Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The clinical features of 12 patients with spasmodic dysphonia are described. In 11 patients, the voice was strained, harsh, tight, and tremulous, and was low in volume and pitch. Speech, which was sometimes barely intelligible, was interrupted by irregular stoppages and catches of the voice; it required considerable effort, and was accompanied by facial grimacing. The dysphonia was part of a more widespread neurological disorder (idiopathic
torsion dystonia
) in one case, while it coexisted with blepharospasm in another, and with postural
tremor
in two. There was a buccolingual hyskinesia in another of these 11 patients, but this may have been related to her previous drug regime. In the twelfth patient, who had a familial
tremor
, the voice was characterised by marked breathiness, with intermittent aphonia. The disorder is probably due to a focal dystonia of the laryngeal musculature, and this would be consistent with the type of neurological disorders that were associated with it in our cases. Symptomatic benefit follows the therapeutic division of one of the recurrent laryngeal nerves, in selected cases.
...
PMID:Clinical aspects of spasmodic dysphonia. 65 Feb 44
A 35-year-old black female with typical
torsion dystonia
is discussed.
Tremors
in the right upper extremity began with a febrile illness at age eight. Difficulty in using the extremity began two years later. Overt writhing movements and torticollis began at age 17. The disorder has been progressive, but not disabling. Neurological examination revealed only extrapyramidal motor system dysfunction. Serum dopamine Beta hydroxylase levels were normal, and an evaluation for Wilson's disease was negative. A sibling has minor writing difficulties.
...
PMID:Torsion dystonia: a case report. 83 81
Plasma dopamine-beta-hydroxylase was studied in 96 subjects, 33 of them controls and 63 of them patients (Parkinson's disease, chronic chorea,
torsion dystonia
, postural
tremor
and epilepsy). Only the epileptics showed a significant decrease in the average level of dopamine-beta-hydroxylase activity in comparison with the controls. During the cold test, DBH did not vary except in one case. On the other hand, during epileptic attacks, DBH activity underwent considerable fluctuations. Therefore, except in special pathological conditions, such as epileptic attacks, measurement of plasma or serum DBH activity is of limited value for neurological pathology and is not a good indication of the activity of the sympathetic nervous system.
...
PMID:[Dopamine beta hydroxylase. Value and limits of its study in neurology]. 94 Sep 70
A family study of 32 patients with
torsion dystonia
has shown at least two forms of generalized dystonia with onset in childhood. These two forms, an autosomal dominant and an autosomal recessive, are clinically indistinguishable. There were at least three families and probably about six to eight patients with the autosomal recessive variety. The remaining nine to 11 patients with generalized childhood dystonia are thought, because of a probable paternal age effect, to be examples of new dominant mutations. Since fitness with childhood onset is 1/20 of normal, most childhood dominant cases appear sporadically. Most of the other 15 patients (12 with onset in adult life) appear to have a non-genetic
torsion dystonia
, although an example of a benign adult-onset dominant form associated with a
tremor
has been observed. It is concluded that there are at least two forms of genetic
torsion dystonia
, an autosomal recessive form with onset in childhood, which, on evidence from America, is particularly common in Ashkenazi Jews, and one or more dominant forms, with onset in childhood or adult life. The majority of adult-onset isolated cases of idiopathic
torsion dystonia
seem to be due to exogenous but unidentified causes.
...
PMID:A genetic study of torsion dystonia. 112 Oct 20
Dopa-responsive dystonia (DRD) is one form of childhood-onset idiopathic
torsion dystonia
. Adult-onset parkinsonism has appeared in several previously unaffected members in families with DRD suggesting that this may be an additional phenotypical expression of the disease. We report a family with DRD in which 2 women and 1 man, unaffected by dystonia, developed
tremor
-onset parkinsonism after age 50 years. The women continue on a low dosage of levodopa after 9 and 13 years of treatment, with a stable, nearly complete, symptomatic response. This contrasts to the typical long-term treatment complications observed in patients with Parkinson's disease. We assessed nigrostriatal dopaminergic function in the proband, with typical DRD, and the 2 women with parkinsonism using 6-[18F]fluoro-L-dopa positron emission tomography. All 3 had normal striatal 6-[18F]fluoro-L-dopa uptake. These observations provide compelling evidence that "benign" adult-onset parkinsonism may be an expression of the disease in some members of families with DRD and does not support consideration of the DRD gene as a risk factor for development of Parkinson's disease. There may be considerable clinical heterogeneity in DRD depending on the age at onset.
...
PMID:Long-term treatment response and fluorodopa positron emission tomographic scanning of parkinsonism in a family with dopa-responsive dystonia. 144 40
A study of 71 patients with idiopathic
torsion dystonia
(ITD) and 71 matched controls was performed to investigate the range of possible clinical expression of ITD and the role of environmental factors in the development of the disease. A family history of
tremor
and stuttering were the only factors significantly associated with ITD. No associated environmental factor was identified.
...
PMID:A case-control study of idiopathic torsion dystonia. 148 41
The clinical phenotype of X-linked recessive
torsion dystonia
was documented in 42 affected individuals from 21 families. In 7 families, there were 9 sibships (core families) with 2 or more affected individuals available for evaluation. The ages of the patients ranged from 29 to 79 years with a mean of 46.2 +/- 10.1 years; the mean age of onset of dystonia was 35.0 +/- 8.0 years with a range of 12 to 48 years; and the mean duration of illness was 11.1 +/- 7.9 years. First manifestations were noted in the lower extremities in 36%, the axial musculature in 29%, the upper extremities in 23%, and in the head in 12% of the cases. The majority of patients displayed gait abnormalities (90%), leg dystonia (79%), oromandibular dystonia (64%), neck dystonia (57%), blepharospasm (57%), and truncal dystonia (52%). The disease generalized in 90% of the cases within 1 to 11 years of onset (median duration, 5 years). Overall, the condition was disabling, but the Fahn-Marsden disability score did not correlate with age of onset, duration of illness, site of onset, rate of generalization, or presence of parkinsonism. Thirty-six percent of the cases displayed at least 1 of the following "parkinsonian symptoms": bradykinesia,
tremor
, rigidity, loss of postural reflexes and a shuffling gait. Parkinsonism was diagnosed as definite in 14%, probable in 2%, and possible in 19% of the cases. Given this high association of dystonia and parkinsonism, we propose to call the disorder X-linked dystonia-parkinsonism syndrome (XDP).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The phenotype of the X-linked dystonia-parkinsonism syndrome. An assessment of 42 cases in the Philippines. 203 Jun 41
The corticomotoneurone pathways were examined in 21 patients with movement disorders, using the technique of percutaneous electrical stimulation of the motor cortex. Conduction in these pathways was assessed by measuring the latency to onset of electromyographic activity in the muscles of the upper limb after cortical stimulation. In all patients [five with primary (idiopathic)
torsion dystonia
and two with secondary (symptomatic) hemidystonia, seven with Huntington's disease, four with essential
tremor
, and three with Parkinson's disease] central motor conduction was normal. This and other evidence suggests that the origin of the disorder of movement in these conditions lies in the delivery of abnormal motor commands to a normal corticomotoneuronal system.
...
PMID:Electrophysiology of the corticomotoneurone pathways in patients with movement disorders. 350 37
The ability of the selective GABA-receptor agonist, progabide, to suppress abnormal involuntary movements was evaluated in a preliminary open pilot study. 17 patients, 10 males and 7 females, aged 10-78 years, with hyperkinetic movement disorders were included in the study. Daily doses of progabide ranged from 900 to 3600 mg (median 2400 mg) corresponding to 14-45 mg/kg (median 45 mg/kg), while the duration of treatment varied from 2 to 52 weeks. Improvement, with a reduction of involuntary movements exceeding 25%, occurred in two of four patients with Gilles de la Tourette's syndrome, and in two of three patients with postanoxic intention myoclonus, while no consistent beneficial effects were registered in ten patients with Huntington's chorea, postanoxic choreoathetosis,
torsion dystonia
, tardive dyskinesia, action
tremor
, essential myoclonus, or oro-branchio-respiratory myoclonus.
...
PMID:Progabide in the treatment of hyperkinetic extrapyramidal movement disorders. 386 33
The amplitude and temporal modulation of the segmented EMG activity in flexor carpi radialis, evoked by imposed angular wrist extension, was studied with respect to the level of pre-existing background activity in rigid parkinsonian (PK) and
dystonia musculorum deformans
(
DMD
) patients. The interdependence of the evoked M1 and M2-3 segments on pre-existing background EMG activity and initial velocity of imposed displacement was established previously for a normal population. Individual responses of 21 parkinsonian and 12 dystonic patients were compared to the established normal "response volume". The augmented magnitude of the M2-3 segment in rigid PK patients, which correlates to the measure of rigidity, could not be accounted for by the low level of pre-existing EMG activity. Therefore, increased descending facilitation does not impinge directly on alpha motoneurons. Paradoxical excitation in the shortened muscle and resetting of tonic
tremor
of the stretched muscle by the imposed wrist extension are two other demonstrated abnormalities which may also contribute to PK rigidity. In contrast,
DMD
patients demonstrated normal amplitude modulation of the M1 and M2-3 segments, but exhibited a disturbance of normal temporal mechanisms that result in constant duration of the M1 and M2-3 responses with imposed force step loads.
...
PMID:Characteristic alterations in responses to imposed wrist displacements in parkinsonian rigidity and dystonia musculorum deformans. 623 55
1
2
3
4
Next >>