Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twenty index patients with hereditary essential
tremor
and their kindreds were studied to define the phenotype of this condition. Ninety-three first degree and 38 more distant relatives were examined; 53 definite and 18 possible secondary cases were identified. The age of
tremor
onset was bimodally distributed with a median at approximately 15 years. Segregation analysis indicated autosomal dominant inheritance and penetrance was virtually complete by the age of 65 years. There were no examples of the disease skipping a generation. Men and women were affected in equal proportions. About 50% of cases were alcohol responsive. In the majority of families alcohol responsiveness was either consistently present or did not occur, but in 20% of kindreds definite heterogeneity of responsiveness was encountered within each family. The typical phenotype was a mild symmetrical postural
tremor
of the upper limbs.
Tremor
of the legs, head, facial muscles, voice, jaw and tongue occurred but never in isolation and rest, task specific (e.g. primary writing
tremor
) and primary orthostatic tremors were not found. Head
tremor
was invariably mild and 75% was of a 'no-no' type. Dystonia (e.g. torticollis and writer's cramp) were not encountered, a finding which strongly suggests that many previous studies of 'essential
tremor
' were contaminated by cases of idiopathic or hereditary torsion dystonia. No association with Parkinson's disease was found but
classical migraine
occurred in approximately 26% of cases and co-segregated with
tremor
. The severity of arm
tremor
(assessed using a clinical rating scale and by scoring
tremor
in Archimedes spirals) and disability increased with advancing age and increasing
tremor
duration, but there was no correlation between age at
tremor
onset and either
tremor
severity or disability. Men and women were affected with equal severity. The sex of the affected parent had no influence on the severity of
tremor
or the degree of disability experienced by an affected child. Disability commenced in the second decade and progressively increased. All the index patients and 59% of the definite secondary cases had
tremor
induced disabilities. Eighty-five percent of index patients and 38% of secondary cases also reported some degree of social handicap. Twenty-five percent of index patients and 12% of secondary cases had been compelled to change jobs or retire. Biological fitness was normal.
...
PMID:A study of hereditary essential tremor. 792 67