legs syndrome, fragmentary
myoclonus
, and respiratory dysfunction in sleep. Depression and hallucinations/psychosis further complicate the picture. The incidence of
REM sleep behavior disorder
(RBD) with nightmares and violent behavior is increased in PD and may occur as a preclinical disease-related symptom. A careful sleep history of patients and their partners, polysomnograms when necessary, motor and psychiatric assessments should precede individual treatment strategies, which include adjusting dopaminergic daytime treatment, benzodiazepines for RBD, reduction of anticholinergic drugs, and, if necessary, clozapine for nocturnal psychosis.
...
PMID:Sleep dysfunction in Parkinson's disease. 1078 36
Corticobasal degeneration (CBD) exhibits distinct features of akinesia, the 'alien limb' sign and cortical
myoclonus
. We report a 63-year old woman with a history of CBD for 18 months who was studied twice using all-night polysomnography with an interval of 13 months. Both recordings revealed frequent periodic arm and leg movements predominantly during non-REM sleep. To our knowledge this has not been described in a patient with CBD so far. Similar to a previous report we found REM sleep without atonia (RWA) in all REM episodes. However, the patient showed RWA and some non violent movements that fulfilled the diagnosis of subclinical
REM sleep behavior disorder
only in the second investigation. These observations may be due to the underlying degenerative process that involves not only cortical but also thalamic and brainstem structures.
...
PMID:Sleep and periodic limb movements in corticobasal degeneration. 1459 51
Sleep-related non epileptic motor disorders represent a frequent but often neglected or trivialized source of neurological disability. In recent decades, the widespread adoption of videopolygraphic techniques has better characterized already known nosographic entities and described a bewildering variety of previously unrecognized clinical entities (such as
REM sleep behaviour disorder
, sleep-related eating disorder, benign neonatal sleep
myoclonus
, facio-mandibular
myoclonus
during sleep, fragmentary hypnic
myoclonus
, propriospinal
myoclonus
at the wake-sleep transition, rhythmic feet movements during sleep, etc). The scope of the neurophysiological investigations of sleep related disorders has therefore been much expanded. However, advances in the semeiology and clinical description of sleep-related movement disorders has rarely been matched by adequate understanding of the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms, or by major advances in treatment. The main sleep-related motor disorders are described here, following the only classification currently available, e. g. that offered by the International Sleep Disorders Classification of the American Sleep Disorders Association, which is more a classification of diseases of sleep than of movement disorders. The increasing use of functional neuroimaging in vivo and of updated neurophysiological and molecular techniques in man and in the experimental animal will hopefully lead to a better understanding of these disorders in terms of pathophysiology of disordered motor control.
...
PMID:Sleep-related non epileptic motor disorders. 1525 79
The International Classification of Sleep Disorders (ICSD-2) has separated sleep-related movement disorders into simple, repetitive movement disorders (such as periodic limb movements in sleep [PLMS], sleep bruxism, and rhythmic movement disorder) and parasomnias (such as
REM sleep behavior disorder
and disorders of partial arousal, e.g., sleep walking, confusional arousals, night terrors). Many of the parasomnias are characterized by complex behaviors in sleep that appear purposeful, goal directed and voluntary but are outside the conscious awareness of the individual and therefore inappropriate. All of the sleep-related movement disorders described here have specific polysomnographic findings. For the purposes of developing and/or revising specifications and polysomnographic scoring rules, the AASM Scoring Manual Task Force on Movements in Sleep reviewed background literature and executed evidence grading of 81 relevant articles obtained by a literature search of published articles between 1966 and 2004. Subsequent evidence grading identified limited evidence for reliability and/or validity for polysomnographic scoring criteria for periodic limb movements in sleep,
REM sleep behavior disorder
, and sleep bruxism. Published scoring criteria for rhythmic movement disorder, excessive fragmentary
myoclonus
, and hypnagogic foot tremor/alternating leg muscle activation were empirical and based on descriptive studies. The literature review disclosed no published evidence defining clinical consequences of excessive fragmentary
myoclonus
or hypnagogic foot tremor/alternating leg muscle activation. Because of limited or absent evidence for reliability and/or validity, a standardized RAND/UCLA consensus process was employed for recommendation of specific rules for the scoring of sleep-associated movements.
...
PMID:The scoring of movements in sleep. 1755 25
On the French West Indian island of Guadeloupe, atypical parkinsonian patients represent two-thirds of all cases of parkinsonism, which is exceptionally frequent compared to epidemiological data from European countries where atypical parkinsonism accounts for only approximately 5% of all cases. The clinical entity was a unique combination of levodopa-resistant parkinsonism, tremor,
myoclonus
, hallucinations,
REM sleep behavior disorder
and fronto-subcortical dementia. Based on the presence or the absence of supranuclear gaze palsy, two subgroups of patients were distinguished. In patients with oculomotor signs that came to autopsy, neuronal loss was found to predominate in the substantia nigra and the striatum but other brain areas were also affected, including the frontal cortex. In addition, tau-containing lesions were detected throughout the brain. Epidemiological data suggested a close association of the disease with the regular consumption of soursop, a tropical annonaceous plant. Experimental studies performed in midbrain cell cultures identified annonacin, a selective mitochondrial complex I inhibitor contained in the fruit and leaves of soursop, as a probable etiological factor. Consistent with this view, chronic administration of annonacin to rats through Alzet osmotic minipumps showed that annonacin was able to reproduce the brain lesions characteristic of the human disease.
...
PMID:Atypical parkinsonism in the Caribbean island of Guadeloupe: etiological role of the mitochondrial complex I inhibitor annonacin. 1881 93
Sleep-related disorders have been reported to have a higher prevalence in multiple sclerosis (MS) than in the general population. They are often undervalued for the presence of more severe physical problems and the occurrence at night, without a direct observation in common clinical practice, but if not recognized and treated they can negatively affect the quality of life causing daytime drowsiness and worsening fatigue. Sleep related disorders most commonly reported in MS are as follows: insomnia, sleep-related breathing disorders (SRBD), restless legs syndrome (RLS) and periodic limb movement disorders (PLMD). Secondary narcolepsy,
REM sleep behavior disorder
(RBD) and propriospinal
myoclonus
have been also described in some case reports or series. The purpose of this review is to correlate the more common sleep disturbances in MS patients to the involvement of specific brain regions, analyzing their relationship with MRI findings. While insomnia is usually secondary to other disabling symptoms such as nocturia or pain, SRBD, RLS, narcolepsy, RBD and propriospinal
myoclonus
in MS patients can be the consequence of an injury of specific central nervous system (CNS) areas. Lesions in the pontine tegmentum and the dorsal medulla have been associated with SRBD, spinal cord lesions or atrophy with RLS, bilateral lesions in the lateral hypothalamus with narcolepsy-like symptoms, lesions in the dorsal pontine tegmentum with RBD and intramedullary demyelinating plaques in spinal cord with propriospinal
myoclonus
. MS specialists and general neurologists should be aware of these comorbidities since neuroimaging, which is routinely performed in MS, could provide helpful clinical indications on patients with secondary sleep-related disorders and to categorize symptomatic patients who need to underdo more in-depth sleep studies.
...
PMID:Sleep-related disorders and their relationship with MRI findings in multiple sclerosis. 3080 30
Orthostatic tremor (OT) is not an uncommon symptom in various neurodegenerative diseases. However, the nature and pathophysiology of OT involve a complex network of tremors and dopaminergic pathways. We assessed patients who complained of prominent leg tremors described as "shaky leg." We analyzed their characteristics and evaluated them with neuroimaging and electrophysiological tools. A total of 23 patients who experienced an uncomfortable symptom of leg tremor were retrospectively enrolled from April 2014 to October 2019. Previous medical history, brain MRI, and surface electromyography (EMG) data were analyzed. The [18F]-FP-CIT brain positron emission tomography (PET) and the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) were assessed for patients who showed parkinsonism. The causes of OT varied: parkinsonism (n = 5), idiopathic causes (n = 4), secondary causes (n = 3, trauma, brain lesion, arteriovenous malformation), drug reactions (n = 3, valproate, perphenazine, haloperidol), other neurological disorders (n = 5, essential tremor, dystonia, restless leg syndrome,
REM sleep behavior disorder
, dementia), alcohol withdrawal (n = 1), functional movement disorder (n = 1), and an unknown cause (n = 1). The frequency range varied (2.6-15 Hz) and according to the new consensus statement on the classification of OT, 4 patients had primary OT, 2 had "primary OT plus," 12 had slow OT, and 5 had orthostatic
myoclonus
. The prognosis associated with the use of medication was generally poor; however, clonazepam and levodopa were the most effective drugs. In conclusion, we found that different types of OT and orthostatic
myoclonus
were diagnosed by electrophysiological evaluation and neuroimaging tools even if they showed the same symptoms as "shaky leg." In addition, it is possible to roughly estimate the response to medication according to the type of OT and the cause. To clarify the pathophysiology of OT, a large number of longitudinal cohort studies and detailed neuroimaging and electrophysiological evaluations are needed.
...
PMID:What Shall We Do for the Patients with Shaky Leg Syndrome? A Review of 23 Patients. 3291 73