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)

We report FK506-induced neurotoxicity in 14 of 44 consecutive patients following orthoptic liver transplantation. In 10 of these 14 patients, postural hand tremors were found in the first weeks following surgery, transient apraxia of speech in 3, and generalized tonic-clonic seizures were noted in 2 patients. Other manifestations included nightmares, agitation, and acute delirium. Reduction of the FK506 dose resulted in resolution of symptoms, but in 1 patient mild speech difficulties and in 3 patients a fine tremor remained. Blood and plasma levels of FK506 were similar in patients with and without neurotoxicity. FK506 neurotoxicity in patients with liver transplantation commonly results in transient neurological manifestations. The incidence of neurotoxicity in FK506 is dramatically reduced in maintenance doses of 0.075 mg/kg twice a day.
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PMID:FK506-induced neurotoxicity in liver transplantation. 751 20

We present an autopsied case of striatonigral degeneration (SND) combined with olivopontocerebellar atrophy (OPCA) with subcortical dementia and hallucinatory state. A Japanese woman without a remarkable family history showed hand tremor at the age of 35 years, followed by bradykinesia, muscle rigidity, orthostatic hypotension, neurogenic bladder and pyramidal signs. No obvious cerebellar symptoms were found. Various antiparkinsonian drugs were administered, but were not markedly effective for the parkinsonism. She developed a mild dementia characterized by mild memory disturbance with preservation of orientation, slowing of thought processes, emotional lability toward sadness, impaired ability to manipulate acquired knowledge and poor calculating, and by the absence of aphasia, apraxia and agnosia. The features in this patient were consistent with those seen in subcortical dementia. She also had auditory hallucinations. MRI revealed hypointense T2 signals in the putamina and substantia nigra. T1-weighted MRI demonstrated atrophy of both the pons and cerebellum in addition to atrophy of the putamina and substantia nigra. EEG showed slowing of background activity. She died of cardiac failure at the age of 47. Autopsy disclosed brain stem tegmental atrophy, SND, OPCA and many glial cytoplasmic inclusions in the central nervous system, but well-preserved cerebrum. We discuss the relationship between the psychiatric symptoms and pathologic findings of brain stem tegmentum.
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PMID:Striatonigral degeneration combined with olivopontocerebellar atrophy with subcortical dementia and hallucinatory state. 755 Jun 4

A 64-year-old right-handed man was admitted because of increasing clumsiness of the right hand and difficulty in walking since 8 months earlier. The WAIS revealed verbal IQ 124, performance IQ 104 and full scale IQ 115. Neurological examination revealed slight dysarthria and normal eye movements. The right upper extremity showed Gegenhalten, tremor, dystonic elbow flexion, marked grasp reflex, grasping and groping behavior. Voluntary movements were slow and clumsy on the right side. However, neither ideational nor ideomotor apraxia was observed. Tendon reflexes were slightly exaggerated on the right side. Plantar responses were normal. The patient had difficulty in initiating forward walking and turning movements. Once started, he walked dragging his right foot ahead of the left with short steps. A line on the floor was of no benefit. He could not stride across the line on the floor in front of him. Analysis of gait with floor reaction force revealed that the single step rhythm of his frozen gait was about 1.5 Hz, which contrasted with the high frequency seen in Parkinson's disease. MRI demonstrated atrophy of the frontal and parietal lobes on both sides. 123I-IMP single-photon emission CT demonstrated severe hypoperfusion of the left frontal and parietal lobes. Frozen or shuffling gait is a popular symptom as well as unsteady gait and tendency to fall in corticobasal degeneration. It may result from the frontal lobe dysfunction. Lack of improvement in freezing by the visual input contrasts with Parkinson's disease and may be related to dysfunction of the mesial part of the frontal lobe or the parietal lobe involved in corticobasal degeneration.
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PMID:[Analysis of gait disturbance in a patient with corticobasal degeneration]. 778 Dec 31

Local injections of botulinum toxin is a well-accepted treatment for focal dystonias, hemifacial spasms and strabismus. Its use by skilled neurologists has been reported to be safe and effective. We report our experience with botulinum toxin injections in 108 patients with various central nervous system disorders. Botox was effective in upper face dystonia (86% improvement), spastic dysphonia (92% improvement), platysma muscle spasms and spasmodic torticollis (range of movement 61%, pain and tension 90%). It was also very effective in a few patients with apraxia of eyelid opening, parkinsonian jaw tremor, teeth clenching, palatal myoclonus and adductor leg spasticity. No serious side effects were recorded. Botulinum toxin is a useful symptomatic treatment for many neurological disorders, and one of the leading mode of treatments in the new subspecialty in neurology called "Interventional neurology."
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PMID:Interventional neurology: botulinum toxin as a potent symptomatic treatment in neurology. 798 70

External application of picoTesla range magnetic fields (MF) has been reported recently to be efficacious in the treatment of patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) including those who manifest levodopa-related dyskinesias. In the present communication, we present four additional Parkinsonian patients who showed, within a brief period of time, marked improvement in motor symptoms after therapy with MF. Three of the patients had been maintained on antiParkinsonian medication during treatment with MF while the fourth patient had never received pharmacotherapy. Improvement with magnetic therapy was noted not only in the motor sphere (resting tremor, gait apraxia, postural instability), but also in nonmotor aspects of the disease including mood, sleep, pain, anorexia, autonomic, and cognitive functions attesting to the unique efficacy of external picoTesla range MF in the treatment of Parkinsonism. Poverty of facial expression (hypomimia, "masked facies"), which correlates with the degree of striatal dopaminergic deficiency, is one of the clinical hallmarks of PD reflecting the severity of hypokinesia and rigidity in the orofacial musculature. In this report, we emphasize the effects of MF on the hypomimia of PD and provide visual documentation illustrating the changes in the patients' facial expression which follow treatment with MF.
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PMID:Further observations on the unique efficacy of picoTesla range magnetic fields in Parkinson's disease. 808 4

A 52-year-old patient presented with paroxystic episodes of generalized apraxia, anomia, agraphia and acalculia. The transient character of these attacks was supported by several neuropsychological examinations. Initially a tentative diagnosis of multiple TIA's was made. Treatment consisted of antiplatelet aggregation therapy. Three years later, however, paroxystic neuropsychological symptomatology occurred more frequently with an increase of severity. The patient was again seen and the differential diagnosis included epilepsy or a metabolic disturbance, in casu hepatic encephalopathy. A therapeutic trial with carbamazepine was started but the patient deteriorated further. He developed a flapping tremor and became stuporous. The blood ammonia was high and there were triphasic waves on the EEG. A probable diagnosis of hepatic encephalopathy was made and carbamazepine therapy was withdrawn. There was a good response on low protein diet and lactulose.
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PMID:Paroxystic neuropsychological symptoms as the early expression of hepatic encephalopathy. A case report. 824 70

The author subjected to neurological examination all children from a special school for retarded children (39 children, 22 boys, 17 girls). All children had a positive neurological finding. Central hypotonic syndrome was revealed most frequently--31 children; static tremor of the upper extremities--11 children and static tremor of the lower extremities--8 children. Minor cerebellar symptomatology was found in 10 children, developmental dyspraxia-dysgnosia in 6 children. Sixteen children were related (brother and sister, two sisters and cousins, etc.)
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PMID:[Neurologic findings in mild mental retardation]. 847 61

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a heterogeneous entity presenting as sporadic and familial disease. In familial AD, there is evidence for genetic linkage to a yet undefined gene on chromosome 14 in early-onset pedigrees and on chromosome 19 in late-onset pedigrees. In a few early-onset kindreds, there were mutations in the amyloid precursor gene on chromosome 21. There is an increased frequency of apolipoprotein E (ApoE) epsilon4 allele in patients with late-onset AD. We studied the clinical presentation and profile of cognitive deficits in 58 AD patients at the early stage of the disease. We divided the AD patients into subgroups of sporadic late-onset (SLO) (> or = 65 years), familial late-onset (FLO) (> or = 65 years), sporadic early-onset (SEO) (<65 years), and familial early-onset (FEO) (<65 years) patients and into three subgroups according to their ApoE genotype zero epsilon4, one epsilon4, and two epsilon4 alleles. The AD subgroups did not differ in the global clinical severity of dementia or the duration of the disease. SLO, FLO, SEO, and FEO subgroups did not differ in clinical characteristics such as occurrence of rigidity, hypokinesia, tremor, myoclonus, hallucinations, delusions, or epileptic seizures nor in the profile of deficits on tests assessing memory, language, visuospatial, executive, and praxic functions. The epsilon4++ allele frequency was 0.43 for all AD patients and did not differ across subgroups divided according to the familial aggregation and age of onset. Patients with two epsilon4 alleles had earlier age at onset of dementia than those with no epsilon4 allele (63 +/- 9 versus 68 +/- 9 years), but otherwise the clinical symptoms and signs were not related to the ApoE genotype. However, the AD patients with two epsilon 4 alleles had lowest scores on memory tests and differed significantly from those with one or zero epsilon4 allele in the delayed list learning (p<0.05) and from those with zero epsilon4 allele in the immediate and delayed story recall. In contrast, verbal functions were better preserved in two epsilon4 patients than in those with other ApoE genotypes. This study failed to confirm the earlier reports of severe aphasia, agnosia, and apraxia in familial AD patients, but the clinical phenotype was similar irrespective to the familial aggregation. However, AD patients with two epsilon4 alleles are characterized by more severe memory loss and earlier age of onset than those without the epsilon4 allele.
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PMID:Clinical and neuropsychological characteristics in familial and sporadic Alzheimer's disease: relation to apolipoprotein E polymorphism. 861 4

We report a right-handed 62-year-old man with early onset familial parkinsonism. The patient was well until 24 years of the age when he noted an onset of resting tremor in his right hand. During the next four years, he noted rigidity, bradykinesia, and difficulty in walking. He was seen in another hospital at 28 years of the age, where he received left pallidotomy. Rigidity on the left side showed marked improvement. He received right pallidotomy at age 30 years. He developed right hemiplegia after this surgery. He was admitted to our hospital in March, 1983 when he was 51 years of the age. He was treated with levodopa but improvement was rather of minor degree. He was transferred to another hospital, but his motor disturbance progressed slowly, and was admitted again to our hospital in November 1990. He had 6 siblings 4 of whom including himself suffered from parkinsonism. No consanguinity was noted in parents. On admission, he appeared chronically ill but the general physical examination was unremarkable. Neurologic examination revealed an alert and mentally sound man. Hasegawa dementia scale was 28.5/32.5. Upward gaze was slightly restricted (3/5). Cranial nerve examination revealed oculogyric crisis, apraxia of eyelid opening, masked face, and small voice. He was able to stand with support; his posture showed left-ward leaning. He had right hemiparesis with moderate weakness. He showed marked bradykinesia and moderate rigidity in his left upper extremity. Fine postural tremor was noted in the left hand. Deep tendon reflexes were diminished in the upper extremities. No Babinski sign was noted. Pain sensation was somewhat diminished on the right side. Results of routine laboratory examination were unremarkable. Cranial CT scan revealed atrophy in the frontal lobe, particularly in the prefrontal area. In addition, MRI revealed T1-and-T2-low signal intensity lesions in the right ventral pallidal region and in the left ventrolateral thalamic-hypothalamic areas. He was treated with 600 mg of levodopa with benserazide and 22.5 mg of bromocriptine with mild to moderate improvement in his bradykinesia and rigidity. He was discharged in January 1991. His clinical course was complicated by intestinal obstruction in October, 1994. He was admitted to another hospital where he was operated on the obstruction on November 5, 1994. The sigmoid colon was markedly dilated but no mass was found. Postoperative course was uneventful until November 18, 1994 when he was found dead in his hospital room shortly after 4 am. The patient was discussed in neurological CPC, and the chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had young-onset familial Lewy body-negative parkinsonism. Opinions were divided between Lewy body-positive familial Parkinson's disease and Lewy body negative young onset parkinsonism. Postmortem examination revealed aspiration pneumonia, which appeared to be the cause of his death, in the right lung. Neuropathologic examination revealed loss of malanized neurons in the substantia nigra and the locus coeruleus. In the substantia nigra, neuronal loss was particularly severe in the ventrolateral area. No Lewy bodies were seen. The dorsal motor nucleus of the vagal nerve was well preserved. Stereotaxic lesions involved bilateral thalamic areas. This patient appears to represent a case of autosomal recessive juvenile parkinsonism (AR-JP). Early onset, superb response to levodopa, sleep effect, and easy development of dyskinesias and motor fluctuations characterize AR-JP. The reason why this patient did not show these clinical features is probably bilateral sterotaxic surgeries. Particularly, the second surgery was complicated by right hemiparesis. His siblings who developed parkinsonism showed typical clinical features of AR-JP.
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PMID:[A 62-year-old man with familial parkinsonism with the onset at 24 years of the age]. 870 64

Eight cases of clinically diagnosed corticobasal degeneration (CBD) were studied with reference to their symptomatology, brain-imagings and electrophysiological findings. The diagnosis was based on the combination of limb-kinetic apraxia (cortical sign), akinetic-rigid sign (extrapyramidal) and their unilateral predominance. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and 123I-IMP or 99mTc-HMPAO SPECT findings were used to reinforce the diagnosis. The age at onset of 8 cases (4 males, 4 females) was 61 to 80 years (mean 66). Other common symptoms on admission consisted of dysequilibrium (8 cases), dysarthria (8), grasp reflex (6), supranuclear gaze palsy (6), tremor (6), limb dystonia (6) and alien limbs (5). MRI revealed parietal (3 cases) or frontoparietal (3) atrophy. SPECT showed decrease in cerebral blood flow in frontoparietal (3 cases) or frontoparietotemporal lobes (5). SPECT surpassed MRI to detect unilateral predominance of the lesions. With magnetic stimulation of the head and neck central motor conduction time (CMCT) was normal, while motor inhibitory periods (IPs) were significantly shorter in CBD patients compared with those in normal controls and the patients with Parkinson's disease. In 3 patients with reflex myoclonus, giant SEPs were not evoked, though with positive C-reflex, suggesting an elevated excitability of cerebral cortex unrelated to the production of giant SEPs.
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PMID:[Corticobasal degeneration: symptomatological, brain-imaging and electrophysiological studies]. 875 30


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