Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (Parkinson's disease)
63,064 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Postural tremor is the most common movement disorder in psychiatry, and often a difficult problem for clinicians. It can be classified as physiological, essential, drug-induced, and postural tremor in Parkinson's disease. Drugs used in psychiatry that can produce postural tremor, include lithium, valproic acid, lamotrigine, antidepressants, and neuroleptics. Clinical characteristics of postural tremor induced by each of these drugs are described. Pharmacological strategies for therapy in disabling drug-induced tremor include beta-blockers, primidone, gabapentin, topiramate, and benzodiazepines; their utility, doses and side-effects are also discussed.
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PMID:Postural induced-tremor in psychiatry. 1906 99

Previous reports have suggested that essential tremor (ET) represents a risk factor for the development of Parkinson's disease (PD). Patients with long-standing ET who develop PD tend to have a tremor-dominant subtype. To further clarify this association, we examined patients from kindreds with autosomal dominant ET who had signs of isolated PD but did not meet criteria for overlapping ET. We identified 22 patients with PD meeting these diagnostic criteria, and 90% (20 of 22) had tremor-predominant subtype of PD. Unilateral rest tremor was the presenting symptom in 15 of 22 patients, bradykinesia or rigidity in 5 of 22, and gait problems in 2 of 22. Postural tremor was relatively mild, and the severity of kinetic tremor tightly correlated with rest tremor (r = 0.83, P < 0.001). Tremor-dominant subtype of PD in patients with a positive family history of ET suggests that these patients have inherited a genetic susceptibility factor for tremor, which affects the motor phenotype of PD.
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PMID:Positive family history of essential tremor influences the motor phenotype of Parkinson's disease. 1979 70

Although rest tremor is the typical form of tremor associated with Parkinson's disease (PD), particularly the tremor-dominant subtype,1 parkinsonian patients may also exhibit postural tremor. In many parkinsonian patients, this postural tremor emerges after a latency of a few seconds or even minutes. In our original description, we coined the term "re-emergent tremor" to differentiate this postural tremor from essential tremor, which occurs without any latency, and to link it to PD rest tremor that is "reset" after some latency when a new holding posture is assumed.2 The relationship of this re-emergent tremor to the typical rest tremor is supported by the observation that this tremor shares many characteristics with the typical rest tremor, such as the same, 3 to 5-Hz frequency, occasional supinating-pronating component, and relatively good response to dopaminergic therapy. Rarely, postural tremor, occurring after a brief (2-4 seconds) latency can be seen even without observable rest tremor.3 In most patients with PD, it is the postural (re-emergent) tremor that is more troublesome for them than the typical rest tremor, because this re-emergent tremor interferes with their ability to hold objects, such as newspapers, against gravity and results in spilling of liquids. Postural tremor of PD is often misdiagnosed as essential tremor, and this diagnostic challenge can be further confounded when both conditions coexist.4 When that occurs, the postural tremor is present without latency, although the amplitude may gradually increase as the underlying re-emergent tremor becomes more evident.
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PMID:How Do I Examine for Re-Emergent Tremor? 3036 1


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