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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Current treatment of spastic
dysphonia
may involve unilateral RLN section preceded by a temporary chemical paralysis of one RLN as a diagnostic test. This study compared the immediate postchemical paralysis and postsurgical paralysis voice and speech qualities of 33 spastic dysphonic patients using perceptual, acoustic, and temporal measurements and found that following section of the RLN, there was a decrease in overpressure and aperiodicity, an increase in vocal range, and a reduction of breathiness. Vocal
tremor
and speech rate were variably affected. It appears that chemical paralysis of the RLN is a fairly accurate means of previewing the postsurgical voice.
...
PMID:Predicting postoperative voice characteristics of spastic dysphonia patients. 50 3
Studies on rats with unilateral nigral lesions suggest that a new ergoline, CF 25-397, is a dopaminergic agonist that might improve parkinsonism. CF 25-397 induces less stereotyped behavior than other dopaminergic agents in rats, and might therefore cause less dyskinesia than levodopa in man. We investigated the clinical actions of CF 25-397 in nine patients. During treatment, severe deterioration resulted in hypokinesia and rigidity; five patients showed marked dysphagia and
dysphonia
. There was statistically significant deterioration in four timed tests. Mild improvement, not statistically significant, was noted in
tremor
. These results indicate that clinical implication of the response to potential therapeutic agents in rodent models of parkinsonism must be interpreted with caution.
...
PMID:Experiences with a new ergoline (CF 25-397) in parkinsonism. 56 12
The clinical features of 12 patients with spasmodic
dysphonia
are described. In 11 patients, the voice was strained, harsh, tight, and tremulous, and was low in volume and pitch. Speech, which was sometimes barely intelligible, was interrupted by irregular stoppages and catches of the voice; it required considerable effort, and was accompanied by facial grimacing. The
dysphonia
was part of a more widespread neurological disorder (idiopathic torsion dystonia) in one case, while it coexisted with blepharospasm in another, and with postural
tremor
in two. There was a buccolingual hyskinesia in another of these 11 patients, but this may have been related to her previous drug regime. In the twelfth patient, who had a familial
tremor
, the voice was characterised by marked breathiness, with intermittent aphonia. The disorder is probably due to a focal dystonia of the laryngeal musculature, and this would be consistent with the type of neurological disorders that were associated with it in our cases. Symptomatic benefit follows the therapeutic division of one of the recurrent laryngeal nerves, in selected cases.
...
PMID:Clinical aspects of spasmodic dysphonia. 65 Feb 44
Two sporadic cases of striato-nigral degeneration were characterized by the onset at the age of 61 of an akinetic-hypertonic syndrome and of a minimal or absent rest
tremor
, with a pyramidal syndrome, sphincter disorders,
dysphonia
, difficulty in swallowing and an unfavorable development in the space of two or three years not affected by L-Dopa. In one case, total insomnia was demonstrated by means of 3 polygraphic recordings during the night, two of them consecutive, and aprobenecide test showed a definite fall in H.V.A. and 5 H.I.A.A. in the lumbar cerebrospinal fluid. Anatomical verification showed, in one case, isolated putamino-nigral degeneration, and in the other associated with lesions of the olivo-cerebellopontine system. Much of the excess pigmentation found only in the putamen was melanotic in character and resulted perhaps from the striato-nigral degeneration, making it possible to classify this more accurately among the other multisystem degenerations, especially olivo-ponto-cerebellar atrophy and Shy-Drager syndrome
...
PMID:[Striato-nigral degeneration. A propos of 2 anatomo-clinical cases]. 96 12
A chart review from 151 dysphonic patients over the age of 60 was done to define aging related voice disorders. Overwhelmingly, patients suffered from
dysphonia
due to disease processes associated with aging rather than to physiologic aging alone. These include: 1. central neurological disorders affecting laryngeal function (e.g., stroke, Parkinson's disease, essential
tremor
, Alzheimer's disease); 2. benign vocal fold lesions (e.g., Reinke's edema, benign and dysplastic epithelial lesions); 3. inflammatory disorders (e.g., laryngitis sicca, medication effect); 4. laryngeal neoplasia; and 5. laryngeal paralysis. Typical laryngeal findings of vocal fold bowing and breathiness consistent with presbylarynges were present in only six patients. Presbylarynges is not a common disorder and should be a diagnosis of exclusion made only after careful medical and speech evaluation.
...
PMID:Dysphonia in the aging: physiology versus disease. 173 85
To study the demographic and clinical correlates of essential
tremor
(ET), we analyzed a comprehensive database of 350 patients evaluated at the Movement Disorders Clinic at Baylor College of Medicine from 1982 to 1989. The age at onset of
tremor
showed bimodal distribution for both male and female patients, with peaks in 2nd and 6th decades. ET appeared most frequently in hands, followed by head, voice, tongue, leg, and trunk. Half of the patients (47%) had associated dystonia, including cervical dystonia, writer's cramp, spasmodic
dysphonia
, and cranial dystonia, and 20% of the patients had associated parkinsonism. At least one 1st-degree relative of 62.5% of ET patients reported
tremor
. Alcohol relieved
tremor
in 2/3 of ET patients. Sixty-eight percent of patients who had adequate follow-up improved with propranolol, and 72% with primidone. There was no significant difference in various clinical variables between the 219 patients with familial ET and 131 with sporadic ET. Patients with early-onset ET were more likely to have hand involvement and associated dystonia than patients with late-onset ET. Dystonia was more frequently associated with mild ET than with severe ET. Patients with low-frequency
tremor
were older and had more head but less hand involvement than patients with high-frequency
tremor
. The lack of relevant differences between ET subgroups suggests that, despite variable expression, ET represents a single disease entity.
...
PMID:Essential tremor: clinical correlates in 350 patients. 162 Mar 68
Spasmodic dysphonia is a disturbance of phonation with laryngeal spasms. We report voice and neurologic examination findings in 45 subjects. Neurologic abnormalities were found in 32 subjects (71.1%). Rapid alternating movement abnormalities, weakness, and
tremor
were common. Incoordination and spasticity were rare. Lower extremity findings were frequent. Abnormalities were bilateral. Spasmodic dysphonia severity was related to age. Type, severity, and duration of vocal symptoms were not different for subjects with or without neurologic abnormalities. Vocal
tremor
was more frequent in neurologically abnormal subjects. Involvement of a pallidothalamic-supplementary motor area system could account for neurologic findings, brain imaging findings, and clinical heterogeneity. The view emerging is that spasmodic
dysphonia
is a manifestation of disordered motor control involving systems of neurons rather than single anatomical sites.
...
PMID:Heterogeneity in spasmodic dysphonia. Neurologic and voice findings. 200 Nov 89
We discuss the etiology of 100 spasmodic
dysphonia
patients. Seventy-one patients had underlying essential
tremor
, 25 had Meige's syndrome, 12 were hypothyroid, and 27 had either a functional disturbance or focal dystonia. Six patients had intermittent breathy
dysphonia
. A large corpus of spasmodic
dysphonia
patients have organic neurolaryngeal disease.
...
PMID:Neurologic aspects of spasmodic dysphonia. 204 Oct 67
Twenty patients with the distinct nosological entity of adductor spastic
dysphonia
(SD) were seen at St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney over a 6-year period. Nine of these patients also experienced a tremulous voice associated with evidence of an essential
tremor
(ET) elsewhere, including head, trunk and limbs. The mean age of onset in patients with SD was 45 years and in those with SD with ET was 52 years. In 10 patients the onset was gradual, with the remaining 10 experiencing an abrupt onset, in 3 related to an upper respiratory tract infection and in 7 to psychosocial stress. Factors which frequently resulted in a worsening of speech included stress, public speaking, tiredness, strong emotions, upper respiratory tract infections and prolonged use of the voice. In patients with SD alone temporary relieving factors included spontaneous statements, use of a quiet voice, slow speech, high and low pitch, yawning, chewing, swallowing, laughing and on first waking in the morning. The response to therapy was variable. Two patients underwent recurrent laryngeal nerve sectioning.
...
PMID:A review of 20 cases of spastic dysphonia. 264 27
Spastic (spasmodic)
dysphonia
(SD) may coexist with or reflect certain neurologic or psychogenic illnesses. The present study of four patients with adductor SD (ASD) revealed several consistent clinical findings and characteristics that could be differentiated, while other findings were not distinguishable. Oscillographic and spectral analyses suggested voice
tremor
as a component of the
dysphonia
in all ASD patients studied. Clinical neurologic and otolaryngologic findings were nonconfirmatory regarding a disease process or state.
...
PMID:Clinical investigations of adductor spastic dysphonia. 337 92
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