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

L-5-Hydroxytryptophan (5HTP) (with or without carbidopa pretreatment), L-tryptophan (plus pargyline pretreatment), or tryptamine (plus pargyline pretreatment) all induced dose-dependent myoclonus in guinea pigs. At the time of maximal behavioural response animals were killed for determination of brain indoleamine content. Administration of 5HTP (50-200 mg/kg) to naive guinea pigs, or of 5HTP (20-80 mg/kg) to carbidopa- (25 mg/kg 1 hr previously) pretreated animals, markedly elevated brain 5-hydroxytryptamine (5HT) concentrations but depressed whole brain tryptamine content. L-Tryptophan (50-200 mg/kg) administration to pargyline- (75 mg/kg 30 min previously) pretreated animals also increased cerebral 5HT levels. L-Tryptophan (200 mg/kg plus pargyline), elevated whole brain tryptamine content. Administration of tryptamine (40 mg/kg) to pargyline-pretreated guinea pigs caused a small increase in brain 5HT levels, but markedly elevated cerebral tryptamine content. 5HT appears to be the indoleamine mainly responsible for 5HTP-induced myoclonus but tryptamine predominates in tryptamine-induced myoclonus. Both 5HT and tryptamine may contribute to myoclonus induced by L-tryptophan.
...
PMID:Alterations in brain 5HT and tryptamine content during indoleamine-induced myoclonus in guinea pigs. 619 24

A patient with chronic manic-depressive illness developed generalized myoclonus and spontaneous ocular oscillations after a single 2 gm dose of L-tryptophan. She had been pretreated with both a tricyclic antidepressant and a monoamine oxidase inhibitor. The involuntary movements gradually disappeared within 24 hours after the drugs were discontinued. Electrooculographic recording 7 hours after onset of the abnormal eye movements revealed square-wave jerks and hypometric voluntary saccades. Pursuit as well as optokinetic and vestibular slow phases were normal except for superimposition of the square-wave jerks. Repeat recording 24 hours later was entirely normal.
...
PMID:Myoclonus and ocular oscillations induced by L-tryptophan. 705 33

The serotonin syndrome has increasingly been recognised in patients who have received combined serotonergic drugs. This syndrome is characterised by a constellation of symptoms (confusion, fever, shivering, diaphoresis, ataxia, hyperelflexia, myoclonus or diarrhoea) in the setting of the recent addition of a serotonergic agent. The most common drug combinations causing the serotonin syndrome are monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) and serotonin selective reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), MAOIs and tricyclic antidepressants, MAOIs and tryptophan, and MAOIs and pethidine (meperidine). This syndrome is caused by excess serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine; 5-HT) availability in the CNS at the 5-HT1A-receptor. There may also be some interaction with dopamine and 5-HT2-receptors. This syndrome probably has a low incidence, even among patients taking these drug combinations, and there is likely to be some other as yet unidentified inciting factor causing some patients to develop a full serotonin syndrome. Because fatalities and severe complications have accompanied the serotonin syndrome, the previously described drug combinations should be used cautiously or not at all. The serotonin syndrome is usually mild and, if managed with drug withdrawal and supportive therapy, generally improves within hours. Patients who develop hyperthermia should be treated aggressively with external cooling and paralysis. Methysergide and cyproheptadine appear to be useful adjuncts in treating the serotonin syndrome.
...
PMID:The serotonin syndrome. Implicated drugs, pathophysiology and management. 757 68

We describe a patient treated with trazodone, isocarboxazid, and methylphenidate hydrochloride who developed confusion, agitation, poor concentration, rigidity, myoclonus, involuntary movements, orthostatic hypotension, and hyperreflexia. CK was normal, and the syndrome resolved spontaneously over 12 hours. The serotonin syndrome occurs following the use of serotomimetic agents (serotonin reuptake inhibitors, tricyclic and tetracyclic antidepressants, tryptophan, 3,4-methylenedioxy-methamphetamine, dextromethorphan, meperidine, S-adenosylmethionine) alone or in combination with monoamine oxidase inhibitors. It is characterized by various combinations of myoclonus, rigidity, hyperreflexia, shivering, confusion, agitation, restlessness, coma, autonomic instability, low-grade fever, nausea, diarrhea, diaphoresis, flushing, and rarely, rhabdomyolysis and death.
...
PMID:Serotonin syndrome. 785 15

There is a new, potentially fatal disorder that is infrequently reported. The apparent rareness may be because of a lack of recognition of the syndrome or its predisposing factors. Fluoxetine (Prozac, Dista Products Co, Division of Eli Lilly Co, Indianapolis, IN), sertraline (Zoloft, Roerig Division, Pfizer Inc, New York, NY), and paroxetine (Paxil, SmithKline Beecham Pharmaceuticals, Philadelphia, PA) belong to a new class of antidepressant medication: the serotonin reuptake-inhibitors (SRIs). The relative safety profile of the SRIs has led to their widespread use. However, a syndrome of excessive serotonergic activity, the "serotonin syndrome" (SS), has recently been recognized. It is characterized by changes in mental status, hypertension, restlessness, myoclonus, hyperreflexia, diaphoresis, shivering, and tremor. A high index of suspicion is required to make the diagnosis in these acutely ill patients. The most common agents implicated in SS are the monoamine oxidase inhibitors in combination with L-tryptophan or fluoxetine. A case of a patient with significant peripheral vascular disease who developed SS while taking paroxetine and an over-the-counter cold medicine is reported. There have been no prior reports of this interaction. Discontinuation of the offending agents, sedation, and supportive care are the mainstays of treatment. The interactions of serotonin with platelets and vascular endothelium are also discussed.
...
PMID:The serotonin syndrome associated with paroxetine, an over-the-counter cold remedy, and vascular disease. 766 67

Twenty-one patients with disabling spontaneous, reflex, or action myoclonus due to various causes, who had shown apparent clinical improvement on introduction of piracetam, entered a placebo-controlled double-blind crossover trial of piracetam (2.4-16.8 g daily). All but one patient had electrophysiological evidence of cortical myoclonus. Patients were randomly allocated to a 14-day course of piracetam followed by identical placebo, or placebo followed by piracetam. Nineteen patients received piracetam/placebo in addition to their routine antimyoclonic treatment (carbamazepine, clonazepam, phenytoin, primidone, sodium valproate, or tryptophan plus isocarboxazid, alone or in combination) and two received piracetam/placebo as monotherapy. All patients were rated at the end of each treatment phase using stimulus sensitivity, motor, writing, functional disability, global assessment, and visual analogue scales. Ten of the 21 patients had to be rescued from the placebo phase of the trial because of a severe and intolerable exacerbation of their myoclonus. No patients required rescue from the piracetam phase of the double-blind trial. When the 21 patients were considered together, there was a significant improvement in motor, writing, functional disability, global assessment, and visual analogue scores during treatment with piracetam compared with placebo. The total rating score also improved significantly with piracetam, by a median of 22%. Piracetam, usually in combination with other antimyoclonic drugs, is a useful treatment for myoclonus of cortical origin.
...
PMID:Effectiveness of piracetam in cortical myoclonus. 841 9

In animals the occurrence of a behavioural syndrome consisting of hyperactivity, stereotyped movements and increase of temperature has been induced by MAOIs, 5-HT precursors (L-tryptophan) and 5-HT reuptake inhibitors. Most of these manifestations were specifically blocked by a pretreatment with an inhibitor of serotonin synthesis. In humans, the association of myoclonus, diarrhea, confusion, hypomania, agitation, hyperreflexia, shivering, incoordination, fever and diaphoresis, when patients are treated with serotoninergic agents, could constitute a "serotonin syndrome". Such cases of serotonin syndrome were reported after treatments with L-tryptophan, MAOIs, serotonin reuptake inhibitors and tricyclics alone or in association. The authors prospectively evaluated all the "serotonin-related" symptoms in 38 depressed inpatients fulfilling DSM III-R criteria of major depression. 16 (42%) out of 38 patients presented at least one symptom of serotonin syndrome. In 14 cases tremor and myoclonus occurred simultaneously and 10 patients presented at the same time tremor, myoclonus, diaphoresis and shivering. Except for two patients, symptoms were transient, lasted less than one week and disappeared with the pursuit of the treatment. Most often, serotonin syndrome thus corresponds to a reaction induced by a combination of serotoninergic agents at high dosages. In very rare cases, a toxic and potentially fatal interaction can occur between MAOIs, tricyclics and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors at therapeutic dosages. Serotonin syndrome also provides an heuristic model of the putative mode of action of antidepressants. Serotonin-related symptoms are the physical and objective expression of the antidepressant-induced increase in serotonin. The specificity of serotonin-related syndrome also needs to be discussed since most of the symptoms, such as tremor and diaphoresis, are not in all cases related to an increase in serotonin.
...
PMID:[The serotonin syndrome: review of the literature and description of an original study]. 852 62

Because of inadequate response to or intolerable side effects of oral medication, nine patients with segmental, generalized, and focal myoclonus were treated with intramuscular botulinum toxin type A. All patients were evaluated with neuroimaging, routine and limb-monitored electroencephalography, electromyography, evoked potentials and appropriate biochemical studies. Patients were aged 2 to 22 years, with duration of myoclonus from 1 month to 10 years. Multiple medication trials included antiepileptic drugs, benzodiazepines, tryptophan, L-dopa/carbidopa, baclofen, and dantrolene. Patients were injected with botulinum toxin in their affected area with electromyographic guidance to affected muscles with different doses (8 to 20 units/kg), except two patients who were injected with 32 and 45 units/kg, respectively, at 4- to 8-month intervals. One patient did not complete botulinum toxin treatment because of subjective weakness, although there were virtually no side effects reported in patients completing therapy. Patients reported a dramatic reduction in painful myoclonus. In addition, patients exhibited improved functional skills, as demonstrated by markedly improved use of affected extremities and improvements in ambulation. One patient, who was nonambulatory prior to treatment, was able to walk afterward. Long-term benefits could be related to higher dosage used or negative feedback effect.
...
PMID:Treatment of childhood myoclonus with botulinum toxin type A. 1061 64

The daily nutritional requirement for L-tryptophan (Trp) is modest (5 mg/kg). However, many adults choose to consume much more, up to 4-5 g/d (60-70 mg/kg), typically to improve mood or sleep. Ingesting L-Trp raises brain tryptophan levels and stimulates its conversion to serotonin in neurons, which is thought to mediate its actions. Are there side effects from Trp supplementation? Some consider drowsiness a side effect, but not those who use it to improve sleep. Though the literature is thin, occasional side effects, seen mainly at higher doses (70-200 mg/kg), include tremor, nausea, and dizziness, and may occur when Trp is taken alone or with a drug that enhances serotonin function (e.g., antidepressants). In rare cases, the "serotonin syndrome" occurs, the result of too much serotonin stimulation when Trp is combined with serotonin drugs. Symptoms include delirium, myoclonus, hyperthermia, and coma. In 1989 a new syndrome appeared, dubbed eosinophilia myalgia syndrome (EMS), and was quickly linked to supplemental Trp use. Key symptoms included debilitating myalgia (muscle pain) and a high peripheral eosinophil count. The cause was shown not to be Trp but a contaminant in certain production batches. This is not surprising, because side effects long associated with Trp use were not those associated with the EMS. Over 5 decades, Trp has been taken as a supplement and as an adjunct to medications with occasional modest, short-lived side effects. Still, the database is small and largely anecdotal. A thorough, dose-related assessment of side effects remains to be conducted.
...
PMID:Effects and side effects associated with the non-nutritional use of tryptophan by humans. 2307 93

Progressive myoclonus epilepsies (PMEs) are inherited disorders characterized by myoclonus, generalized tonic-clonic seizures, and ataxia. One of the genes that is associated with PME is the ER-to-Golgi Qb-SNARE GOSR2, which forms a SNARE complex with syntaxin-5, Bet1 and Sec22b. Most PME patients are homo-zygous for a p.Gly144Trp mutation and develop similar clinical presentations. Recently, a patient who was compound heterozygous for p.Gly144Trp and a previously unseen p.Lys164del mutation was identified. Because this patient presented with a milder disease phenotype, we hypothesized that the p.Lys164del mutation may be less severe compared to p.Gly144Trp. To characterize the effect of the p.Gly144Trp and p.Lys164del mutations, both of which are present in the SNARE motif of GOSR2, we examined the corresponding mutations in the yeast ortholog Bos1. Yeasts expressing the orthologous mutants in Bos1 showed impaired growth, suggesting a partial loss of function, which was more severe for the Bos1 p.Gly176Trp mutation. Using anisotropy and gel filtration, we report that Bos1 p.Gly176Trp and p.Arg196del are capable of complex formation, but with partly reduced activity. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations showed that the hydrophobic core, which triggers SNARE complex formation, is compromised due to the glycine-to-tryptophan substitution in both GOSR2 and Bos1. In contrast, the deletion of residue p.Lys164 (or p.Arg196del in Bos1) interferes with the formation of hydrogen bonds between GOSR2 and syntaxin-5. Despite these perturbations, all SNARE complexes stayed intact during longer simulations. Thus, our data suggest that the milder course of disease in compound heterozygous PME is due to less severe impairment of the SNARE function.
...
PMID:Functional assays for the assessment of the pathogenicity of variants of GOSR2, an ER-to-Golgi SNARE involved in progressive myoclonus epilepsies. 2898 78


<< Previous 1 2 3