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)

Stereotactic medial posteroventral pallidotomy for treatment of Parkinson's disease attracts increasing attention. We report on the preliminary results of 12 patients at 1 year after microelectrode-guided unilateral pallidotomy. The primary indications were severe bradykinesia and levodopa-induced dyskinesias. After radiofrequency lesioning all patients had immediate improvement of contralateral parkinsonian signs. Postoperative magnetic resonance imaging confirmed the localization of the lesions. At the 1-year follow-up, all patients had sustained benefit. The global improvement was rated as moderate in six cases, and as marked in six other cases. The mean values of various subscores of the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) showed highly significant changes in the "off" state (pre/postoperatively): UPDRS Motor score (60.3/31). UPDRS Activities of Daily Living (ADL) score (33.2/18.3), gait/postural stability score (13.8/7.0), and subscores for contralateral rigidity (4.9/2.1), tremor (7.1/1.4) and bradykinesia (11.6/5.3). There was also significant improvement of ipsilateral bradykinesia and rigidity. Furthermore, we found significant changes of the mean values of the UPDRS ADL and motor "on" scores, an increase of the percentage of "on" time with reduced on-off fluctuations, and a decrease of the percentage of levodopa-induced dyskinesias, with marked improvement or complete abolition of contralateral dyskinesias in particular. The preoperative levodopa regimen was maintained, in general, or only slightly modified, if necessary. Two patients had transient complications: one patient suffered postoperative pneumonia and altered mental status; another patient displayed mild Broca's aphasia secondary to a small stroke involving the dorsal thalamus and the adjacent white matter. There were no persistent side effects at the 1-year follow-up. Contemporary unilateral pallidotomy is an effective and promising therapeutical option for surgical treatment of advanced Parkinson's disease.
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PMID:[Medial posteroventral pallidotomy for the treatment of Parkinson's disease]. 948 51

Reports of 9 cases with hand dystonia due to stroke are described. The site of the lesion was found to be parietothalamic in 1 patient, posterolateral thalamic in 5 patients, dorsal thalamic in 2 patients and medial thalamic in 1 patient as defined by computerized tomography or magnetic resonance imaging. In addition to the hand dystonia, hemiballism was noted in 1 case, hemichorea in 2 cases, action tremor in 3, anxiety in 3 and pain in 2 cases. The time lapse from the stroke to the manifestation of dystonia was 1 month to 2 years.
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PMID:Lesion localization in developing poststroke hand dystonia. 969 39

This article is devoted to animal models of tremors that emerge from lesions in the Guillain-Mollaret triangle. Cerebellar intention tremor is caused by lesions in the brachium conjunctivum or in the interpositus nucleus, possibly in combination with damage to the dentate nucleus. Impaired feed-forward motor control delays the braking of rapid movements, resulting in target overshoot and subsequent oscillation. Transcortical and transcerebellar sensorimotor loops undergo oscillation at a frequency that depends on the mechanical properties of the limb and the length of the sensorimotor loop (mechanical reflex oscillation). The crescendo quality of intention tremor may be a result of amplification of tremor in reverberating brain stem-cerebellar or thalamocortical loops. So-called rubral or midbrain tremor is caused by a combination of damage to the brachium conjunctivum and nigrostriatal pathways in the vicinity of the red nucleus. Secondary compensatory changes in the motor system are probably involved because midbrain tremor in people usually begins weeks or months after a midbrain stroke or trauma. Harmaline causes enhanced neuronal synchrony and rhythmicity in the inferior olive; this animal model, although as yet unproven, is the most popular one for essential tremor (ET). Additional studies in laboratory animals are needed to define the seemingly universal involvement of the cerebellum and ventrolateral thalamus (ventralis intermedius [Vim]) in virtually all human tremor disorders.
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PMID:Animal models of action tremor. 982 92

We prospectively studied motor symptoms in 32 patients with CT- or MRI-proven acute pure parietal stroke. A transient, mild, 'pseudoparesis' of the hand (90%), was noted, improved by visual attention and prompting, associated with non-awareness of muscle power (53%), transient soft pyramidal signs (50%), unilateral akinesia (100%) and motor hemineglect (37%) in non-dominant lesions. Lower motoneurone-type atrophy was not observed in this acute phase. We called 'poikilotonia' the striking unpredictable variations in muscle tone, ranging from extreme hypertonia to hypotonia, found in all patients. When maintaining postures, patients showed large oscillations (100%), laterodeviation or levitation of the arm (60%), especially in the case of large or posterior lesions, or, occasionally (3%), motor persistence or even hemicatalepsy (3%). Limb kinetic and manipulatory apraxia, with inadequate organization and anticipation of motor sequences and synergies, motor arrests, perplexity, unrecognizable gestures and loss of bimanual coordination, was a constant finding (100%). Other apraxias (62%) and difficulty in copying intransitive gestures of the hand (84%) were associated with posterior lesions involving the supramarginal gyrus. When reaching towards objects, all patients showed abnormal anticipatory hand shaping, but visuomotor ataxia (3%) was only seen with bilateral posterior stroke. Sensory (70%) or pseudocerebellar (4%) ataxia, was seen in both anterior and posterior lesions. Avoidance behaviors (34%) were not uncommon, but had no localizing value. Of the dyskinesias, hand dystonia (84%) was frequent, but athetosis (16%), asterixis (15%), postural tremor (15%), myoclonus (9%) and stereotypia (9%), were uncommon. The abnormal eye movements were unilateral hypo-akinesia of exploratory saccades (43%), abnormal ipsilateral pursuit and contralateral optokinetic nystagmus in the case of posterior lesions, and oculomotor apraxia with bilateral posterior lesions. In conclusion, parietal motor syndrome can be recognized during bedside examination, and probably reflects the loss of multiple sensory feedback to motor programs, especially those directed to the extrapersonal space.
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PMID:Parietal motor syndrome: a clinical description in 32 patients in the acute phase of pure parietal strokes studied prospectively. 987 53

Thalamic neurons are known to switch their firing from a tonic pattern during wakefulness to a bursting pattern during sleep. Several studies have described the existence of bursting activity in awake chronic pain patients and have suggested that this activity is abnormal and may be related to their pain. However, we have frequently observed bursting activity in awake non-pain patients suggesting that there may not be a causal relationship between thalamic bursting activity and chronic pain. To examine this issue more rigorously we compared the incidence and pattern of bursting activity of lateral thalamic neurons of both pain and non-pain patients in a state of wakefulness. Recordings were obtained from lateral thalamic areas of different groups of patients (n = 91) suffering from pain disorders (e.g. anaesthesia dolorosa, phantom limb pain, trigeminal neuralgia, post-stroke pain) and motor disorders (e.g. Parkinson's disease, essential tremor) during stereotactic surgical procedures for the treatment of pain and movement disorders. Burst indices (the number of bursting cells per electrode track) were computed for all the explorations in the two groups. The burst indices in the pain and non-pain groups (1.73 +/- 0.28 and 1.14 +/- 0.16, respectively) were not significantly different from each other. The bursts were analyzed to see if they fulfilled the criteria of low-threshold calcium spike (LTS)-evoked bursts characterized by (i) a shortening of the first interspike interval with an increase in the number of interspike intervals in the burst and also (ii) a progressive prolongation of successive interspike intervals. LTS-evoked bursts were identified in 27/47 (57%) bursting cells in pain patients and 15/32 (47%) cells in non-pain patients. These data demonstrate that the occurrence of bursting activity and of LTS-evoked bursts in the human thalamus is prevalent in both pain and non-pain patients. This suggests that the bursting activity of thalamic neurons in pain patients is not necessarily related to the occurrence of their pain.
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PMID:A comparison of the burst activity of lateral thalamic neurons in chronic pain and non-pain patients. 1034 18

Aside from physiological tremor, essential tremor (ET) is by far the most common cause of tremor in humans, affecting large numbers of individuals in every human population. The crude prevalence of ET has been conservatively estimated to be between 0.4% and 3.9%, although some estimates of the prevalence of ET among the elderly are higher than 20%. Essential tremor is the most prevalent adult-onset movement disorder, and is also regarded as one of the most common neurological disorders of adults, with a prevalence that is similar to or greater than that of stroke, Alzheimer disease, migraine headache, and lumbosacral pain syndromes. Essential tremor is as much as 20 times more prevalent than Parkinson disease.
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PMID:A new twist for stopping the shakes? Revisiting GABAergic therapy for essential tremor. 1040 81

A 72-year-old woman experienced a sudden onset of spontaneous tremor and myoclonus of right extremities that completely subsided 24 hours after onset. Neuroimaging study revealed an infarct at the left ventral portion of thalamus and subthalamic nucleus. Concomitant dyskinetic movement disorders after stroke are extremely rare and the mechanism is herein discussed.
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PMID:An unusual concomitant tremor and myoclonus after a contralateral infarct at thalamus and subthalamic nucleus. 1056 82

Methamphetamine, called meth, crystal, or speed, is a central nervous system stimulant that can be injected, smoked, snorted, or ingested orally; prolonged use at high levels results in dependence. Methamphetamine (MA) is a derivative of amphetamine, which was widely prescribed in the 1950s and 1960s as a medication for depression and obesity, reaching a peak of 31 million prescriptions in the United States in 1967. Until the late 1980s, illicit use and manufacture of MA was endemic to California, but the MA user population has recently broadened in nature and in regional distribution, with increased use occurring in midwestern states. An estimated 4.7 million Americans (2.1% of the U.S. population) have tried MA at some time in their lives. Short- and long-term health effects of MA use include stroke, cardiac arrhythmia, stomach cramps, shaking, anxiety, insomnia, paranoia, hallucinations, and structural changes to the brain. Children of MA abusers are at risk of neglect and abuse, and the use of MA by pregnant women can cause growth retardation, premature birth, and developmental disorders in neonates and enduring cognitive deficits in children. MA-related deaths and admissions to hospital emergency rooms are increasing. Although inpatient hospitalization may be indicated to treat severe cases of long-term MA dependence, optimum treatment for MA abusers relies on an intensive outpatient setting with three to five visits per week of comprehensive counseling for at least the first three months. The burgeoning problems of increased MA use must be addressed by adequate treatment programs suitable for a variety of user types.
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PMID:History of the methamphetamine problem. 1090

New halogen atom substituted 2,3-benzodiazepine derivatives condensed with an azole ring on the seven membered part of the ring system of type 3 and 4 as well as 5 and 6 were synthesized. It was found that chloro-, dichloro- and bromo-substitutions in the benzene ring and additionally imidazole ring condensation on the diazepine ring can successfully substitute the methylenedioxy group in the well known molecules GYKI 52466 (1) and GYKI 53773 (2) and the 3-acetyl-4-methyl structural feature in 2, respectively, preserving the highly active AMPA antagonist characteristic of the original molecules. From the most active compounds (3b,i) 3b (GYKI 47261) was chosen for detailed investigations. 3b revealed an excellent, broad spectrum anticonvulsant activity against seizures evoked by electroshock and different chemoconvulsive agents indicating a possible antiepileptic efficacy. 3b was found to be highly active in a transient model of focal ischemia predictive of a therapeutic value in human stroke. 3b also reversed the dopamine depleting effect of MPTP and antagonized the oxotremorine induced tremor in mice indicating a potential antiparkinson activity.
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PMID:New non competitive AMPA antagonists. 1100 58

Hashimoto's encephalopathy is a poor understood neurological disorder associated with thyroid disease. We describe a 12 years old woman with a relapsing clinical picture characterized by acute onset confusion, tremor, convulsive seizures and a stroke-like episode associated with autoimmune thyroid disease. High titers of antithyroid antibodies were detected in her serum. Neurologic investigation showed a marked slowing of the basic activity in EEG, diminished perfusion of left hemisphere in brain SPECT, mild CSF protein level without pleocytosis, and normal brain CT and cerebral angiogram. The clinical course was favorable without corticosteroid therapy. Antithyroid antibodies and EEG were normal after one-year follow-up. We suggest that antithyroid antibody levels should be checked in any unexplained acute or subacute encephalopathy, especially when a relapsing course, stroke-like exacerbation, seizures, tremor or elevation of the CSF protein are found.
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PMID:[Hashimoto's encephalitis: a new case with spontaneous remission]. 1107 81


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