Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (tremor)
18,428 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors have experimented tiapride in 37 cases of abnormal movements and 20 cases of shaking anxio depresive origin. The best indication of tiapride corresponds to lingual buccal an facial dyskinesia caused by neuroleptics and senile trembling increased by alcoholism. On the other hand its anxiolytic and anti shaking properties are more limited. Finally in the case of degenerative senile trembling its action is less effective. Tolerance to tiapride seemed to be excellent even at high dose.
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PMID:[Abnormal movements and shaking in geriatrics (author's transl)]. 3 13

The CSF proteins have previously been very little investigated in the cerebellar syndrome of chronic alcoholism and in essential tremor. Such studies have been carried out more thoroughly by electrophoretic methods in Parkinson's disease but generally with normal results. In the present investigation the CSF proteins were examined by isoelectric focusing and quantitative paper electrophoresis in 10 patients with the cerebellar syndrome of chronic alcoholsm, 12 patients with Parkinson's disease and 16 subjects with essential tremor. Abnormal CSF proteins of very similar appearance were found on isoelectric focusing in the acidic pH interval 5.6-5.8 in 80% of the patients with the cerebellar syndrome of chronic alcoholism. In Parkinson's disease the most common aberration was evidence of nonspecific blood-CSF-barrier damage which occurred in half of the patients. In only 17% of these cases did other alterations appear, situated in the pH range alkaline to pH 5.8. Abnormal CSF proteins were found in 94% of the patients with essential tremor. The aberrant proteins appeared in both the acidic and alkaline pH regions, most frequently with anisoelectric point at pH 5.9, 7.2 and 9.3. There was a considerably higher frequency of CSF protein abnormalities in different pH ranges in patients with tremor of more pronounced degree as compared to those with only mild symptoms. The electrophoretic examinations failed to show any conclusive alterations. Barrier-damage patterns of mild or moderate degree or slightly increased levels of CSF beta1-globulin were occasionally found in all 3 diseases. The results indicate that isoelectric focusing of the CSF proteins may be of diagnostic value in the cerebellar syndrome of chronic alcoholism and in essential tremor but does not reveal any characteristic abnormalities in Parkinson's disease.
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PMID:Isoelectric focusing and electrophoresis of the CSF proteins in tremor of different origins. 6 43

Triapride has proved to be effective for the treatmentof neurological and digestive disorders associated with chronic alcoholism. The clinical and physiopathological aspects of this disease are discussed briefly. Tiapride has a significantly effective action on tremor and muscular pains in moderate cases of alcoholism.--It corrects changes in hebanour and mood.--It improves appetite stimulating the desir for food and reducing the overall functional symptomatology. Tiapride is well-tolerated and vigilance is not modified.
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PMID:[Nervous and digestive manifestations in chronic alcoholism. Their treatment by tiapride]. 21 May 20

A total of 24 patients (20 men and 4 women) were treated for varying degrees of alcoholism. Tiapride was administered orally as 300 to 600 mg/day to 22 patients, the other two cases receiving i.v. injections followed by oral doses. Tiapride was extremely well-tolerated and no side-effects were noted. Withdrawal symptoms were effectively reduced, and a significant action was noted against tremor. Tiapride was also effective against depression and anxiety, and hallucinations disappeared in two cases.
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PMID:[Treatment of alcohol withdrawal symptoms: a clinical study (author's transl)]. 22 18

Alcoholism is the number-one social scourge in France today and any means that become available for combating its effects are of the utmost importance. The author used an original approach to the problem by obtaining the co-operation of the family doctors in order to study 60 cases, including 52 men and 8 women, with alcoholism. Clinical symptoms, drinking habits, and in some cases biological test results using Gamma GT were recorded. The patients were then treated with tiapride. Daily family, professional and social activities were always better after treatment with extension of ideation and improved relations with others. Tremor was also greatly diminished. Distate for alcohol was not observed constantly but in some rare cases. Total abstinence was only noted in one case, but reduced alcohol consumption was reported in 50% of the patients. It is true that the product was not associated systematically with psychotherapy which might have made the results more demonstrative, but the objective of the study was to evaluate whether tiapride could be of value by assisting in the fight against alcoholism, and this was confirmed.
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PMID:[The fight against alcoholism and its consequences in general practice (author's transl)]. 22 66

Many studies cite no more than 80% incidence of hand tremor during withdrawal in known alcoholics, although this symptom is one of the diagnostic signs of addiction. We found that of 48 patients tested, hand tremor increased in 29 Ss after the application of a passive relaxation technique while it decreased in 28. It was found that MMPI data obtained for both groups fitted the inverted U curve in that the most distressed Ss tremored as little as did the least distressed originally, while the tremor increased in the high stress group after relaxation therapy while it decreased in the least stressed group. Implications for alcoholism research and theory were discussed, and the possible superiority of the CES to drug therapy for withdrawal was noted.
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PMID:A curvilinear relationship between alcoholic withdrawal tremor and personality. 37 Jan 54

30 patients with delirium tremens were given in a double-blind trial--beside the basic treatment with chlormethiazol (Distraneurin)--aprotinin (Trasylol) or placebo. Duration of the delirium and the amount of chlormethiazol used were the criteria for successful treatment. It was shown that the additional application of aprotinin did neither shorten significantly the duration of the delirium not save the amount of chlormethiazol used. Methodologically, special attention was given to the question of duration of the delirium and of registering symptoms. A delirium-rating scale was devised and its analysis showed a good randomization of the items. One main question was as to what extent the individual items were good indicators of a delirium. An item intercorrelation showed that there were two clusters of symptoms: psychological and sympathetic nervous system symptoms. It could be shown that the items 'consciousness, orientation, hallucinations and short-term memory' were good indicators of the delirium, while items of the autonomous nervous system, as tremor of hands and body, facial muscular twitching and exteroceptive reflexes, were less indicative of delirium. The duration of the delirium seems to be the best criterion for the question as to whether a drug is effective or not in delirium tremens. There is a highly significant correlation between the degree of the severity of the delirium and its duration. Other significant predictors for the severity of the delirium were the maximal pulse rate and change in blood pressure. Age, duration of alcoholism and psychological or physical depravation showed no influence on the duration of the delirium.
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PMID:[Criteria of the efficacy of therapeutic measures in alcoholic delirium. Study on the effectiveness of aprotinin in alcoholic delirium]. 80 70

The familial occurrence of essential tremor combined with (congenital) nystagmus, duodenal ulceration and a narcolepsy-like sleep disturbance caused by an autosomal dominant gene with high penetrance and fairly uniform expressivity is reported in a family of Swedish-Finnish ancestry. Twelve of 17 affected family members had essential tremor which began between 30-40 years of age and which could be controlled temporarily by alcohol; this resulted in alcoholism in several affected individuals. The most severly affected persons showed cerebellar signs which may reflect a possible pathogenetic relationship of the syndrome to the genetic cerebellar atrophies. Nystagmus, observed in 12 of 17 affected family members (eight of whom were also affected with tremor) usually was congenital and accompanied by refractive errors. Duodenal ulcers occurred almost exclusively in individuals with the neurological syndrome, and preceded its onset in some cases. The ulcer disease therefore seems to be a component manifestation of the syndrome and is interpreted as a pleiotropic effect of the gene which also causes the nystagmus, tremor and sleep disturbance.
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PMID:Essential tremor, nystagmus and duodenal ulceration. A "new" dominantly inherited condition. 124 68

Five patients developed neurological adverse effects as they were treated with amiodarone for 2 to 18 months. The daily maintenance dose did not exceed 400 mg. The neurological manifestations included tremor, ataxia, peripheral neuropathy, dyskinesia, myoclonic jerks, extrapyramidal hypertony, and altered mental status. These side effects resolved within 3 days to 3 months after amiodarone withdrawal. Advanced age, renal failure, diabetes mellitus, and alcoholism seemed to be risk factors for development of amiodarone neurotoxicity. Both peripheral and central nervous systems are involved in these amiodarone-induced complications.
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PMID:[Neurological toxicity of amiodarone. 5 case reports]. 134 23

The tremor of chronic alcoholism, although clinically similar to essential tremor, has been considered a distinct syndrome. Its underlying mechanism was analyzed in five patients (none in the acute stages of alcohol withdrawal) hospitalized in an alcohol detoxification program. All five patients performed tracking tasks in which they pursued a linearly moving "target" light with a response light that they controlled by flexion-extension activity of the wrist. Stationary and dynamic targets were used with both isometric and unconstrained wrist mechanical interfaces. Frequency, torque, and displacement tremor characteristics were examined under varying inertial loading or isometric voluntary torque conditions. Two simultaneous tremor components were present in all patients: a prominent 4- to 7-Hz low-frequency peak and a smaller-amplitude 9.4- to 9.6-Hz high-frequency peak. As the inertia of the hand was augmented during unconstrained tasks, the low-frequency peak decreased, while the high-frequency peak was unaffected. As required voluntary effort was increased during isometric testing, the amplitude of the low-frequency peak increased. These findings suggest that the low-frequency peak represents the significant pathologic component of the tremor of chronic alcoholism and that it has a biomechanical reflex mechanism similar to that of the lower-amplitude normal physiologic tremor.
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PMID:Peripheral mechanical loading and the mechanism of the tremor of chronic alcoholism. 149 1


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