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)

Three brothers with dyssynergia cerebellaris myoclonica received alcohol to study the correlation between improvement of myoclonus and alteration in somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs). Alcohol considerably improved myoclonus for about six hours in two patients (cases 1 and 2) but had only a mild effect in one (case 3). All three patients had giant cortical SEPs. The amplitudes of median N20-P25 and P25-N35 components and tibial N30-P40 and P40-N50 components were considerably decreased after alcohol ingestion in two patients (cases 1 and 2) but unchanged or slightly decreased in one (case 3). The peak latencies of those components were not affected by alcohol. There was thus a good correlation between the suppression of myoclonus and the decrease in giant SEP amplitude.
...
PMID:Effects of alcohol on myoclonus and somatosensory evoked potentials in dyssynergia cerebellaris myoclonica. 174 45

We examined 56 members of a large Norwegian family with hereditary essential myoclonus, affecting mainly the neck and upper parts of the body, and inherited in an autosomal-dominant pattern. We observed definite myoclonus in nine individuals, probable myoclonus in one, and possible myoclonus in one. There were two other living members who had a history compatible with myoclonus but who had developed a permanent remission, so we did not observe the movements, and two who had involuntary movements only with stress. Writing usually increased the myoclonus in the neck and trunk, but did not produce myoclonus in the arm used for writing. Having a conversation with an individual who was aware of being watched would also usually increase the myoclonus. Alcohol ameliorated the myoclonus in many, but not all, affected members. Activities such as walking and concentrating during reading would usually reduce the myoclonus. Three living members with definite myoclonus also had features of mild focal dystonia, either spasmodic torticollis or blepharospasm, indicating that focal dystonia may exist as part of the clinical spectrum in hereditary essential myoclonus. In addition to examining the members of the family, we videotaped them and obtained blood samples for molecular genetic analysis.
...
PMID:Hereditary essential myoclonus in a large Norwegian family. 192 29

Alcohol-responsive myoclonic dystonia is reported in 26 individuals in a six-generation family, thus indicating autosomal dominant inheritance. Twenty affected family members aged between 3 and 56 years were examined on one occasion. Myoclonus in arms, shoulder, and neck distribution was seen in 17, with occasional generalized jerks in 14. Leg dystonia/hemidystonia was seen in two infant cases, writer's cramp in seven, torticollis/retrocollis in two, and finger tremor in three. The onset of myoclonus was regularly reported from 2 to 3 years of age, the onset of leg dystonia/hemidystonia from 6 to 18 months of age, writer's cramp from early school age, and neck dystonia from late teenage. The effect of alcohol had been noted in 10 individuals, and seven of them abused alcohol. Once established, the neurological signs did not progress significantly. Leg dystonia resolved in two juvenile members. Two adult members had recovered from myoclonus: one elderly man and one posthemorrhagic spastic hemiplegic man. Extensive family investigation is necessary to clarify the clinical variation of this autosomal dominant disorder of involuntary movements.
...
PMID:Alcohol-responsive myoclonic dystonia in a large family: dominant inheritance and phenotypic variation. 225 50

The convulsant potency of bicuculline, a GABA antagonist, was shown to be greater in Short-Sleep (SS) mice than in Long-Sleep (LS) mice. LS mice, selectively bred for lengthy ethanol-induced narcosis, had longer latencies to myoclonus and clonus following administration of bicuculline and picrotoxin than did ethanol-resistant SS mice. SS mice were also more susceptible to pentylenetetrazol-induced myoclonus, but not clonus. F1 hybrids showed bicuculline seizure sensitivity intermediate to the two parent lines. Ethanol weakly inhibited bicuculline-induced myoclonus in both LS and SS mice. Clonus was clearly antagonized by ethanol in both lines, but to a similar degree. These data provide evidence for a GABAergic role in genotype-dependent sensitivity to ethanol.
...
PMID:Convulsant properties of GABA antagonists and anticonvulsant properties of ethanol in selectively bred long- and short-sleep mice. 250 97

Twenty patients with tongue tremor associated with essential tremor are reported. Patients were unaware of the tongue tremor, and voice disturbance was a complaint in only one patient. Three patients had an isolated tongue tremor. Hand tremor was present in 16 patients. Dystonia, myoclonus, and tremor of other body parts were present in some patients. Three patients had a mild-to-moderate dysarthria. The frequency of tongue tremor (4-8 Hz) was identical to hand tremor. The intravenous infusion of ethanol suppressed tongue tremor. Therapy with propranolol, primidone, or clonazepam also reduced tongue tremor amplitude. Tongue tremor is a common finding in some essential tremor patients but often there are no symptoms.
...
PMID:Essential tongue tremor. 350 57

This study investigated the ability of hyperbaric exposure to antagonize ethanol's anticonvulsant effect on isoniazid (INH)-induced seizures. Drug-naive, male C57BL/6 mice were injected intraperitoneally with saline, 1.5, 2.0, or 2.5 g/kg ethanol followed immediately by an intramuscular injection of 300 mg/kg of INH. The mice were then exposed to either 1 atmosphere absolute (1 ATA) air, 1 ATA helium-oxygen gas mixture (heliox), or 12 ATA heliox at temperatures that offset the hypothermic effects of helium. Ethanol increased the latency to onset of myoclonus in a dose-dependent manner. Exposure to 12 ATA heliox antagonized ethanol's anticonvulsant effect at 2.0 and 2.5 g/kg, but not at 1.5 g/kg. Ethanol also increased the latency to onset of clonus in a dose-dependent manner beginning at 2.0 g/kg. Exposure to 12 ATA heliox antagonized this anticonvulsant effect. When exposed to 12 ATA heliox, the blood ethanol concentrations at time to onset of myoclonus were significantly higher in mice treated with 2.5 g/kg of ethanol as compared with blood ethanol concentrations of mice exposed to 1 ATA air. These findings extend the acute behavioral effects of ethanol known to be antagonized by hyperbaric exposure and support the hypothesis that low-level hyperbaric exposure blocks or reverses the initial action(s) of ethanol leading to its acute behavioral effects.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res 1994 Oct
PMID:Low-level hyperbaric antagonism of ethanol's anticonvulsant property in C57BL/6J mice. 784 5

Alcoholic pellagra-encephalopathy is an underestimated entity, which is characterized by alteration in the level and content of consciousness, marked oppositional hypertonus and myoclonus. This entity should be included in the differential diagnosis of encephalopathy in ethanol abusers. The spontaneous course is potentially lethal. Therapy consists of substitution of nicotinic acid in the form of nicotinamide. It is emphasized that any chronic ethanol abuser with neurological symptoms should receive substitution of all B-group vitamins including nicotinamide.
...
PMID:[Alcoholic pellagra encephalopathy: an underestimated treatable entity]. 820 69

We examined 678 essential tremor patients in specialty, university, and private practice clinics. The mean age of patients was 65.2 years with a similar number of men and women. Six percent of patients were left-handed. A positive family history of tremor was reported in more than 60% of patients. Alcohol ingestion was reported to decrease tremor in 74% of patients who were cognizant of the effect of alcohol on tremor. Mean age at tremor onset was 45.3 years. An earlier onset of tremor was observed in those patients having a positive family history of tremor. Tremor affected the hands in 90% of patients, head in 50%, voice in 30%, and legs and chin in 15%. Functional disability was common and impairment at work occurred in 18%. Propranolol and primidone were the most frequently used drugs and were effective in 40% of patients. Six and one-tenth percent of essential tremor patients had concomitant Parkinson's disease, 6.9% had a coexisting dystonia, and 1.8% had myoclonus. It is concluded that the frequency of Parkinson's disease in essential tremor is more than would be reported in the general population and that other movement disorders are infrequently observed in essential tremor.
...
PMID:The relationship of essential tremor to other movement disorders: report on 678 patients. Essential Tremor Study Group. 821 Feb 29

The mechanism by which 12 atm abs of a helium-oxygen gas mixture (heliox) antagonizes behavioral effects of ethanol is unknown. Although the threshold for pressure-reversal of general anesthesia and expression of the high pressure neurologic syndrome (HPNS) is well above 12 atm abs in mice, the ethanol antagonism by 12 atm abs heliox could result from similar underlying excitatory effects. To investigate this possibility, the behavior of water-injected control mice and the latency to convulsions in drug-injected mice were determined in 1 atm abs air and 12 atm abs heliox. Four convulsant drugs were tested: picrotoxin (2 mg/kg), dl-allylglycine (300 mg/kg), isoniazid (300 mg/kg), and l-methionine-dl-sulfoximine (170 mg/kg). Responses were videotaped to observe behavior and to measure latency to the onset of myoclonus and clonus. Results indicated no observable excitatory effects of 12 atm abs in control mice. The latency to myoclonus was significantly reduced by pressure in allylglycine-treated mice but not in mice treated with the other convulsants. Latency to clonus was not significantly altered by pressure, relative to latency at 1 atm abs heliox, for any drug tested. In conclusion, the present findings indicate that exposure to 12 atm abs heliox is not proconvulsant and, thus, the findings do not support the hypothesis that 12 atm abs heliox antagonizes ethanol indirectly via an increase in central nervous system excitability.
...
PMID:Effect of 12 atmospheres helium-oxygen on the response of mice to convulsant drugs. 865 64

Ramsay Hunt syndrome (RHS) is a rare condition within the progressive myoclonic epilepsies syndrome (PME), with a triad of action myoclonus, grand mal seizure and severe cerebellar ataxia. There are few reports about the psychiatric disturbances associated with PME or RHS. The present study examines the evidence that RHS may accompany an organic mental syndrome, ethanol's effective suppression of myoclonus, and the possible resultant problem of alcohol dependence in RHS patients. Two brothers with the previous long-standing diagnosis of RHS and their mental symptoms of persecutory delusion and depression are reported, as well as the additional problem of alcohol dependence in one of them. The cerebellar dysfunction found in RHS may be associated with an underlying organic condition. Determination of the relationship between cerebellar dysfunction and psychosis in RHS will require further study. Although the mechanism of the suppression of myoclonus by alcohol remains unclear, patients should be allowed to drink socially, and alcohol consumption should not be totally prohibited. However, effective treatment of the problems of alcohol tolerance, abuse, or dependence requires the cooperation of both neurologists and psychiatrists.
...
PMID:Progressive myoclonic epilepsies syndrome (Ramsay Hunt syndrome) with mental disorder: report of two cases. 1059 82


1 2 3 Next >>