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)

Drug-induced and tardive movement disorders represent a large number of extrapyramidal disorders seen in neurologic practice. Iatrogenically induced, most commonly by neuroleptics, these disorders can be characterized by any abnormal body movement including tremor, chorea, athetosis, dyskinesias, dystonia, myoclonus, tics, ballismus or akathisia. Parkinsonism, dyskinesias and dystonia tend to be the most common. Management of patients with drug-induced or tardive syndromes is complex. Prognosis is frequently poor as patients usually need the offending agent to manage their underlying psychiatric or medical problem. Neuroleptics and other drugs known commonly to cause movement disorders should be used cautiously and significant consideration of all risks and benefits measured before initiating therapy.
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PMID:Drug-induced and tardive movement disorders. 183 84

The clinical features and course of 14 patients with progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) were analysed. PSP formed 2.3 percent of the parkinsonian population. Blepharospasm, hypersomnia, athetosis, action dystonia, action myoclonus and family history of dementia were the unusual features. Half of the patients had dementia at presentation. Drug therapy was uniformly disappointing. The mean duration from onset to death in 4 patients who died was 4.5 years. The histopathological features in a patient with the disease for one year and who died of acute myocardial infarction showed moderately severe changes characteristic of the disease.
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PMID:Progressive supranuclear palsy. Report of 14 cases with special reference to unusual features. 193 53

Actual phenomena of various types of involuntary movements listed below were demonstrated by moving pictures, which were followed by comments on symptomatology, in particular the fundamental characteristics of an individual involuntary movement. These characteristics are the essence of each involuntary movement, and it is necessary to recognize both its phenomenon itself and its accumulated knowledge in order to realize and interpret the involuntary movement. The following involuntary movements are treated: (1) typical tremor-at-rest in paralysis agitans, (2) atypical parkinsonian tremor, (3) essential tremor, (4) chorea, (5) ballism, (6) athetosis, (7) choreoathetosis, (8) dystonia, (9) spontaneous myoclonus at rest, (10) intention or action myoclonus, (11) intention tremor and (12) hyperkinesis.
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PMID:[Symptomatology of the involuntary movement]. 201 97

Extrapyramidal dysfunction is poorly characterized in Rett's syndrome, a neurodegenerative disorder in girls. We studied the motor and behavioral findings in 32 Rett's syndrome patients, 21 months to 30 years old. In addition to the typical stereotyped movements and scoliosis, other motor disturbances included bruxism, sialorrhea, ocular deviations, parkinsonian findings, dystonia, myoclonus, and athetosis. The types of movement disorders seemed to be age-related, with the hyperkinetic disorders occurring in the younger patients and the bradykinetic disorders occurring more frequently in the older patients.
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PMID:Extrapyramidal involvement in Rett's syndrome. 223 45

The descriptive aspects of all types of movement disorders and their related syndromes and terminologies used in the literature are reviewed and described. This comprises the features of (a) movement disorders secondary to neurological diseases affecting the extrapyramidal motor system, such as: athetosis, chorea, dystonia, hemiballismus, myoclonus, tremor, tics and spasm, (b) drug induced movement disorders, such as: akathisia, akinesia, hyperkinesia, dyskinesias, extrapyramidal syndrome, and tardive dyskinesia, and (c) abnormal movements in psychiatric disorders, such as: mannerism, stereotyped behaviour and psychomotor retardation. It is intended to bring about a more comprehensive overview of these movement disorders from a phenomenological perspective, so that clinicians can familiarize with these features for diagnosis. Some general statements are made in regard to some of the characteristics of movement disorders.
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PMID:Clinical features of movement disorders. 662 43

In the broad sense of the term, dyskinesia refers to the overall spectrum of abnormal involuntary movement. Abnormal involuntary movement includes parkinsonism, chorea, athetosis, myoclonus and ballism. Clinically, the most frequently encountered form of dyskinesia is parkinsonism. In addition to parkinsonism, typical forms of dyskinesia caused by cerebrovascular disease, head injury and brain tumor, based on a review of the literature and our own experience are discussed.
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PMID:[Dyskinesia in various diseases--cerebrovascular disease, head injury, brain tumor]. 827 68

A variety of inheritable metabolic disorders produce movement disorders. A lists of conditions associated with tremor, athetosis, chorea, dystonia and myoclonus are presented as a guide for the differential diagnosis of such abnormal involuntary movements. The list includes aminoacidopathies, lipidoses, mucopolysaccharidoses, mucolipidoses, organic acidemias, mitochondrial cytopathies and disorders of carbohydrate, purine, and metal metabolism. Clinical, pathological and biochemical features of movement disorders of three typical examples, Wilson's disease, Lesch-Nyhan syndrome and glutaric acidemia type 1, are described.
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PMID:[Movement disorders in miscellaneous disorders--inherited metabolic diseases]. 827 72

We describe the first Danish family with dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy (DRPLA), containing 16 clinically affected individuals in five generations. Inheritance is autosomal dominant. The disorder was diagnosed as Huntington's disease (HD), but analysis of the IT15 gene for HD revealed normal alleles. The diagnosis of DRPLA was based on the finding of elongated CAG repeats in the B37 gene on chromosome 12 in affected individuals. The age at onset ranged from 13 to 60 years, with the most severe clinical picture being associated with onset in childhood. Clinical features included varying combinations of dementia, euphoria, visuomotor disturbances, speech problems, ataxia, tremor, epilepsy and involuntary movements presenting as chorea, athetosis, and dystonia. We discuss characteristics of DRPLA that may enable the differentiation from HD on a clinical basis. In conclusion, DRPLA should be considered and DNA analysis is recommended in patients manifesting varying combinations of extrapyramidal and cerebellar symptoms, especially when clinical features show pronounced intrafamilial variability, and dyscoordination, tremor, myoclonus, epilepsy, and euphoria are part of the syndrome.
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PMID:Dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy. Clinical features of a five-generation Danish family. 886 94

We prospectively studied motor symptoms in 32 patients with CT- or MRI-proven acute pure parietal stroke. A transient, mild, 'pseudoparesis' of the hand (90%), was noted, improved by visual attention and prompting, associated with non-awareness of muscle power (53%), transient soft pyramidal signs (50%), unilateral akinesia (100%) and motor hemineglect (37%) in non-dominant lesions. Lower motoneurone-type atrophy was not observed in this acute phase. We called 'poikilotonia' the striking unpredictable variations in muscle tone, ranging from extreme hypertonia to hypotonia, found in all patients. When maintaining postures, patients showed large oscillations (100%), laterodeviation or levitation of the arm (60%), especially in the case of large or posterior lesions, or, occasionally (3%), motor persistence or even hemicatalepsy (3%). Limb kinetic and manipulatory apraxia, with inadequate organization and anticipation of motor sequences and synergies, motor arrests, perplexity, unrecognizable gestures and loss of bimanual coordination, was a constant finding (100%). Other apraxias (62%) and difficulty in copying intransitive gestures of the hand (84%) were associated with posterior lesions involving the supramarginal gyrus. When reaching towards objects, all patients showed abnormal anticipatory hand shaping, but visuomotor ataxia (3%) was only seen with bilateral posterior stroke. Sensory (70%) or pseudocerebellar (4%) ataxia, was seen in both anterior and posterior lesions. Avoidance behaviors (34%) were not uncommon, but had no localizing value. Of the dyskinesias, hand dystonia (84%) was frequent, but athetosis (16%), asterixis (15%), postural tremor (15%), myoclonus (9%) and stereotypia (9%), were uncommon. The abnormal eye movements were unilateral hypo-akinesia of exploratory saccades (43%), abnormal ipsilateral pursuit and contralateral optokinetic nystagmus in the case of posterior lesions, and oculomotor apraxia with bilateral posterior lesions. In conclusion, parietal motor syndrome can be recognized during bedside examination, and probably reflects the loss of multiple sensory feedback to motor programs, especially those directed to the extrapersonal space.
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PMID:Parietal motor syndrome: a clinical description in 32 patients in the acute phase of pure parietal strokes studied prospectively. 987 53

A 68-year-old man was hospitalized on 24 June, 1998 because of visual and gait disturbance. A month before admission, he had been aware of blurred or double vision while watching TV. A few days later, he developed dysphagia and clumsiness in the fingers. His gait became unstable and he exhibited restless finger movements. His shoulders and trunk showed torsion while walking. On admission, he became disoriented and showed rigidity in the legs and athetosis in the bilateral fingers. Routine laboratory findings, thyroid function data, and the serum levels of vitamin B1, B12, Cu, and ceruloplasmin were within the normal ranges. Periodic synchronous discharges (PSD) were observed on electroencephalography. MRI showed T2-high intensity and atrophy of the bilateral caudate nucleus and putamen in addition to the cerebral cortex. 99mTc-ECD-SPECT showed a decrease of local blood flow in the bilateral frontal, right temporal, and bilateral parietal lobes and bilateral thalami. Athetosis became exacerbated and was observed for a month, overlapping with myoclonus. We diagnosed the patient as having CJD because of progressive dementia, myoclonus and PSD. Analysis of the prion protein revealed that codon 129 was Met/Met and codon 219 Glu/Glu by DNA sequences. The patient developed akinetic mutism and rigid contracture, and died of pneumonia on 5 September, 1998. Because athetosis is thought to involve the bilateral caudate nucleus, putamen and thalamus, the findings of diagnostic imaging in this patient might be relative to the clinical symptoms.
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PMID:[A case of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease exhibiting athetosis in the early stage]. 1055 90


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