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)

Since the beginning of 1974, we have studied 17 cases of iatrogenic encephalopathy due to the ingestion of bismuth taken for the treatment of chronic digestive disorders. More than 100 similar cases have been reported in France within the same period. The clinical picture is remarkably consistent: there is a relatively long prodromal phase with difficulties in gait and writing, followed by a phase characterised by four signs, namely a severe confusional syndrome, myoclonus, astasia-abasia and sisorders of language. In our cases, after withdrawal of bismuth, recovery invariably began within 2 to 3 weeks but fatal cases have been described. All our patients had taken, for periods of between 3 weeks and 20 years, bismuth subnitrate. The levels of bismuth in the blood and urine in these patients were between 10 and 100 times as great as those in patients who had taken the same treatment without ill effect. The exact mechanism by which bismuth causes this complication, described only recently, is totally unknown.
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PMID:[Iatrogenic myoclonic encephalopathies caused by bismuth salts]. 124 82

The various reported psychogenic dyskinesias include tremor, dystonia, myoclonus, gait disorder, Parkinsonism, tics, and chorea. It is not easy to diagnose psychogenic movement disorders, especially in patients with underlying organic disease. We describe three patients with balance and/or posture abnormalities that occur when they stand up, start to move, or halt from walking, although their gaits are normal. One had an underlying unilateral frontal lobe lesion. All patients improved dramatically after receiving a placebo-injection or medication. These abnormal features differ from the previously reported features of astasia without abasia and of psychogenic gait disorders, including recumbent gait. We describe and discuss the patients' unique clinical characteristics.
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PMID:Psychogenic balance disorders: is it a new entity of psychogenic movement disorders? 2486 10