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)

Freezing gait is an incapacitating symptom often observed in patients with Parkinson's disease. It has been less frequently described in association with multi-infarct state, multisystem atrophies, and normotensive hydrocephalus. In our movement disorder clinic, we have diagnosed (and followed up to 3 years; median, 16 months), 18 patients in whom progressive freezing gait was the sole neurological dysfunction. These 15 men and 3 women (aged 60-82 years; 74 +/- 6) were subjected to an extensive neurological workup that included clinical evaluation, videotaping for grading of gait disability, comprehensive blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis, and brain computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Mean disease duration was 2.5 +/- 1.9 years (range, 0.5-6). Neurological examination disclosed freezing gait, often associated with varying degrees of postural instability. The degree of freezing gait ranged from sudden motor blocks only when confronted with obstacles to severe disability with total inability to start walking requiring a walker, massive assistance, or a wheelchair. However, patients could mimic gait movements with absolutely no freezing when seated or lying prone, and most of them could overcome arrests by the "walking-over-lines" maneuver. Otherwise, neurological examination was normal with no signs of bradykinesia, rigidity, or tremor. Blood chemistry and CSF analysis were normal. Brain CT and MRI were normal or showed mild cortical atrophy in 12 and putative lacunes in 6 patients. Therapy with levodopa or dopamine agonists was ineffective. During the follow-up period, a gradual progression of the freezing gait was observed. However, it remained unaccompanied by any other neurological findings.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Primary progressive freezing gait. 834 Dec 93

To explore the relationship between hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy (HMSN) and movement disorders, we examined 7 patients with HMSN referred to our Movement Disorders Clinic and surveyed members of the Charcot-Marie-Tooth association. The following movement disorders were observed in the index patients: postural tremor in 6, rest tremor in 3, and Parkinsonism and dystonia in 2. Tremor, present in 40% of the 201 patients who responded to the survey, was first noted at a mean age of 36 years, and mostly involved the hands. Family history of tremor was more frequent in the tremor group (P < 0.005), which also had a significantly worse writing score than the nontremor group (P < 0.001). The overlap in clinical features between HMSN-associated tremor and essential tremor (ET), the high frequency of family history of tremor, and the lack of a relationship between the severity of tremor and of peripheral neuropathy suggest that the tremor in HMSN is pathogenically related to ET.
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PMID:Hereditary motor-sensory neuropathy and movement disorders. 835 21

Leigh syndrome (LS) is the clinical prototype of a genetically-determined mitochondrial encephalopathy. Twenty-two of 34 patients with LS had evidence of a movement disorder (MD). Dystonia, the most common MD, was present in 19 cases, rigidity in 4, tremor in 2, chorea in 2, hypokinesia in 2, myoclonus in 1, and tics in 1. Dystonia was most commonly multifocal at onset and showed progression in six patients. In half of the cases an enzymatic defect was detected, most commonly cytochrome C oxidase. The neuroradiologic findings showed prominent basal ganglia lesions in 20/21 patients. Putamen, caudate, substantia nigra and globus pallidus were involved in this order of frequency. This experience was reflected in a literature review encompassing 284 cases of LS. However, only 26.4% had MD. Eleven patients, including one of our cases, presented as the primary torsion dystonia phenotype. There are clinical and pathological similarities between LS and other metabolic diseases affecting the central nervous system. The enhanced vulnerability of the nervous system to metabolic stress and the resemblance in the distribution of the pathology of these diverse conditions suggests a common pathogenetic mechanism. An excitotoxin-mediated mechanism is favored, one which might account for the frequent involvement of the basal ganglia in LS.
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PMID:Disorders of movement in Leigh syndrome. 839 42

Twenty patients with movement disorders associated with astrocytomas (grade I-IV according to the WHO tumour classification) of the basal ganglia and the thalamus were evaluated for the effects of treatment. Five patients had more than one movement disorder when the histological diagnosis was verified by stereotactic biopsy. Twelve had tremors, eight hemidystonia, three hemichorea, and one hemichorea/ballismus, and myoclonus respectively. Ten patients died during the follow up period, and for the surviving patients follow up periods ranged from 6-21 years. The movement disorders changed over long periods of time related to therapeutic interventions. CSF shunt operations and percutaneous radiotherapy had no definite effect on the movement disorders. There was a moderate response to medical treatment in a few patients. Stereotactic aspiration of tumour cysts had a marked influence on the movement disorder in two patients, and functional stereotactic surgery abolished tumour induced tremor in one. Interstitial radiotherapy was performed in fifteen patients for treatment of the underlying neoplasm and resulted in different and variable alterations of the movement disorders. These differences may be explained by complex interactions involving structures affected primarily by the tumour, as well as by secondary functional lesions of adjacent structures.
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PMID:Evaluation of the effect of treatment on movement disorders in astrocytomas of the basal ganglia and the thalamus. 841 11

Hereditary trembling chin is an autosomal dominant condition characterized by recurrent bouts of tremor involving the chin. These episodes are precipitated by emotional upset. There has been considerable debate about the gravity of this condition. This may be a benign movement disorder; however, the rhythmic trembling of mentalis at rest or during times of stress in these patients is often misinterpreted as betraying an incipient emotional upset. For this reason, some patients with this condition may find it socially disabling. We have recently successfully treated one such family with regular botulinum toxin injections to the mentalis muscle.
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PMID:Successful treatment of hereditary trembling chin with botulinum toxin. 850 78

Developments in the field of Huntington's disease have focused on the potential benefits of predictive testing. Markers have been described for autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia and for certain subtypes of Friedrich's ataxia. Argentophilic neuronal and glial inclusions appear to be the first specific pathologic hallmark of multiple system atrophy. "Pure" hereditary spastic paraplegia is not a multisystem disorder of the central nervous system, but a monomorphic and stereotyped disease. Advances in Tourette's syndrome are limited because the presumed gene eludes identification. A new type of myoclonus, propiospinal myoclonus, has been described. Clinical and electrophysiologic criteria for defining primary orthostatic tremor have been proposed. Understanding of the neurophysiologic substrate of essential tremor and myoclonus is improving. New neurologic disorders presenting clinically with prominent movement disorder continue to be described.
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PMID:Choreas, hereditary and other ataxias, tics, myoclonus, and other movement disorders. 850 6

A 16-year-old patient with multiple sclerosis (MS) showed paroxysmal movement disorders during a recurrence of the disease. The paroxysms took the form ot brief unilateral dystonic posturings of the right body suggestive of paroxysmal dystonia (PD); they completely receded with acetazolamide. A single episode of a high amplitude, rythmic slow and coarse generalized tremor, present at rest and increasing with movement, particularly involving the head in a no-no movement, occurred soon after recovery from PD and lasted three hours. The present report provides evidence that MS has to be considered in the diagnostic approach to symptomatic childhood PD and underlines the efficacy of acetazolamide in the treatment of PD attacks. It also describes a rare paroxysmal movement disorder, defined as paroxysmal dystonic tremor, that can be considered as falling within the spectrum of PD.
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PMID:Paroxysmal dystonia and paroxysmal tremor in a young patient with multiple sclerosis. 853 20

We report on a patient with sleep apnea and an unusual familial movement disorder. The movements were present only during wakefulness and nocturnal arousals caused by disordered breathing. A 27-year-old obese man was referred with sleep onset insomnia, symptoms suggesting restless legs syndrome, daytime sleepiness, loud snoring and awakening with choking sensations. He was proven to have obstructive sleep apnea (apnea hypopnea index = 60.6). He also had a daytime movement disorder that was characterized by almost continuous stereotypic tapping of one or both legs. The movements were suppressible and not associated with any unpleasant or abnormal leg sensation. Virtually identical movements were present in three generations of his family. The severity of the movements did not worsen late in the day or with supine posturing. The nocturnal movements, consisting of a visible shaking of one or both legs, occurred only during arousals secondary to the apnea, had a mean duration of 5.7 +/- 3.0 (standard deviation) seconds and could not be defined as periodic limb movements in sleep (PLMS). Successful treatment of apnea by nasal continuous positive airway pressure dramatically reduced the movements during sleep (from 88.2 to 1.9 per hour). The clinical significance and the mechanism of this movement disorder is unknown. We discuss the features inconsistent with restless legs syndrome and consider other possible phenomenology, including akathisia. We conclude that this patient may have a previously unreported familial movement disorder and in addition developed the sleep apnea syndrome related to obesity.
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PMID:A familial awake movement disorder mimicking restless legs in a sleep apnea patient. 855 32

We studied 53 patients (64% females) with static brain lesions who developed progressive movement disorders. Of these, 50 (94%) had dystonia, 17 (32%) tremor, eight (15%) parkinsonism, seven (13%) myoclonus, and three (6%) chorea. The precipitating insults included perinatal hypoxia/ischemia in 22 (42%), stroke in 12 (23%), head injury in eight (15%), encephalitis in eight (15%), and carbon monoxide poisoning, kernicterus, and radiation necrosis in one patient (2%) each. Among the 30 patients with initial insult occurring at age 2 years or younger (Infant group), distribution of dystonia at follow-up was focal in three (10%), segmental in eight (27%), unilateral in 10 (33%), and generalized in nine (30%). The mean latency between the original injury and onset of movement disorder was 25.5 +/- 16.7 years. Among the nine patients who developed dystonia after an insult occurring between ages 6 and 17 (Childhood group), the distribution of dystonia at follow-up was segmental in two (33%) and unilateral in seven (78%); the mean latency of dystonia onset was 4.9 +/- 7.8 years. Of the 14 patients in the Adult group (injury at age 25 or older), 11 developed dystonia, two developed parkinsonism, and one had carbon monoxide encephalopathy and parkinsonism. The distribution of dystonia in the 11 patients at follow-up was segmental in three (27%) and unilateral in eight (73%). The mean latency of movement disorder onset in the 14 patients of the Adult group was 2.5 +/- 4.9 years. No individuals in the Childhood or Adult groups became left-hand dominant; by comparison, nine of the 30 individuals in the Infant group became left-handed. In conclusion, brain injury at a young age is associated with a longer latency to onset of subsequent movement disorder, a greater tendency to development of generalized dystonia, and a greater probability of altered handedness. These tendencies may result from differences in age-related neuroplasticity.
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PMID:Delayed-onset progressive movement disorders after static brain lesions. 890 76

Intracranial neoplasms are an uncommon cause of symptomatic Parkinsonism and rest tremor. We found an incidence of 0.3% in a prospective evaluation of 907 patients with supratentorial tumours. Eight patients with Parkinsonism and rest tremor secondary to supratentorial tumours sparing the basal ganglia are reported. Neuro-imaging revealed compression and distortion of the basal ganglia by large tumours which were identified histopathologically as meningiomas in four patients and as an epidermoid, a fibrillary astrocytoma, an anaplastic oligodendroglioma and a glioblastoma. Six patients underwent tumour removal by craniotomy, in two the histopathology was obtained by stereotactic biopsy. Four patients were free of Parkinsonian symptoms and signs on long-term follow-up. The possible pathophysiological mechanisms involved are discussed. Since some of these patients closely resemble cases of idiopathic Parkinson's disease, and the movement disorder can precede other symptoms and signs or will remain isolated in the further course, the diagnosis of an intracranial neoplasm was generally delayed in these patients. Increased awareness of this rare entity may lead to an earlier diagnosis. Early computed tomography in patients with Parkinsonism might help to detect these patients with a potentially curable cause of their condition.
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PMID:Parkinsonism and rest tremor secondary to supratentorial tumours sparing the basal ganglia. 856 Oct 31


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