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

Any attempt to classify and to understand the basic mechanism underlying the neurological symptoms as pyramidal and/or sensitive, should start from the fundamental laws of nervous system functioning: 1) the law of reciprocal innervation of Sherrington; 2) the law of hierarchy of levels of Jackson and 3) the law of supersensitivity of deafferented structures of Cannon. Paresis on one side, Jacksonian jerks on the other side represent two opposite conditions known respectively as negative and positive symptoms of corticomotor involvement. Unluckly involuntary movements cannot be explained with these three laws. They are the clinical expression of the disorganization and disintegration of functions: a true disregulation unrespectful of laws and general principles. They must be considered as the result of conflicts of antagonist functions controlling each other, i.e. tremor, chorea, myoclonus, torsion spasm etc. The author emphasizes the clinical-descriptive aspect of the problem.
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PMID:[Involuntary movements]. 269

Unilateral loss of horizontal semicircular canal function, termed canal paresis, is an important finding in dizzy patients. To our knowledge, apart from head-shaking nystagmus, no clinical sign of canal paresis has yet been described and the term derives from the characteristic finding on caloric tests: little or no nystagmus evoked by either hot or cold irrigation of the affected ear. We describe a simple and reliable clinical sign of total unilateral loss of horizontal semicircular canal function: one large or several small oppositely directed, compensatory, refixation saccades elicited by rapid horizontal head rotation toward the lesioned side. Using magnetic search coils to measure head and eye movement, we have validated this sign in 12 patients who had undergone unilateral vestibular neurectomy.
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PMID:A clinical sign of canal paresis. 339 28

During the 6 years between 1980 and 1985, 39 nursing home patients were admitted to the Hvidovre Burns Unit in Copenhagen with accidental burns. These patients accounted for 20 per cent of all burn patients above the age of 69 years admitted during this period. The median age of the patients was 80 years. Two-thirds of them suffered from burns of less than 15 per cent of their total body surface area. The mortality rate was 64 per cent. All patients were burned in single-person accidents, most often while sitting alone in their own living room, and smoking materials were involved in 85 per cent of the injuries. Senility, hemiplegia and other neurological diseases with tremor or paresis were frequently present in the victims. Several preventive measures are proposed, including smoking under supervision, use of flame-resistant aprons of adequate size, flame-resistant materials in chairs, etc., and installation of smoke detectors in rooms where patients smoke. A possible relation between the marked incidence of these accidents during weekends or holidays, at a time when staff numbers are reduced in the nursing homes, is discussed.
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PMID:The nursing home patient--a burn-prone person. An epidemiological study. 344 26

Muscular deficit, voluntary movement disorders, abnormal movements, and global disturbance of movements are considered. A muscular deficit is part of the Dejerine-Roussy syndrome. It appears as hemiparesis, regressive within days or weeks. A juxta-thalamic capsular involvement can be considered as the origin of this deficit in most cases, especially in hemorrhagic processes even if these are located within the thalamus, on account of mass effect. The occurrence of paresis or paralysis in ischemic processes strictly situated in the thalamus, however, is discussed: the deficit may be limited to parts of limbs; most often, it is not associated with pyramidal symptomatology; recovery is observed in the hand before the inferior limb. To these anatomoclinical facts some data from animal experiments or thalamic stereotaxic surgical procedures in humans must be added. A deafferentiation from the cortex seems to be the main cause of these motor disturbances. Three types of voluntary movement disorders may be encountered: contralateral cerebellar incoordination due to the involvement of the nucleus ventrooralis posterior where the superior cerebellar peduncle ends; homolateral imitative syncinesias, not confined to thalamic lesions, but frequently observed in this location with a particular aspect; contracture. Abnormal movements include choreoathetosic movements, and exceptionally intention and action tremor, and asterixis. They primarily involve the superior limb, but reported cases are not associated with thalamic limited lesions. Global disturbance of movements is observed in the hand or gait. "Thalamic hand" consists of incessant finger movements in the vertical and horizontal planes. They are associated with thalamic dystonia and deep sensibility disorder.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Motor symptomatology of the thalamus]. 378 43

The olivopontocerebellar atrophies (OPCA) can be divided into five disease entities. One of these, dominant OPCA with dementia and extrapyramidal signs, is better defined by the family we studied. Five persons in three generations were affected by progressive ataxia, tremor, rigidity and mental deterioration, beginning in their twenties and thirties. Neurologic examination showed mental deterioration, high-pitched dysarthric voice, gaze paresis, rigidity and coarse tremor. This disease differs from other dominant and recessive OPCAs clinically because of the prominent mental deterioration and extrapyramidal signs, and pathologically because of cortical, lentiform and substantia nigra neuronal loss.
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PMID:Dominant olivopontocerebellar atrophy with dementia and extrapyramidal signs: report of a family through three generations. 517 58

The mutant strain of Wistar rats carrying an autosomal recessive gene defect is characterized by a sequence of progressively developing behavioural alterations including hyperexcitability, tremor, olfactory and gustatory automatisms, bradykinesia, ataxia, rigidity, paresis and cachexia. The stereotypy and locomotor responses to increasing doses of apomorphine hydrochloride and D-amphetamine sulphate, and the catalepsy response to increasing doses of haloperidol were studied in mutant rats at the age of 6-7 weeks. In the mutants, both the stereotypy and locomotor responses to amphetamine were enhanced, while stereotypy and locomotor effects induced by apomorphine were unaltered. The cataleptic response to haloperidol was significantly diminished compared to controls. These findings indicate a derangement in the function of basal ganglia in the mutants.
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PMID:Stereotypy, locomotor and cataleptic effects produced by drugs influencing dopaminergic systems in a mutant strain of Wistar rats: a genuine model of basal ganglia dysfunction? 653 16

Comprehensive treatment, including pharmacotherapy, rehabilitation, psychotherapy and ultrasound stimulation of the lymphatic system by the method of Seltzer is given to multiple sclerosis patients at the hospital department for these patients. In the first year of treatment three courses of ultrasound sessions are given with 24 sessions in each course, in the second year two such courses are given, and in the following years one course is given yearly. The present material comprised 45 patients after 7 or 8 courses of treatment in the hospital. The neurological status of each patient was evaluated before the first course and after the last one using a score scale containing the most important clinical parameters. Is was found that these therapeutic methods had only a negligible effect on paresis of the extremities, but it seems that they influenced favourably eye signs, particularly nystagmus, and cerebellar tremor. The greatest improvement was obtained in sphincter disturbances, especially in pollakiuria and urinary incontinence. The effect of ultrasound alone on the obtained results could not have been assessed. Investigations would be necessary for this purpose which are not done in this hospital.
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PMID:[Complex treatment of patients with multiple sclerosis]. 664 25

A new spontaneous autosomal recessive mutation with a nervous disorder and a hair anomaly occurred in a colony of Sprague Dawley rats. The animals developed a generalized body tremor at about 15 days of age, and with increasing age a progressive flaccid paresis occurred. Light microscopy revealed spongy changes in the central nervous system. The mutant was designated zitter rat (zi).
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PMID:A new rat mutant with defective overhairs and spongy degeneration of the central nervous system: clinical and pathologic studies. 707 76

Thirty-four patients were submitted to the conventional cervical myelography by administration of metrizamide (Amipaque) through three routes (lumbar 23, suboccipital 6, C1-C2 lateral 5). After the injection of metrizamide (4-11 ml, 170-250 mgI/ml), all procedures of the cervical myelography were done as soon as possible within 9 minutes. The adverse reactions of Amipaque were observed in 29 cases (85%) out of 34 cases initially 1 hour after cervical myelography and disappeared completely in an average of 16 hours. The total number of the side effects was 140 incidences such as meningeal irritation (headache 18, nausea 17, vomiting 17), cerebellar signs (dizziness 11, dysarthria 8, tremor 5, bradylalia 2, dysmetria 2, tipsy feeling 2, dysdiadochokinesis 1), autonomic signs (flushing 7, pale face 4, fever 4, sweating 2, hiccup 2, fatigability 2, micturition disturbance 1), sensory signs (exacerbation of numbness 6, perioral numbness 3, back pain 1, chest pain 1), motor signs (focal muscle spasm 5, exacerbation of paresis 4, areflexia 1), psychiatric signs (dysphasia 3, disturbance of consciousness 2, euphoria 1, persecutory delusion 1) and muddiness 7. We observed that waxing and waning of side effects correlated tightly with transient cortical penetration of dye in CT and cortical dysfunction mainly slowing of the background activity and slow wave burst in EEG. According to high frequency of side effects in our study, we suggest that a greater incidence of side effects may result when high concentration of Amipaque comes in contact with the cerebral cortex by using an inadequate fluoroscopic table which has only fixed one plane image and rough positioning control. Slow absorption into blood stream may affect appearance and maintenance of side effects. In order to decrease side effects after Amipaque cervical myelography, we propose that we should introduce a mobile rotating chair coupled with high power image and chose C1-C2 lateral route using 1500-1700mgI of Amipaque.
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PMID:[Side effects of metrizamide (Amipaque) cervical myelography (author's transl)]. 711 May 15

In guinea-pigs, the oral and subcutaneous LD50 values were very similar (cf. 0,173 mg/kg over 48 h with 0,116 mg/kg over 24 and 48 h). When dosed subcutaneously, a cumulative effect was observed. Intravenous administration of cotyledoside to anaesthetized guinea-pigs resulted in: dyspnoea, increased heart rates and blood pressures, and electrocardiagraphic changes typical of cardiac glycoside poisoning. A positive cardiac inotropic effect was succeeded by a positive chronotropic one. In sheep, acute and subacute intoxication resulted in ruminal, respiratory and cardiac changes. The signs included ruminal stasis, cyanosis, cardiac arrhythmia, ectopic foci and AV dissociation, followed by hypotension and progressive respiratory and cardiac failure. The skeletal muscles were affected in only 1 sheep vide infra. In chronically intoxicated sheep typical clinical signs of "krimpsiekte" developed, e.g. weakness, reluctance to stand, unsteadiness on feet, tremor and paresis of hindquarter muscles, paresis of the neck, arching of the back and standing with the feet close together. Respiratory function was affected in all 3 cases; ruminal stasis, with concomitant loss of appetite occurring in one, and a transient change in heart function in another. The syndrome induced by acute cotyledoside poisoning is similar to that of other cardiac glycosides, but the paretic signs of chronic intoxication resemble "krimpsiekte", a disease associated only with intoxication with the plants of the family Crassulaceae.
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PMID:Studies on South African cardiac glycosides. II. Observations on the clinical and haemodynamic effects of cotyledoside. 718 41


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