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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thirty-six patients with Parkinson's disease and medically refractory
tremor
underwent stereotactic ventrolateralis thalamotomy at the Mayo Clinic between 1984 and 1989. All patients had been or were being treated with carbidopa/levodopa but with unsatisfactory
tremor
control. Modern stereotactic techniques, including microelectrode recording, were used to treat 36 patients, of whom 31 (86%) had complete abolition of
tremor
and three patients (5%) had significant improvement.
Tremor
recurred in two patients within 3 months of surgery; however, the remaining patients suffered no recurrence of
tremor
during follow-up periods ranging from 14 to 68 months (mean 33 months). Persistent complications (arm dyspraxia, dysarthria, dysphasia, or
abulia
) were noted in five patients but were a source of disability in only two. It is concluded that thalamotomy in carefully selected patients is a beneficial operation for the control of medically refractory parkinsonian resting
tremor
.
...
PMID:Stereotactic ventrolateralis thalamotomy for medically refractory tremor in post-levodopa era Parkinson's disease patients. 156 56
Posteroventral pallidotomy (PVP) has been shown to alleviate motor symptoms in Parkinson's disease (PD), e.g., rigidity, secondary akinesia due to existence of muscle rigidity and slight
tremor
, but not the marked
tremor
. For the latter, additional lesion of the ventral intermediate nucleus of the thalamus is necessary. Akinesia was divided into three subtypes, and the influence of PVP on each type is described. Primary akinesia is not changed by either PVP or thalamotomy but responds well to L-dopa. Psychological symptoms, i.e., depressive mood, loss of initiation or
abulia
, and lowered emotional activity, which are generally termed as bradyphrenia, benefit well from PVP but less from thalamotomy. This effect is interpreted as due to the lesion extending into the ventral pallidum, where a small posterior part of the limbic-motor projections may possibly be involved. Such experience suggests that the third type of akinesia in PD, named the 'psychomotor or limbic-motor type' by the author, can be improved by the surgical procedure on the ventral globus pallidus. These observations offer an important chance to understand the psychological symptoms in PD as a result of dopamine deficiency of ventral tegmental area neurons projecting to the ventral striatum, which further influences the ventral pallidum.
...
PMID:Pallidotomy revisited. Analysis of posteroventral pallidotomy. 971 34
An update of the endemic parkinsonism-dementia complex (PDC) frequently associated with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) in the high prevalence ALS focus of the Kii peninsula of Japan is presented. The initial symptom was parkinsonian gait or hypobulia/amnesia, which was followed by akinesia, rigidity, occasional
tremor
, bradyphrenia,
abulia
and amnesia, and finally by akinetic mutism. In several years, most of the patients developed ALS symptoms such as muscle atrophy, bulbar palsy, and upper motor neuron signs. Magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography of the brain showed marked atrophy of the temporal and frontal lobes and the cerebral blood flow reduction on single-photon emission computed tomography. Marked loss of nerve cells associated with abundant neurofibrillar tangles (NFTs) in the entire central nervous system, most predominantly in the brainstem and temporal lobe was characteristic. Concomitant ALS pathology involving the upper and lower motor neurons was common, and senile plaques were absent in most cases. NFTs consisted of twisted tubules on electron microscopy. Western blot of tau protein showed three bands consisting of six tau isoforms, similar to those of Alzheimer's disease. A family history of ALS/PDC was recorded in more than 70% of patients, but no abnormal mutation or polymorphism was found in the genes of SOD1, tau, and apolipoprotein E. Familial nature and continuing morbidity of Kii ALS/PDC suggest that genetic factors may be more likely in its pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Atypical parkinsonism of Japan: amyotrophic lateral sclerosis-parkinsonism-dementia complex of the Kii peninsula of Japan (Muro disease): an update. 1609 99
Parkinson disease (PD) is characterized by a number of motor and behavioral abnormalities that could be considered deficits of a "no task" or "resting" state, including resting motor findings and defects in emerging from a resting state (e.g., resting
tremor
, elevated resting tone,
abulia
, akinesia, apathy). PET imaging, and recently, the MRI technique of continuous arterial spin labeling (CASL) have shown evidence of changes in metabolic patterns in individuals with PD. The purpose of this study was to learn if the presence of PD could be "predicted" based on resting fluctuations of the BOLD signal. Participants were 15 healthy controls, 14 subjects with PD, and 1 subject who presented as a control but later developed PD. The amplitude of the low frequency fluctuation (ALFF) was used as an index of brain activity level in the resting state. Participants with PD using this index showed a reliable decrease in activity in a number of regions, including the supplementary motor cortex, the mesial prefrontal cortex, the right middle frontal gyrus, and the left cerebellum (lobule VII/VIII) as well as increased activity in the right cerebellum (lobule IV/V). Using a cross validation approach we term "Reliability Mapping of Regional Differences" (RMRD) to analyze our sample, we were able to reliably distinguish participants with PD from controls with 92% sensitivity and 87% specificity. Our "pre-diagnostic" subject segregated in our analysis with the PD group. These results suggest that resting fMRI should be considered for development as a biomarker and analytical tool for evaluation of PD.
...
PMID:Reliability analysis of the resting state can sensitively and specifically identify the presence of Parkinson disease. 2192 67