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)

In animals the occurrence of a behavioural syndrome consisting of hyperactivity, stereotyped movements and increase of temperature has been induced by MAOIs, 5-HT precursors (L-tryptophan) and 5-HT reuptake inhibitors. Most of these manifestations were specifically blocked by a pretreatment with an inhibitor of serotonin synthesis. In humans, the association of myoclonus, diarrhea, confusion, hypomania, agitation, hyperreflexia, shivering, incoordination, fever and diaphoresis, when patients are treated with serotoninergic agents, could constitute a "serotonin syndrome". Such cases of serotonin syndrome were reported after treatments with L-tryptophan, MAOIs, serotonin reuptake inhibitors and tricyclics alone or in association. The authors prospectively evaluated all the "serotonin-related" symptoms in 38 depressed inpatients fulfilling DSM III-R criteria of major depression. 16 (42%) out of 38 patients presented at least one symptom of serotonin syndrome. In 14 cases tremor and myoclonus occurred simultaneously and 10 patients presented at the same time tremor, myoclonus, diaphoresis and shivering. Except for two patients, symptoms were transient, lasted less than one week and disappeared with the pursuit of the treatment. Most often, serotonin syndrome thus corresponds to a reaction induced by a combination of serotoninergic agents at high dosages. In very rare cases, a toxic and potentially fatal interaction can occur between MAOIs, tricyclics and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors at therapeutic dosages. Serotonin syndrome also provides an heuristic model of the putative mode of action of antidepressants. Serotonin-related symptoms are the physical and objective expression of the antidepressant-induced increase in serotonin. The specificity of serotonin-related syndrome also needs to be discussed since most of the symptoms, such as tremor and diaphoresis, are not in all cases related to an increase in serotonin.
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PMID:[The serotonin syndrome: review of the literature and description of an original study]. 852 62

A better understanding of the mechanisms underlying movement disorders, coupled with refinements in surgical technique, has led to a resurgence of interest in the surgical treatment of patients with tremor. We retrospectively analyzed the outcomes of 60 patients (62 patient sides) with medically intractable tremor who underwent stereotactic thalamotomy. Of these 60 patients, 42 had Parkinson's disease (of whom 2 patients underwent bilateral surgery for a total of 44 patient sides), 6 had essential tremor, 6 had cerebellar tremor, and 6 had post-traumatic tremor. The patients received follow-up for as long as 13 years (mean, 53.4 mo) after their operations. At the most recent follow-up visit, 86% of the patients with Parkinson's disease, 83% of the patients with essential tremor, 67% of the patients with cerebellar tremor, and 50% of the patients with post-traumatic tremor had cessation of or moderate-to-marked improvement in their contralateral tremor, with a concomitant improvement in function. The mean daily dose of levodopa for those patients preoperatively taking levodopa (n = 35) was reduced by approximately 156 mg at a mean of 53.4 months after thalamotomy. Immediate postoperative complications were common, occurring in 58% of patients. The most common complications were contralateral weakness (34%), dysarthria (29%), and confusion (23%). These complications generally resolved rapidly during the postoperative period.
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PMID:Outcome after stereotactic thalamotomy for parkinsonian, essential, and other types of tremor. 883 86

Reported is a case of fetal death associated with a misoprostol overdose. The 25-year-old US woman, gravida 3 para 0 abortion 2, at 36 weeks' gestation presented to the hospital 3 hours after self-administering 6000 mcg of misoprostol intravaginally and 600 mcg orally, reportedly to induce and shorten the duration of labor. Prior to this regimen, the woman was experiencing mild contractions every 15-20 minutes and was aware of fetal movement. She presented with agitation and confusion, shaking chills, abdominal and extremity cramping, emesis, tachycardia, hypotension, and hyperthermia. Pelvic ultrasonography performed 3.5 hours after misoprostol administration showed no fetal movement or heart motion. A nonviable fetus was delivered by emergency cesarean section. Hypotension has not been previously reported in an overdose case and may reflect a direct vasodilatory effect of misoprostol on systemic vascular tone. Marginal placental abruption also may have contributed to the hypotension. The patient's clinical course resolved over 15 hours with supportive care, including intravaginal saline irrigation and endotracheal intubation with neuroparalytic therapy to control agitation and hyperthermia. Divided intravaginal doses of 50 mcg of misoprostol every 4 hours, for a total dose of 50-600 mcg, have effectively induced labor with no significant neonatal or maternal adverse outcomes. In developing countries, doses of 800-1600 mcg of misoprostol administered intravaginally have successfully induced first-trimester abortion.
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PMID:Acute intravaginal misoprostol toxicity with fetal demise. 901 89

The frequent use of selective, serotonin reuptake inhibitors has increased the risk of the serotonin syndrome. This condition is related to stimulation of 5HT1A receptors and is characterized by agitation, confusion, tremor, fever and shivering. A 29-year-old woman and a 69-year-old man with the syndrome are reported. The importance of early diagnosis and treatment is emphasized, and aspects of the syndrome in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder are presented.
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PMID:[The serotonin syndrome]. 903 77

The serotonin syndrome is frequently characterized by minor neurologic manifestations that regress rapidly (such as confusion, tremor, ...). Many medications including tricyclic antidepressants, serotonin reuptake inhibitors, tryptophan and the association of monoamine oxidase inhibitors together with a serotoninergic agent have been implicated in this syndrome. In certain cases, and for poorly understood reasons, clinical manifestations can include circulatory collapse, malignant hyperthermia, convulsions and rhabdomyolysis. These forms are often fatal. Treatment, other than the withdrawal of the offending drug, is symptomatic. Dialysis may be of value in withdrawing the drug from the circulatory system. We report a patient with the serotonin syndrome of favorable outcome due to an overdose of moclobemide and clomipramine.
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PMID:Serotonin syndrome due to an overdose of moclobemide and clomipramine. A potentially life-threatening association. 903 53

We describe a patient with a clinical picture characterized by subacute onset of confusion, myoclonus, tremor and generalized convulsive seizures with a relapsing course, which was attributed to Hashimoto's encephalopathy. EEG and MRI were diffusely abnormal. High titers of antithyroid antibodies were detected in her serum. She responded well to corticosteroids and her condition remained good during a one-year follow-up.
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PMID:Hashimoto's encephalopathy: clinical and laboratory findings. 911 67

Hypoglycemia is often associated with typical, but not specific symptoms. A differentiation is made between neuroglucopenic symptoms (e.g., confusion, somnolence) on the one hand, and those that arise as a result of the counterregulatory response of the sympathetic nervous system (e.g., tremor, sweating), on the other. The diagnosis of hypoglycemia can cause considerable problems, in particular when only isolated single symptoms present (e.g., confusion, psychosis, seizures, coma). For the elective clarification of recurrent hypoglycemia, further diagnostic examinations (e.g., fasting with determination of hormones, measurement of insulin) are employed in addition to the patient's history. For differential diagnostic considerations not only organic causes, but also adverse drug reactions and a factitious genesis must be excluded. In the event of an emergency (e.g., hypoglycemic coma) the usual form of treatment is the administration of glucoses or glucagon.
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PMID:[Hypoglycemia. Symptoms, differential diagnosis, therapy]. 917 11

A common observation in neurological practice is parkinsonism with concomitant cognitive decline, an association that usually arises from various underlying degenerative or vascular conditions, most of which are untreatable. An elderly woman with no history of psychiatric disease presented complaining of memory and cognitive impairment serious enough to interfere with daily life activities over the preceding year. She soon developed a predominantly left-sided tremor, rigidity and bradykinesia. She had had only 2 years of formal education. Neuropsychological assessment showed poor performance on Wechsler memory scale sub-items, as well as constructional apraxia, dyscalculia, reasoning difficulties and gross information deficits. A 3-month trial course of levodopa was followed by dramatic improvement in both parkinsonian symptoms and cognitive performance, including a 7-point gain in the Mini-Mental Status Examination score. At the same time, the Beck Depression Inventory score fell from 27 (baseline) to 18. Over the 10-year follow-up period the patient developed late levodopa syndrome and a persistent but mild dysthymic disorder, but never manifested dementia as defined by DSM-III-R criteria. This patient's case illustrates three important principles. First, although parkinsonism is known to be preceded by depressive episodes, particularly in a subgroup of younger patients, the symptoms of the elderly patient whose Parkinson's disease is foreshadowed by depression can mimic depressive pseudodementia, potentially leading to diagnostic confusion. Second, impaired motivation and disturbances in cognitive function are different from mood disorders, as the former involve the mesolimbic/mesocortical dopamine system, explaining the beneficial effect of levodopa on motivation and cognition in this patient even as mood was unaffected. Finally, depressive pseudodementia in Parkinson's disease does not necessarily herald the development of organic dementia in the long term.
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PMID:[Depressive pseudodementia in early Parkinson's disease: lessons from a case with long-term follow-up]. 919 54

In the present study we describe the case of a 11 years old child, female, who was accidentally fulgurated by the left arm and after has presented an episode of pallor, shaking, confusion, throbbing and tingle of the arms. For this reason she was admitted in our Department of Pediatrics, University of Rome "La Sapienza". The child presented also a moderate pain at the left wrist. For this reason was performed a wrist X Ray which showed an incomplete fracture of the distal extremity of the radial diaphysis, with a small ulnar infraction of the same side. Life parameters and the ECG were normal so as the blood exams, in particular the CPK and the LDH (in fact, they can be indication of muscular necrosis). In summary the Authors with this study would like to remark the necessity of to suspect a fracture in the place of admittance of the electric current, even if not immediately appear clean signs of oedema, pain and functional impotence.
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PMID:[Colles' fracture in a girl after fulguration]. 928 Sep 15

Surgical treatments for PD and ET are promising. Medial Pallidotomy, the surgical lesioning of the pallidum, often improves symptoms of long-standing PD. We enrolled twenty-seven late stage PD patients for unilateral medial pallidotomy who were then assessed by the Core Assessment Program for Intracranial Transplantation (CAPIT) protocol. One year after surgery persistent improvement was seen contralateral to the lesion in the following features: drug-induced dyskinesias (92%), akinesia (38%), rigidity (51%), and tremor (42%). Complications included transient dysarthria (7 patients), facial weakness (9 patients), limb weakness (1 patient), swallowing problems (4 patients) and intracerebral haemorrhage (1 patient). Thalamic DBS may improve tremor in PD and ET patients. Therefore, we enrolled fifteen patients (9 PD and 6 ET patients) with disabling tremor, unresponsive to medication. They were assessed by the United Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) and the Tremor Rating Scale (for PD and ET patients, respectively). Three months after surgery, limb tremor contralateral to stimulation improved by 71% in PD patients and 76% in ET patients. Complications included transient paresthesias (all), confusional state (1 patient) and intracerebral bleed (1 patient). Unilateral medial pallidotomy safely improves some Parkinsonian symptoms contralateral to the lesion. Thalamic DBS may effectively and safely improve contralateral limb tremor in PD and ET.
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PMID:Surgical interventions in the treatment of Parkinson's disease (PD) and essential tremor (ET): medial pallidotomy in PD and chronic deep brain stimulation (DBS) in PD and ET. 929 83


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