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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We studied seven patients with AIDS or AIDS-related complex (ARC) and movement disorders. Three had
hemichorea
-ballismus, two had segmental myoclonus, one had postural
tremor
with dystonia, and one had paroxysmal dystonia. Besides the hyperkinesias, two patients had parkinsonism, and one had cerebral Whipple's disease. In two, the movement disorder preceded other evidence of AIDS; in three others, the diagnosis of AIDS was not considered until there was a movement disorder. The movement disorders were attributed to toxoplasmosis in four patients (one confirmed at autopsy), viral encephalitis, vacuolar myelopathy, and CNS Whipple's disease.
...
PMID:Movement disorders and AIDS. 379 36
Reports of 62 cases with a movement disorder associated with a focal lesion in the thalamus and/or subthalamic region were analyzed. Thirty-three cases had a lesion confined to the thalamus. Sixteen cases had a thalamic lesion extending into the subthalamic region and/or midbrain. Thirteen cases had a lesion in the subthalamic region or a subthalamic lesion extending into the midbrain. Nineteen cases with dystonia, 18 with asterixis, 17 with ballism-chorea, three with paroxysmal dystonia, and five with clonic or myorhythmic movements have been described. No case with isolated
tremor
has been described. In 53 cases with unilateral thalamic or subthalamic lesions, all but one with bilateral blepharospasm (associated with right posterior thalamic, pontomesencephalic, and bilateral cerebellar lesions) had dyskinesias in the limbs contralateral to the lesion. The other nine cases had bilateral paramedian thalamic lesions; seven developed bilateral dyskinesias, and the remaining two had unilateral dyskinesias. Regarding the 19 patients with dystonia, the two with bilateral blepharospasm had thalamic and upper brainstem lesions, and one with hemidystonia and torticollis had a subthalamic lesion. The other 16 patients all had a unilateral thalamic lesion with contralateral dystonia (10 hemidystonia, five focal dystonia affecting a hand and/or and one segmental dystonia involving face, arm, and hand). The exact location of the thalamic lesion was mentioned in 10 cases; the posterior or posterolateral thalamus was involved in six and the paramedian thalamus in four. These areas are more posterior or medial to the ventrolateral and ventroanterior thalamic nuclei, which receive pallido-thalamic and nigro-thalamic afferents. Two cases developed dystonia immediately after thalamotomy, and one case developed it 4 days after head trauma. The others initially had a hemiplegia and developed dystonia 1-9 months after the acute insult. Fifteen of the 17 patients with chorea had a unilateral lesion in the subthalamic nucleus or subthalamic region (eight due to infarcts, one to hemorrhage, five to mass lesions, and one to multiple sclerosis). All had contralateral
hemichorea
or hemiballism. One other case had bilateral chorea of the hands and tongue due to paramedian thalamic infarction. Another case with generalized chorea and thalamic atrophy was complicated by stereotaxic surgery. Thirteen of the 18 cases with asterixis had lesions confined to the thalamus. Eight were associated with thalamotomy, and five others had a stroke (four infarction and one hemorrhage) affecting the contralateral thalamus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Movement disorders following lesions of the thalamus or subthalamic region. 799 Aug 45
We studied 1086 AIDS patients in the last six years. Of these 389 (35.82%) had neurological manifestation and 7 (1.8%) male patients had abnormal involuntary movements (parkinsonism in 3,
hemichorea
-hemiballism in 2, spinal myoclonus in 1 and rubral
tremor
in another). All patients were men, 5 white and 2 black. Four were homosexual, 2 drug-users and 1 bisexual. The mean age was 33.14 years. The time between AIDS diagnosis and the onset of movement disorders was 23.8 months in 5 patients and in 2 it was the first symptom. The parkinsonian patients did not show any opportunistic infection in connection with the neurological symptoms but in the remaining four cases this relationship was suggested. The data showed that not only the opportunistic infection but also the AIDS virus may play an important role on the development of involuntary movements.
...
PMID:Involuntary movements and AIDS: report of seven cases and review of the literature. 814 50
Stroke-related nonepileptic transient dyskinesias are rare, and the site of ischemia remains often undetermined. Five cases out of 47 consecutive thalamic infarcts (10.6 per cent) are reported. Patients presented with monochorea (1 case), hemiballism-
hemichorea
(2 cases), choreoathetosis (1 case with subsequent arm painful dystonia and hand
tremor
), and asterixis (1 case). Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated that the subthalamic nucleus was spared in all cases. Transient dyskinesias occurred at any time in the course of infarction (as a warning sign in 1 case, as an associated symptom in 3 cases, or during recovery in 1 case). Moreover, this study suggests that: 1) transient dyskinesias are mainly related to thalamic ischemic injury, and 2) small vessels disease is the main etiology.
...
PMID:[Transient involuntary movement disorders and thalamic infarction]. 830 59
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.
...
PMID:Evaluation of the effect of treatment on movement disorders in astrocytomas of the basal ganglia and the thalamus. 841 11
We describe the clinical characteristics, causes and response to treatment in 6 patients with AIDS who presented with abnormal movement disorders between January 1987 and July 1993 in our hospital, 3 with hemiballismus-
hemichorea
, 1 with athetosis, 1 myoclonia and 1 with "rubric"
tremor
. Brain imaging showed lesions in the corpus striatum in all the patients. Suspected diagnoses were cerebral toxoplasmosis in 4, cerebral lymphoma in 1 and progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy in 1. The toxoplasmosis patients showed improvement (2 cases) or disappearance (2 cases) of movements with antiparasitic therapy. Treatment provided no benefit to the patients with leukoencephalopathy and lymphoma. Hemiballismus-
hemichorea
was the most common movement disorder in AIDS patients. The underlying cause is usually lesions in the basal ganglia arising from toxoplasmosis. If the lesions are so caused, movements may improve with antiparasitic therapy.
...
PMID:[Movement disorders and AIDS]. 865 95
Nineteen Macaca fascicularis monkeys were divided into four different groups: Group A (n = 3), control; Group B (n = 3), monkeys treated with 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP); Group C (n = 8), animals treated with MPTP in which the subthalamic nucleus (STN) was unilaterally lesioned by kainic acid injection; in Group D (n = 5), the STN was lesioned prior to MPTP administration. Subthalamotomy resulted in a bilateral improvement of
tremor
, spontaneous activity, bradykinesia (evaluated by a manual motor test) and freezing in Group C. All these monkeys developed
hemichorea
contralateral to the lesion. The improvement was maintained and the
hemichorea
continued until death. The monkeys in group D showed severe hemiballism which persisted throughout MPTP administration and developed parkinsonian signs mainly on the side ipsilateral to the lesion. Analysis of the in situ hybridization of the mRNA coding for glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) of MPTP monkeys showed a significant increase in the mean density of silver grains over every labelled neuron in the globus pallidum lateralis (56.8% over control) as well as the globus pallidus medialis (GPM) (45.7% over control) and the substantia nigra reticulata (SNR) (35.8% over control). No significant change was observed in the thalamic nucleus reticularis. Subthalamotomy (Groups C and D) produced a significant reduction in mRNA GAD expression on the side of the lesion in the GPM and the SNR (34% and 42.3%, respectively) with respect to the ipsilateral (non-lesioned) side and also when compared with parkinsonian monkeys. These results confirm and expand, at the cellular level, the paramount role of STN hyperactivity in the pathophysiology of parkinsonism. The therapeutic consequences of these findings for surgical treatment of Parkinson's disease are discussed.
...
PMID:Subthalamotomy in parkinsonian monkeys. Behavioural and biochemical analysis. 893 92
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.
...
PMID:Lesion localization in developing poststroke hand dystonia. 969 39
The effects of deep brain or epidural cortical stimulation on poststroke involuntary and voluntary movement disorders were analyzed in a total of 64 patients. Among them, 22 patients underwent either deep brain or epidural cortical stimulation in order to control their poststroke involuntary movements. The remaining 42 underwent epidural cortical stimulation for the purpose of controlling their poststroke pain. In the latter group of patients, we analyzed the changes in coexistent involuntary or voluntary movement disorders during stimulation for pain control. Stimulation of either the thalamic nucleus ventralis intermedius or the motor cortex proved to be useful in 13 (59%) of the patients who underwent deep brain or epidural cortical stimulation for control of poststroke involuntary movements. Satisfactory control was often achieved in patients with hemiballismus,
hemichorea
or resting
tremor
. In 8 (19%) of the patients who underwent epidural cortical stimulation for pain control, stimulation of the motor cortex improved motor performance which had been impaired in association with hemiparesis. Such an effect was independent of pain control and apparently resulted from an inhibition of their rigidity. We believe that these findings justify further clinical studies on deep brain or epidural cortical stimulation for the control of poststroke movement disorders.
...
PMID:Control of poststroke involuntary and voluntary movement disorders with deep brain or epidural cortical stimulation. 971 37
We report on two patients with unilateral hyperkinetic movement disorders associated with contralateral hemiparesis and ipsilateral basal ganglia lesions. The first patient, a 47-year-old woman, had a low-grade astrocytoma located in the right basal ganglia extending into the subthalamic area and the cerebral peduncle. She presented with left hemiparesis, right
hemichorea
, and intermittent right-sided
tremor
at rest. The second patient, a 85-year-old woman, had hypertensive hemorrhage to the right posterior basal ganglia, the posterior limb of the internal capsule, the lateral thalamus, and the subthalamic region with accompanying intraventricular bleeding. She developed right-sided transient
hemichorea
-hemiballism. A videotape illustration of one of the patients is provided. The literature on the rare occurrence of ipsilateral
hemichorea
-hemiballism is discussed and possible pathomechanisms are reviewed. We postulate that hemiparesis contralateral to basal ganglia lesions might have a conditioning effect on the appearance of ipsilateral dyskinetic movement disorders.
...
PMID:Hemichorea and hemiballism associated with contralateral hemiparesis and ipsilateral basal ganglia lesions. 1034 77
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