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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (tremor)
18,428 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report a 70-year-old man with progressive gait disturbance and gaze palsy. The patient was well until summer of 1991 when he was 66-year-old, when he noted a gradual onset of difficulty in gait and looking downward. He was evaluated in our hospital in May, 1994 when he was 69-year-old. On admission, he was alert but markedly demented with disorientation and memory loss. Constructional apraxia and dressing apraxia were noted. He had difficulty in gaze to all directions; he could move his eyes only 20% of the normal range. Oculocephalic response was retained. He had small voice and some dysphagia. Other cranial nerves were unremarkable. He could not walk unsupported. Marked retropulsion was noted in which he would fell down spontaneously upon standing unless supported. Moderate to marked rigidity was noted in the neck, trunk, and in the legs, however, in the upper extremities, rigidity was only mild. No tremor was noted. Deep reflexes were symmetrically exaggerated with ankle clonus bilaterally. Plantar response was flexor. Sensation was intact. Routine laboratory tests were unremarkable, however, his cranial MRI showed moderate to marked fronto-temporal atrophy and moderate midbrain and pontine tegmental atrophy. The third ventricle was markedly dilated. He was discharged for out patient care, however, his dysphagia had become progressively worse, and he suffered from frequent bouts of pneumonia. He was admitted to our service on October 17, 1994. His neurologic examination was essentially similar except that he showed more advanced dementia. He was still able to stand with support. Gastrostomy was placed on October 25. Post-operative course was unremarkable. He was discharged on November 1. His motor disturbance showed gradual deterioration, and by the May of 1995, he became bed-ridden, and was admitted to another hospital on May 30, 1995. He was almost totally unable to move his eyes, but oculocephalic response was still elicited. Marked truncal and limb rigidity were noted. He vomited coffee-ground substance on October 31, 1995, and developed hypotension. The subsequent course was complicated by pneumonia and he expired on November 24. The patient was discussed in a neurological CPC. Majority of the participants thought that the patient had progressive supranuclear palsy, but some participants thought that the patient had corticobasal degeneration because cortical atrophy was so marked. Post mortem examination revealed atrophy of the frontal and parietal lobe. The brain stem was atrophic particularly in the tegmental area including the midbrain. The substantia nigra showed marked neuronal loss and globose type neurofibrillary tangles in the remaining neurons. The neurons in the locus coeruleus was well retained, however neurofibrillary tangles were seen. In addition, the cerebellar dentate nucleus, the inferior olivary nucleus, and the internal globus pallidus showed marked neuronal loss and neurofibrillary degeneration. In the frontal cortex, although macroscopic examination showed some atrophy, microscopic examination failed to show neuronal loss or gliosis. The pathologic findings were consistent with the diagnosis of progressive supranuclear palsy.
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PMID:[A 70-year-old man with a progressive gait disturbance and gaze palsy]. 902 10

Several lines of clinical evidence suggest that myoclonus is caused by a reduction of serotonin in the brain and hyperactivity of the inferior olive. We determined whether a change in serotonin content within the olivocerebellar system accompanied a predisposition to myoclonus and investigated the necessity of the inferior olive for a myoclonic seizure. The experiments employed the genetically epilepsy-prone rat that exhibits a profound myoclonic seizure in response to an auditory stimulus. We found that these animals demonstrated a significant reduction in the serotonergic innervation of the inferior olive without a significant change in the serotonergic innervation at any other level of the olivocerebellar circuit. The deficit in olivary serotonin was verified physiologically and pharmacologically by a reduced sensitivity of the genetically epilepsy-prone rat to the tremorogenic effect of harmaline, which is known to produce tremor through a mechanism that requires serotonergic innervation of the inferior olive. We quantified the timing of the myoclonic seizure of the genetically epilepsy-prone rat and found that its large amplitude 2-6 Hz clonus was always preceded by 9-10 Hz tremor that was synchronized among limbs. Ablation of the inferior olive by 3-acetylpyridine abolished the myoclonic seizure. The specificity of the deficit in olivary serotonin, the timing of the seizure, and the demonstration of the necessity of the inferior olive for myoclonus suggest that pathological inferior olivary activity contributes to the genesis of a myoclonic seizure.
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PMID:Removal of the inferior olive abolishes myoclonic seizures associated with a loss of olivary serotonin. 948 43

Psychogenic tremor has become a rare movement disorder. Twenty-five patients from our movement disorder unit presented either with obviously nonorganic body shaking during stance or with extremity tremors. A sudden onset and a variable but rarely remitting course of the condition was common. The "coactivation sign of psychogenic tremor" and absent finger tremor were the most consistent criteria to separate them from organic tremors. Quantitative analysis of tremor shows decreasing amplitudes in most organic tremors when the extremity is loaded with additional weights. In contrast, we found an increase of tremor amplitude for most of the cases with psychogenic tremor. This might be caused by increased coactivation to maintain the oscillation. These clinical and electrophysiological features suggest a clonus mechanism induced by coactivation as the pathophysiological basis of psychogenic extremity tremor. Psychiatric evaluation did not show overt signs of hysteria for the majority of the patients. However, we found depression and functional somatic or psychosomatic conditions to be frequent among the patients. A reduced ability to cope with stressful situations may play a significant role. The clinical course of the condition is usually far from benign. We conclude that psychogenic tremor can be positively diagnosed by means of neurologic signs in the majority of patients and is not only a diagnosis of exclusion. The poor outcome makes early and serious neuropsychiatric attempts at therapy necessary.
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PMID:Diagnostic and pathophysiological aspects of psychogenic tremors. 953 44

An apparently new cardioskeletal myopathy is reported in three unrelated families. Five infants were affected by rapidly progressive generalized muscle weakness, with onset shortly after birth, and dilated cardiomyopathy. All had generalized tremor (clonus) starting in the first week of life. The disease was lethal in all cases between 4 and 6 months. Muscle biopsy, performed in four of the five patients, showed a light microscopic pattern of small type I and normal-sized type II fibres. By electron microscopy small fibres were affected by myofibrillar disruption and swelling of organelles. Findings in blood and urine suggested a disturbance in energy metabolism but an extensive search for respiratory chain disorders and disorders of mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation in frozen muscle and cultured fibroblasts was negative. The findings support a new progressive autosomal recessive infantile cardioskeletal myopathy in which type I muscle fibres are preferentially affected.
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PMID:Infantile fibre type disproportion, myofibrillar lysis and cardiomyopathy: a disorder in three unrelated Dutch families. 967 82

This is a proposal of the Movement Disorder Society for a clinical classification of tremors. The classification is based on the distinction between rest, postural, simple kinetic, and intention tremor (tremor during target-directed movements). Additional data from a medical history and the results of a neurologic examination can be combined into one of the following clinical syndromes defined in this statement: enhanced physiologic tremor, classical essential tremor (ET), primary orthostatic tremor, task- and position-specific tremors, dystonic tremor, tremor in Parkinson's disease (PD), cerebellar tremor, Holmes' tremor, palatal tremor, drug-induced and toxic tremor, tremor in peripheral neuropathies, or psychogenic tremor. Conditions such as asterixis, epilepsia partialis continua, clonus, and rhythmic myoclonus can be misinterpreted as tremor. The features distinguishing these conditions from tremor are described. Controversial issues are outlined in a comment section for each item and thus reflect the open questions that at present cannot be answered on a scientific basis. We hope that this statement provides a basis for better communication among clinicians working in the field and stimulates tremor research.
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PMID:Consensus statement of the Movement Disorder Society on Tremor. Ad Hoc Scientific Committee. 982 89

HIV-associated neurological manifestations: dementia, myelopathy, and neuropathy, have become one of the commonest causes of neurological disorders in young people. Cognitive impairment develops in about 30 p. 100 of patients with AIDS and frank dementia in 15 to 20 p. 100 with an annual incidence after AIDS of approximatively 7 p. 100. Typically, the onset of dementia is relatively abrupt over a few weeks or months. The clinical manifestations of the encephalopathy now termed "HIV-dementia", suggest predominant subcortical or frontal involvement. Typical presentation includes apathy and inertia, memory loss and cognitive slowing, minor depressive symptoms and withdrawal from usual activities. Neurological examination may show hypertonia of lower limbs, tremor, clonus, frontal release signs and hyperactive reflexes. Terminally, the patient is bedbound, incontinent, abulic or mute with decorticate posturing leading to death over 3 to 6 months. However, a stabilisation and even a regression of the cognitive disorders have been observed following antiretroviral treatment. Radiological features of HIV dementia include both central and cortical atrophy and white matter rarefaction. However they are neither invariable nor specific. Together with CSF examination, they are more important to exclude opportunistic infections. Indeed, although a completely normal CSF profile may reasonably exclude the diagnosis; at present, no single test or combination of tests can reliably diagnose HIV dementia. Although the clinical characteristics of HIV-dementia are now clearly established, its pathogenesis is unclear and its pathological counterpart remains a matter of debate. A number of "HIV-induced" lesions may be found in the brain of AIDS patients and their causative role in HIV-dementia has been considered. They include HIV encephalitis due to productive CNS infection by the virus, diffuse white matter pallor "HIV-leukoencephalopathy" reflecting an abnormality of the blood brain barrier, involvement of the grey matter, "diffuse poliodystrophy", with neuronal loss that results, at least partly, from a process of programmed cell death and axonal damage. These changes are variably associated in patients with HIV dementia, however none of them can be closely related to the cognitive disorders. This suggests that the neuronal dysfunction underlying HIV-dementia results from different mechanisms that are variably associated and may interact mutually. These include production of viral proteins, microglial activation with consequent production of neurotoxic factors such as proinflammatory cytokines, free radicals, derivates of arachidonic acid, or quinoleic acid, and blood borne neurotoxic factors in particular cytokines.
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PMID:[Dementia and human inmmunodeficiency virus infection]. 983 49

Tremor is defined as rhythmic oscillatory activity of body parts. Four physiological basic mechanisms for such oscillatory activity have been described: mechanical oscillations; oscillations based on reflexes; oscillations due to central neuronal pacemakers; and oscillations because of disturbed feedforward or feedback loops. New methodological approaches with animal models, positron emission tomography, and mathematical analysis of electromyographic and electroencephalographic signals have provided new insights into the mechanisms underlying specific forms of tremor. Physiological tremor is due to mechanical and central components. Psychogenic tremor is considered to depend on a clonus mechanism and is thus believed to be mediated by reflex mechanisms. Symptomatic palatal tremor is most likely due to rhythmic activity of the inferior olive, and there is much evidence that essential tremor is also generated within the olivocerebellar circuits. Orthostatic tremor is likely to originate in hitherto unidentified brainstem nuclei. Rest tremor of Parkinson's disease is probably generated in the basal ganglia loop, and dystonic tremor may also originate within the basal ganglia. Cerebellar tremor is at least in part caused by a disturbance of the cerebellar feedforward control of voluntary movements, and Holmes' tremor is due to the combination of the mechanisms producing parkinsonian and cerebellar tremor. Neuropathic tremor is believed to be caused by abnormally functioning reflex pathways and a wide variety of causes underlies toxic and drug-induced tremors. The understanding of the pathophysiology of tremor has made significant progress but many hypotheses are not yet based on sufficient data. Modern neurology needs to develop and test such hypotheses, because this is the only way to develop rational medical and surgical therapies.
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PMID:The pathophysiology of tremor. 1136 Feb 55

Administration of 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) or 3,4-methylenedioxyamphetamine (MDA) to rats produces serotonergic nerve terminal degeneration. However, they are not neurotoxic when injected directly into the brain, suggesting the requirement for peripheral metabolism of MDMA to a neurotoxic metabolite. Alpha-methyldopamine (alpha-MeDA) is a major metabolite of MDA. There are indications that a glutathione metabolite of alpha-MeDA and/or 3,4-dihydroxymethamphetamine may be responsible for the neurotoxicity and some of the behavioural effects produced by MDMA and/or MDA. The present study details the synthesis, purification and separation of the 5-(glutathion-S-yl)-alpha-MeDA and 6-(glutathion-S-yl)-alpha-MeDA regioisomers of alpha-MeDA. Incubation of MDA with human liver microsomes demonstrated that production of both glutathione adducts are related to cytochrome P450 2D6 isoform activity. Following intracerebroventricular administration (180 nmol) of either GSH adduct into Dark Agouti or Sprague-Dawley rats only 5-(glutathion-S-yl)-alpha-MeDA produced behavioural effects characterised by hyperactivity, teeth chattering, tremor/trembling, head weaving, splayed posture, clonus and wet dog shakes. Pre-treatment with a dopamine receptor antagonist (haloperidol, 0.25 mg/kg; i.p.) attenuated hyperactivity, teeth chattering, low posture and clonus and potentiated splayed postural effects. These results indicate that MDA can be converted into two glutathione regioisomers by human liver microsomes, but only the 5-(glutathion-S-yl)-alpha-MeDA adduct is behaviourally active in the rat.
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PMID:Synthesis, in vitro formation, and behavioural effects of glutathione regioisomers of alpha-methyldopamine with relevance to MDA and MDMA (ecstasy). 1449 58

A 65-year-old female patient with major depressive disorder suffered from clonus, shivering and impaired visual acuity after 20 mg/day of paroxetine administration. The symptoms were initially regarded as further manifestations of her somatic symptoms of depression, and paroxetine was increased to 30 mg/day resulting in frequent clonus, increased shivering, serious dysarthria, ongoing impairment in visual acuity and agitation. These symptoms subsided upon paroxetine discontinuation. Ten mg/day of paroxetine rechallenge provoked dysarthria, tremor and headache, but these symptoms improved again upon paroxetine discontinuation. These findings indicate that the patient's symptoms were not somatic in origin but were in fact the symptoms of serotonin syndrome. In conclusion, the present case suggests the difficulty in diagnosing serotonin syndrome in a patient with somatic symptoms.
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PMID:Serotonin syndrome in a case of depression with various somatic symptoms: the difficulty in differential diagnosis. 1691 68

In this study, a neuromusculoskeletal model was built to give insight into the mechanisms behind the modulation of reflexive feedback strength as experimentally identified in the human shoulder joint. The model is an integration of a biologically realistic neural network consisting of motoneurons and interneurons, modeling 12 populations of spinal neurons, and a one degree-of-freedom musculoskeletal model, including proprioceptors. The model could mimic the findings of human postural experiments, using presynaptic inhibition of the Ia afferents to modulate the feedback gains. In a pathological case, disabling one specific neural connection between the inhibitory interneurons and the motoneurons could mimic the experimental findings in complex regional pain syndrome patients. It is concluded that the model is a valuable tool to gain insight into the spinal contributions to human motor control. Applications lay in the fields of human motor control and neurological disorders, where hypotheses on motor dysfunction can be tested, like spasticity, clonus, and tremor.
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PMID:Analysis of reflex modulation with a biologically realistic neural network. 1750 69


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