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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (tremor)
18,428 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A recently developed technique for the acoustical analysis of speech is described. Speech is analysed electronically for the presence or absence of a microtremor having a frequency of about 10 Hz. This tremor is said to be attenuated in states of psychological stress. The paper present data supporting the validity of this as a measure of anxiety, using states of both normal and pathological anxiety. An objective scoring system is proposed to overcome some of the problems of unreliability. A number of practical advantages of the voice technique are described.
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PMID:Voice analysis for the measurement of anxiety. 59 87

Frequency variations in the human voice result from voluntary and involuntary changes in the parameters of the vocal system. The present work deals with involuntary frequency perturbations from two theoretical aspects: 1) the influence of pitch period variations on frequency changes in the band-limited signal which results from the resonant characteristics of the vocal tract; 2) the physiological parameters of the vocal system which are potentially able to govern involuntary frequency changes. It is shown that the modulation function of the vocal-cord wave can theoretically be derived from its harmonics using FM demodulation techniques, and that higher distortion may appear at higher harmonics. It is also shown that involuntary geometirical changes of the vocal tract and its terminal impedance as well as tension and initial-area changes of the vocal cord--changes well within the physiological range--can influence frequency changes in the human voice. The present results are correlated with our reported experimental findings on involuntary voice tremor, used in psychological stress evaluation. The role of the central nervous system, and possible mechanisms for these phenomena, are discussed.
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PMID:Physiological model analysis of involuntary human-voice tremor. 70 99

The response to mental stress in patients with benign essential tremor is an exaggeration of the resting tremor. We have studied the ability of metoprolol tartrate to attenuate specifically the tremorgenic response to mental stress in five patients with essential tremor who were each studied on four occasions. Treatment regimens consisted of 0-, 25-, 50-, and 75-mg doses of metoprolol tartrate, given twice daily for seven- to ten-day periods. Tremor was measured while patients were resting comfortably and then again following mental stress over eight-hour study periods. During the baseline study period, the investigational mental stress consistently exaggerated tremor in each patient. Metoprolol treatment reduced both the resting tremor and tremor following mental activity, but the drug-induced change in the response to mental stress was more pronounced than the drug-induced reduction in resting tremor. The ability of metoprolol to blunt the response to mental stress was associated with serum concentrations of the drug. The time courses of metoprolol serum concentrations were similar to the time course of metoprolol's ability to blunt the response to mental stress. Metoprolol possesses the ability to blunt the tremorgenic response to mental stress in patients with essential tremor, but the duration of this effect lasts less than seven hours after administration of a dose.
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PMID:Attenuation of response to mental stress in patients with essential tremor treated with metoprolol. 372 47

Reactions of tremor before and after stress were registered with a new method. Reactions with informatory-mental stress (adding tests with increasing time pressure) can only be interpreted by considering performance. Reactions with informatory-emotional stress (University examination; tasks in a central TV control room) are task specific when tremor is inter-individually normalized.
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PMID:[Tremor reaction to mental and emotional stress]. 614 Feb 25

The present report presents an attempt to define the physiological parameter used to describe "voice tremor" in psychological stress evaluating machines, and to find its sources. This parameter was found to be a low frequency (5-20 Hz) random process which frequency modulates the vocal cord waveform and (independently) affects the frequency range of the third speech formant. The frequency variations in unstressed speakers were found to be the result of forced muscular undulations driven by central nervous signals and not of a passive resonant phenomenon. In this paper various physiological and clinical experiments which lead to the above conclusions are discussed. a) It is shown that induced muscular activity in the vocal tract and vocal cord regions can generate tremor in the voice. b) It is shown that relaxed subjects exhibit significant tremor correlation between spontaneously generated speech and EMG, with the EMG leading the speech tremor. c) Tremor in the electrical activity recorded from muscles overlapping vocal tract area was correlated with third formant demodulated signal and vocal cord demodulated pitch tremor was correlated with first formant demodulated tremor. d) Enhanced tremor was found in Parkinson patients and diminished tremor in patients with some traumatic brain injuries.
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PMID:Physiological evidence for central modulation of voice tremor. 687 Dec 80

The authors analyzed rhythmical involuntary movements at rest, which appeared as complications in 12 (sporadic 11, hereditary 1) out of a total of 139 cases (sporadic 99, hereditary 40) of olivo-ponto-cerebellar atrophy. These movements tended to be seen in patients with sporadic OPCA of longer illness duration and at more advanced stages. They were distributed over the face, neck and extremities. Palatal myoclonus was observed in only one case. The movements were exacerbated by maintenance of a fixed posture, motion and mental stress, and stopped during sleep. In some cases, clonazepam, trihexyphenidyl or 1-Dopa was effective. In the surface electromyogram, rhythmical grouped discharges of 2-4 Hz were recorded only on agonist muscles or on both agonist and antagonist muscles synchronously, which is characteristic of skeletal myoclonus. However, pathological study of 3 cases with involuntary movements revealed marked putaminal degenerations as compared with 3 uncomplicated cases. This suggests that these rhythmical movements might be related to parkinsonian tremor.
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PMID:[Rhythmical involuntary movement at rest associated with olivo-ponto-cerebellar atrophy (OPCA)]. 833 81

Stuttering onset in adulthood is rare. With no prior history of stuttering or demonstrable neurological insult, diagnosis is often that of a conversion reaction. Stuttering as the first sign of a parkinsonian-like syndrome in extrapyramidal disease has only been reported once in the previous 30 years (Koller, 1983). The present case study differs from and builds upon the case reports in the literature, and describes a 29-year-old white male who began stuttering purportedly secondary to psychological stress. The fluency evaluation revealed severe stuttering characterized by multiple repetitions and/or blocks, with 20 or more repetitions per word routinely noted during both conversational speech and oral reading. No starters or secondary stuttering characteristics, no specific word fears or avoidances, and no situational fears were exhibited. The subsequent neurological examination found resting tremor in hands and legs, lingual fasciculations, gait imbalance, and numbness and tingling of the hands and feet, all of which were progressive in nature. Rehabilitation initially focused on fluency therapy, but then included psychiatric therapy, and finally medical intervention. Fluency and psychiatric therapies were unsuccessful in eliminating stuttering. Following a diagnosis of parkinsonian-like syndrome, medical intervention with carbidopa-levodopa resulted in dramatic improvement of motor, sensory, and fluency symptoms. It is important to consider extrapyramidal disease as an etiological factor in patients with adult onset of stuttering.
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PMID:Adult onset of stuttering as a presenting sign in a parkinsonian-like syndrome: a case report. 895 3

A 22-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because she showed psychomotor excitement and signs of schizophrenia following psychological stress. Nine days after neuroleptic medication, she could not eat and exhibited high fever, diaphoresis, excessive salivation, and severe extrapyramidal signs with cogwheel rigidity and resting tremor of the upper extremities. The next day, bucco-linguomasticatory dyskinesia, which is quite similar to tardive dyskinesia, appeared. The dyskinesia lasted intermittently for 6 days. The present case shows that buccolingual dyskinesia can occur even after early neuroleptic exposure in certain patients.
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PMID:Transient and intermittent oral dyskinesia appearing in a young woman ten days after neuroleptic treatment. 909 72

Physiological finger tremor was assessed by two-dimensional solid accelerometry in 40 healthy normal subjects at rest (R) with the hand hanging over the armrest of a chair, in posture (P) with the arm rested on the armrest but the hand extended from the wrist, and finally adding proximal muscles contraction in extension (E) with the arm extended in front of the patient, each time with and without mental stress. The mean amplitude for physiological tremor, about 30 microns, was almost doubled by hand extension and increased by 4 to 5-fold by arm extension with further increase by mental stress in each position, which gives a good estimation of the contribution of proximal and distal muscles into the amplitude of physiological tremor. There was no significant effect of age between 20 and 60 years on tremor amplitude, but mean tremor frequency decreased significantly between 40 to 60 years. Mental stress increased amplitude but decreased tremor frequency of both across all position, possibly by increasing the synchronization of motor unit firing and by modifying the gain of the motoneurones and the stretch reflex as shown by electrophysiological studies.
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PMID:Effects of proximal and distal muscles' groups contraction and mental stress on the amplitude and frequency of physiological finger tremor. An accelerometric study. 1093 96

A 31-year-old woman with a left frontal and parietal brain tumor underwent awake craniotomy. Propofol/remifentanil general anesthesia was induced. Following craniotomy, anesthetic administrations ceased. The level of consciousness was sufficient and she was not agitated. However, the patient complained of nausea 70 minutes into the awake phase. Considering the adverse effects of antiemetics and the upcoming surgical strategy, we did not give any medications. Nausea disappeared spontaneously while the operation was suspended. When surgical intervention extended to the left caudate nucleus, involuntary movement, classified as a tremor, with 5-6 Hz frequency, abruptly occurred on her left forearm. The patient showed emotional distress. Tremor appeared on her right forearm and subsequently spread to her lower extremities. Intravenous midazolam and fentanyl could not reduce her psychological stress. Since the tremor disturbed microscopic observation, general anesthesia was induced. Consequently, the tremor disappeared and did not recur. Based on the anatomical ground and the medication status, her involuntary movement was diagnosed as psychogenic tremor. Various factors can induce involuntary movements. In fact, intraoperative management of nausea and vomiting takes priority during awake craniotomy, but we should be reminded that some antiemetics potentially induce involuntary movement that could be caused by surgery around basal ganglia.
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PMID:[A Case of Psychogenic Tremor during Awake Craniotomy]. 2700 92


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