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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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.
...
PMID:Isoelectric focusing and electrophoresis of the CSF proteins in tremor of different origins. 6 43
Plasma concentrations of aprindine were used to assess its absorption, toxicity and disappearance rate after oral administration to patients within 24 hours of admission to a coronary care unit. Despite high oral doses, absorption was so slow that in half the patients effective plasma levels (exceeding 0.70 mug/ml) were not found during the first 12 hours of treatment. Therefore the oral route should not be used to treat cases of acute myocardial infarction with severe ventricular dysrhythmias. Clinical tolerance was good; there was one episode of delirium tremens in a chronic alcoholic (aprindine plasma concentration: 3 mug/ml); no case of
tremor
or
cerebellar syndrome
was observed. Disappearance of aprindine from plasma was slow, by far exceeding the half-lives found in healthy volunteers, and ranging from 20 to over 100 h. The variability of biological half-life in individual patients makes plasma level determiniations necessary whenever aprindine is to be administered for a long period.
...
PMID:Absorption, half-life, and toxicity of oral aprindine in patients with acute myocardial infarction. 123 49
Patients with cerebellar disease may exhibit tremulous phonation as part of their dysarthria. The results of an acoustic analysis of cerebellar voice
tremor
in a patient with hereditary ataxia and presenting with a purely
cerebellar syndrome
are reported. Analysis included computation of speech intensity contours, fundamental frequency contours, and spectral parameters from sustained productions of vowels and voiceless fricatives. Fundamental frequency contours during sustained phonation of vowels showed rhythmic oscillations at a rate of about 3 Hz. No concomitant periodicity could be detected for the parameters characterising voiceless fricative production. The results indicate an impairment of phonatory control in relation to the maintenance of a constant isometric activity of the internal laryngeal muscles. Cerebellar voice
tremor
may therefore be classified as a form of postural
tremor
.
...
PMID:Cerebellar voice tremor: an acoustic analysis. 201 Jul 64
The parkinsonian syndrome rests on the clinical tripod: akinesia, rigidity,
tremor
. Akinesia is the key symptom, broadly defined as a difficulty in initiating and performing movements in proportion to their complexity (sophisticated, simultaneous movements) and their duration (repetitive movements). The most frequent cause of the syndrome is Parkinson's disease. Although this diagnosis needs to be confirmed in pathological terms by the loss of neurons and the presence of Lewy's bodies in the substantia nigra, some clinical data enable it to be envisaged with a minimum of errors; these are pure parkinsonian triad, good response to dopatherapy and asymmetrical symptoms. The other causes of parkinsonian syndrome are usually related to the administration of neuroleptic drugs and to degenerative diseases with lesions that are more diffuse than those of Parkinson's disease. In Steele-Richardson-Olzewski disease a parkinsonian syndrome is associated with supranuclear ophthalmoplegia. Multiple systematized atrophy presents under three different clinical aspects: a parkinsonian syndrome without
tremor
and resistant to L-dopa, suggesting atrophy of the strionigral tract; a parkinsonian syndrome associated with a
cerebellar syndrome
, suggesting olivo-cerebellar-pontine atrophy, and Shy-Drager disease which includes primary dysautonomy and other neurological syndromes.
...
PMID:[Parkinson's disease and parkinsonian syndromes]. 272 71
A case of hereditary olivo-pontocerebellar atrophy is reported. The patient presented with intentional
tremor
and slurred speech, and physical examination disclosed a bi-hemispherical
cerebellar syndrome
, involvement of the IX and X cranial nerves, and retinitis pigmentosa. Computerized axial tomography demonstrated a supra and infratentorial atrophy, predominating in the brain stem and cerebellum. The literature on olivo-pontocerebellar atrophy is reviewed, verifying the ample clinical spectrum of this disorder amongst the spinocerebellar degeneration syndromes, and emphasizing the diagnostic value of computerized axial tomography.
...
PMID:[Olivo-pontocerebellar atrophy. Report of a case (author's transl)]. 720 86
The clinical features and natural history of 100 patients diagnosed as probable multiple system atrophy (MSA) are described. In all 14 (of 41 deceased) cases who underwent post-mortem examination of the brain, the diagnosis was confirmed pathologically, providing some validation of the clinical diagnostic criteria used. There were 67 men and 33 women. Median age at onset (at time of first reported symptom) was 53 (range 33-76) years. Autonomic symptoms were the initial feature in 41% of the patients, but had subsequently developed in 97% at latest follow-up. The most frequent autonomic symptom in men was impotence, and in women was urinary incontinence. Symptomatic orthostatic hypotension, although present in 68%, was severe in only 15% of patients. Parkinsonism was the initial feature in 46%, but had subsequently developed in 91% of subjects at latest follow-up. It was the predominant motor disorder [striatonigral degeneration (SND) type] in 82% of the patients, and was usually asymmetric (74%). Although akinesia and rigidity predominated,
tremor
was present at rest in 29% of patients, but in only 9% had a classical pill-rolling parkinsonian rest
tremor
been recorded. Twenty-nine percent of MSA patients had a good or excellent levodopa response at some stage. However, only 13% maintained this response. Prominent orofacial dyskinesias and dystonias occurred in a quarter of treated patients with MSA. Early onset (before age 49 years) MSA patients tended to have a good levodopa response. Cerebellar symptoms or signs were the only initial feature in 5%. Although subsequently developing in a further 47% of cases, in only 18% was a
cerebellar syndrome
the only (9%) or predominant (9%) motor disorder [olivopontocerebellar (OPCA) type]. Pyramidal involvement at latest follow-up was noted in 61% of all cases. In a further seven patients the initial features involved more than one system, and one other had presented as a parasomnia. Multiple system atrophy of the OPCA type most commonly presented with gait ataxia.
Tremor
, pyramidal signs and myoclonus were less common than in MSA of the SND type. Cerebellar signs were present in 42% of patients with MSA of the SND type and parkinsonian signs in 50% of patients with MSA of the OPCA type. Disease progression was faster than in idiopathic Parkinson's disease, so that > 40% of patients were markedly disabled or wheelchair bound within 5 years of onset of motor disturbance. Median survival of the whole group as calculated by Kaplan-Meier analysis was 9.5 years.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Clinical features and natural history of multiple system atrophy. An analysis of 100 cases. 792 69
A variety of post-traumatic movement disorders may follow severe head injury. Generally, the movement disorder is a moderate to severe intention tremor, and this is often the major source of disability for the patient. The clinical features of 7 patients whose predominant problem was a post-traumatic
cerebellar syndrome
, who were treated by stereotactic ablation of the ventralis intermedius thalamic nucleus, are reported. 6 patients had good relief of their
tremor
and only 1 patient did not improve. Conservative treatment is usually ineffective, but in appropriately selected cases, stereotactic thalamotomy has a high degree of clinical success.
...
PMID:Stereotactic surgery for post-traumatic cerebellar syndrome: an analysis of seven cases. 832 95
Seventy-seven families with autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia were analyzed for the CAG repeat expansions causing spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA) types 1, 2, 3, and 6. The SCA1 mutation accounted for 9%, SCA2 for 10%, SCA3 for 42%, and SCA6 for 22% of German ataxia families. Seven of 27 SCA6 patients had no family history of ataxia. Age at onset correlated inversely with repeat length in all subtypes. Yet the average effect of one CAG unit on onset age was different for each SCA subtype. We compared clinical, electrophysiological, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings to identify phenotypic characteristics of genetically defined SCA subtypes. Slow saccades, hyporeflexia, myoclonus, and action
tremor
proposed SCA2. SCA3 patients frequently developed diplopia, severe spasticity or pronounced peripheral neuropathy, and impaired temperature discrimination, apart from ataxia. SCA6 presented with a predominantly
cerebellar syndrome
and patients often had onset after 55 years of age. SCA1 was characterized by markedly prolonged peripheral and central motor conduction times in motor evoked potentials. MRI scans showed pontine and cerebellar atrophy in SCA1 and SCA2. In SCA3, enlargement of the fourth ventricle was the main sequel of atrophy. SCA6 presented with pure cerebellar atrophy on MRI. However, overlap between the four SCA subtypes was broad.
...
PMID:Autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia: phenotypic differences in genetically defined subtypes? 940 86
Cyclosporin A (CsA) induces neurological side effects in up to 40% of patients. A reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome is the most serious complication. Symptoms include headache, altered mental functioning, seizures, cortical blindness, and other visual disturbances, with hypertension. Neuroimaging studies show white matter changes in the posterior regions of the brain. Other neurological side effects of CsA include
tremor
, diffuse encephalopathy,
cerebellar syndrome
, extrapyramidal syndrome, pyramidal weakness, and peripheral neuropathy. Hypertension, hypomagnesemia, hypocholesteremia, and the vasoactive agent endothelin may all play a role in the pathogenesis of CsA neurotoxicty. Neurotoxicity is more frequent with high CsA blood levels, but levels may be within the therapeutic range. Dose reduction or withdrawal of CsA usually results in resolution of clinical symptoms and of neuroimaging abnormalities.
...
PMID:Cyclosporine neurotoxicity: a review. 1039 63
Local field potentials (LFPs) were recorded in seven unanaesthetized patients between the four adjacent contacts of a macroelectrode stereotactically implanted for the treatment of
tremor
. The LFPs were presumed to arise predominantly from the nucleus ventralis intermedius (Vim) of the thalamus, the implantation target. They were recorded simultaneously with the ipsilateral EEG and contralateral EMG during an isometric contraction or at rest. The patients had a history of either isolated
tremor
(essential
tremor
, n = 2; benign tremulous Parkinson's disease, n = 1) or
tremor
with signs of a
cerebellar syndrome
(multiple sclerosis, n = 3; essential
tremor
and ataxia, n = 1), although clinical
tremor
was absent at the time of recording because of a temporary microthalamotomy effect in four patients. In patients with isolated
tremor
, oscillatory activity picked up by contacts in Vim (cerebellar thalamus) was invariably coherent with that in the sensorimotor cortex or contracting muscle in the 8-27 Hz range. Such coherence was absent in two of the four subjects with
tremor
associated with a
cerebellar syndrome
. Coherence between LFPs recorded from more caudally placed contacts and the sensorimotor cortex or contracting muscle was negligible in all patients. These caudally placed contacts demonstrated the highest sensory evoked potential in response to median nerve stimulation. Oscillatory activity in the cerebellar thalamus (Vim) lagged behind that in both cortex and muscle. Coherent activity between the cerebellar thalamus (Vim) and the cortex persisted at rest. It is suggested that rhythmicities in the 8-27 Hz range could provide the basis for a temporal framework that is widely distributed within the motor system.
...
PMID:Coherence between cerebellar thalamus, cortex and muscle in man: cerebellar thalamus interactions. 1086 57
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