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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (
Parkinson's disease
)
63,064
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although levodopa is the gold standard for treating motor symptoms of
Parkinson's disease
(PD), long-term therapy leads to levodopa-induced dyskinesia (LID). Dyskinesia refers to involuntary movements other than tremor and most commonly consists of
chorea
that occurs when levodopa-derived dopamine is peaking in the brain ("peak-dose dyskinesia"). However, dyskinesia can also consist of dystonia or myoclonus and occur during other parts of the levodopa dosing cycle. New validated rating scales and home diaries can better help the health care provider assess the timing and severity of dyskinesia. The exact etiology of LID is unknown, but there is evidence that abnormal pulsatile stimulation of dopamine receptors may be contributory. Treatment of LID includes adjustment of PD medications to maximize "on" time without troublesome dyskinesia. Amantadine is the only medication available with demonstrated ability to reduce the expression of established LID without reducing antiparkinsonian benefit. Other medications that are currently being studied to treat established LID include antiepileptics and serotonergic medications. Deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus is now the most commonly used surgical procedure for PD patients, and it is very effective in treating LID.
...
PMID:Levodopa-induced dyskinesia in Parkinson's disease: epidemiology, etiology, and treatment. 1761 36
Movement disorders are not commonly seen during pregnancy. As a result, there are few studies on whether disease manifestations are affected by the hormonal changes that occur during pregnancy or on the teratogenicity of commonly used medications for movement disorders on the developing fetus. This article discusses movement disorders that are seen only during pregnancy (
chorea
gravidarum) or that may present during pregnancy (restless legs syndrome), the effect that pregnancy has on symptoms and treatment (in
Parkinson's disease
, essential tremor, dystonia, tic disorders, and Wilson's disease), and the role of genetic testing for movement disorders in genetic counseling for pregnant women.
...
PMID:Movement disorders in pregnancy. 1794 Sep 26
The rate model regarding the development of movement disorders of basal ganglia origin suggests that hyperkinetic and hypokinetic disorders occur as a result of changes in the firing rates in the GPi and SNr, which in turn suppress thalamocortical output. Dopamine depletion in
Parkinson's disease
increases basal ganglia output, then decreases thalamocortical output, leading to bradykinesia. This model, however, cannot explain a lack of deterioration of parkinsonian signs following thalamic coagulation surgery. Instead of the rate model, the beta oscillation hypothesis has been proposed, explaining that synchronized oscillation in the beta frequency in the basal ganglia disturbs initiation of voluntary movement. We observed that effective high-frequency STN stimulation in parkinsonian monkeys was associated with increase in the firing rate and the pattern shift from irregular burst firing to regular high-frequency firing in the projecting sites. High-frequency neural activation by deep brain stimulation is supposed to cancel lower frequency oscillation including beta oscillation, leading to improvement of bradykinesia. Our observation supports the significance of the neural activity pattern, rather than the tonic activity level, in the development of movement disorders. The rate model cannot explain the improvement of ballismus and
chorea
by pallidotomy because pallidotomy increases the disinhibition of the thalamocortical projection, which should increase the movements. We observed repetitive bursts or pauses of neuronal firing of the globus pallidus synchronized to ballistic movements in patients with hemiballism or
chorea
, suggesting that phasic neuronal driving in the basal ganglia is important as their pathophysiology.
...
PMID:[Functional models of movement disorders of basal ganglia origin and effects of functional neurosurgery]. 1821 Jul 85
Frontal-subcortical dementias are a heterogeneous group of disorders that share primary pathology in subcortical structure and a characteristic pattern of neuropsychologic impairment. Their clinical presentation is characterized by memory disorders, an impaired ability to manipulate acquired knowledge, important changes of personality (apathy, inertia, or depression), and slowed thought processes (or bradyphrenia). It also has marked frontal dysfunction. Classic frontal-subcortical dementias include Huntington
chorea
,
Parkinson disease
dementia, progressive supranuclear palsy, thalamic degeneration, subcortical vascular dementia, multiple sclerosis, the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome dementia complex, depressive pseudodementia, and some other rare dementias like spinocerebellar degenerative syndromes, Hallervorden-Spatz disease, choreoacanthocytosis, idiopathic basal ganglia calcification, Guamanian parkinsonism-dementia complex, corticobasal degeneration multiple system atrophy, Wilson disease, metachromatic leukodystrophy, adrenoleukodystrophy, hypoparathyroidism, sarcoidosis, and other CNS inflammatory disorders. Anatomic data suggest that the frontal signs result from a disconnection of the frontal cortex from the basal ganglia. However, most frontal-subcortical dementias show cortical atrophy in later stages, and cortical dementias have subcortical pathology at some point. In fact, the concept might be seen as a continuum, and only the 2 extremes would be represented by pure cortical or subcortical pathology. Anyway, subcortical disorders may still be more similar to one another than they are to AD. Possibly, frontal-subcortical and cortical dementias are the description of the prior main target of the disease process, ending up in both cases in a global dementia. Although the dichotomy cortical versus frontal-subcortical dementia is not strict, the 2 concepts still seem to have advantages.
...
PMID:Frontal-subcortical dementias. 1833 39
Chorea
is the predominant motor manifestation in the early symptomatic phase of adult onset Huntington's disease (HD). Pathologically, this stage is marked by differential loss of striatal neurons contributing to the indirect pathway. This pattern of neuronal loss predicts decreased neuronal firing rates in GPi and increased firing rates in GPe, the opposite of the changes in firing rate known to occur in
Parkinson's disease
(PD). We present single-unit discharge characteristics (33 neurons) observed in an awake patient with HD (41 CAG repeats) undergoing microelectrode guided surgery for pallidal deep brain stimulation. Pallidal single-unit activity at "rest" and during voluntary movement was discriminated off line by principal component analysis and evaluated with respect to discharge rate, bursting, and oscillatory activity in the 0-200 Hz range. 24 GPi and 9 GPe units were studied, and compared with 132 GPi and 50 GPe units from 14 patients with PD. The mean (+/-SEM) spontaneous discharge rate for HD was 58+/-4 for GPi and 73+/-5 for GPe. This contrasted with discharge rates in PD of 95+/-2 for GPi and 57+/-3 for GPe. HD GPi units showed more bursting than PD GPi units but much less oscillatory activity in the 2-35 Hz frequency range at rest. These findings are consistent with selective early loss of striatal cells originating the indirect pathway.
...
PMID:Pallidal neuronal discharge in Huntington's disease: support for selective loss of striatal cells originating the indirect pathway. 1834 9
Acute or sub-acute movement disorders represent a small percentage of neurological emergencies but it is necessary to be aware of their existence because a failure in their diagnosis or treatment can result in significant morbidity and mortality. Clinical presentation of acute movement disorders can be diverse. In some cases acinesia or rigidity predominates, while others are characterized by dystonia,
chorea
o balism. The type of movement disorder suggest a specific aetiology. Drugs represent the most frequent etiologic factor and are the cause of neuroleptic malignant syndrome and serotoninergic syndrome. Emergencies secondary to
Parkinson's disease
are reviewed, including parkinsonism-hyperpirexia syndrome, acute psychosis and the emergencies derived from deep brain stimulators. Different aetiologies of acute dystonia and
chorea
are also covered and, finally, acute movement disorders due to stroke are reviewed.
...
PMID:[Movement disorders in the emergency department]. 1852 49
This paper reviews the epidemiology, pathophysiology, clinical features and rationale for managing dyskinesias associated with
Parkinson's disease
. These are a common clinical problem occurring in up to 90% of patients and more frequently affect those with early-onset. Dyskinesias have a negative impact on quality of life and are an important cause of disability. Their precise etiology is still poorly understood, although it is recognized that dopaminergic pre-synaptic and post-synaptic mechanisms are involved together with extra-dopaminergic factors. The phenomenology of dyskinesias encompasses a variable mixture of two prevalent features: dystonia and
chorea
. We have studied their time course following a single acute levodopa challenge and have found that dystonia occurs throughout the duration of the on period, whereas choreiform movements occur only at the peak of therapeutic dopaminergic motor responses. This allows a schematic relationship to be drawn between a short duration motor response and the occurrence of dystonia and
chorea
. There is currently no satisfactory treatment for dyskinesias. Managing the therapeutic window does not provide an adequate solution due to the appearance of a dyskinesia threshold dose that narrows the therapeutic margin. High frequency stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus probably has some specific anti-dyskinetic action, but is limited by the small number of patients who are candidates for this treatment. Research efforts are currently focused on the development of specific anti-dyskinetic medications. Their availability will certainly change the current clinical practice and will widen again the therapeutic window of dopaminergic medications that has now become too narrow.
...
PMID:Levodopa-induced dyskinesias and their management. 1882 Oct 84
Paroxysmal non-kinesigenic dyskinesia (PNKD) is a clinical syndrome of sudden involuntary movements, mostly of dystonic type, which may be triggered by alcohol or coffee intake, stress and fatigue. The attacks of PNKD may consist of various combinations of dystonia,
chorea
, athetosis and balism. They can be partial and unilateral, but mostly the hyperkinetic movements are bilateral and generalized. We present a large Polish family with 7 symptomatic members of the family in 6 generations. In all affected persons, the onset of clinical symptoms was in early childhood. All male cases showed an increase in severity and frequency of the attacks with ageing, while the only living female patient noticed an improvement of PNKD during both her pregnancies and also after menopause. In addition, at the age of 55 years, she developed symptoms of
Parkinson's disease
with good response to levodopa treatment.
...
PMID:Paroxysmal non-kinesigenic dyskinesia caused by the mutation of MR-1 in a large Polish kindred. 1894 99
We describe a case of tardive parkinsonism in the setting of bipolar syndrome, and we offer pathological confirmation that idiopathic
Parkinson disease
was not the underlying etiology. A 74-year-old Hispanic woman with a history of bipolar disease was noted to have oro-buccal-lingual
chorea
and parkinsonian symptoms such as resting tremor, rigidity, bradykinesia, and gait disorder persisting several months after neuroleptic discontinuation. She had minor improvement in ambulation with levodopa treatment, and she significantly improved in ambulation only during her manic states. Examination of the subject's post-mortem brain revealed no explicit evidence of degeneration in substantia nigra or other brainstem centers, and no nigral or cortical Lewy bodies were present. Glial cytoplasmic inclusions (characteristic of multiple systems atrophy) and globose neurofibrillary tangles (seen in progressive supranuclear palsy) were not seen either. This patient's presentation was most consistent with neuroleptic-induced parkinsonism and tardive dyskinesia; the etiology was likely related to previous neuroleptic exposure.
...
PMID:Tardive parkinsonism in a bipolar patient: post-mortem examination supports a physiological rather than pathological dysfunction. 1923 27
In addition to levodopa treatment and disease duration, genetic predisposition might contribute to the development of medication-related complications in
Parkinson's disease
(PD). As recent observations indicate the dopamine D(3) receptor (DRD3) to modulate both therapeutic action of levodopa and dyskinesia, we reappraised the impact of the DRD3 Ser9Gly polymorphism on development of motor complications in a large scale association study based on the gene bank of the German Competence Network on
Parkinson's disease
. Stepwise regression analysis revealed no effect of DRD3 Ser9Gly on
chorea
, dystonia, or motor fluctuations in PD, despite incorporating established clinical risk factors to avoid overlooking an effect of genotype. Duration of PD was confirmed as the most important clinical risk factor, followed by age of disease onset and female sex. Additional studies incorporating grading of motor complications, and combinations of risk genotypes, are warranted.
...
PMID:Motor complications in patients form the German Competence Network on Parkinson's disease and the DRD3 Ser9Gly polymorphism. 1935 3
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