Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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 85-year-old woman who had an onset of gait disturbance at 80 years of the age. She had a dizzy spell when she was 80-year-old. She was evaluated at another hospital where paroxysmal tachycardia and sinus arrest lasting as long as 5.8 seconds were found. She was diagnosed as having sick sinus syndrome and a pace maker was inserted. She had a gradual onset of disturbance of gait shortly after the above dizzy spell. She became unable to walk fast and her steps became small. Neurologic examination at age 83 revealed small step gait with freezing episodes. Retropulsion was present. No motor weakness or origidity was noted. She had no tremor. Mentally she was alert and sound. Cranial nerves were essentially normal. Cranial CT scan revealed slight diffuse low density change in the bilateral cerebral white matter. She was treated with amantadine HCI and levodopa with carbidopa. Her gait and balance showed some improvement. She developed pneumonia and worsening of her gait when she was 85 years of the age, and she was admitted again to our hospital. She was mentally alert and sound but she showed marked freezing of gait with loss of postural reflex; she would have fallen down unless supported upon standing. Cranial nerves were again essentially normal. Her hospital course was complicated by pneumonia, DIC, and renal failure. She expired suddenly on the 10th day of her last admission. She was discussed in a neurological CPC and the chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had vascular parkinsonism due to lacunar state. However, paucity of vascular changes in her CT scan remained as a question. Other participants thought that she had nigral cell loss secondary to her aging and circulatory disturbance which would have been caused by her sick sinus syndrome. Post-mortem examination revealed marked loss of nigral pigmented cells; the cell loss was diffusely seen in the substantia nigra. Neurofibrillary tangles were seen in the remaining neurons. In addition, gliosis was noted in the globus pallidus and the subthalamic nucleus, however, neuronal loss was very mild in those nuclei. In the superior colliculus, neuronal loss was mild, however, gliosis was seen. No clear neuronal loss was observed in the locus coeruleus, however, Lewy bodies were seen in the remaining neurons. Furthermore, Lewy bodies were also found in the substantia sigra. It was thought that she had progressive supranuclear play (PSP). Question was whether or not she was complicated by Parkinson's disease. Clinically, she had no rigidity or tremor. Pathologically, locus coeruleus did not show neuronal loss. Therefore, incidental Lewy body disease was raised as a possibility. Finally, it should be pointed out that she had no oculomotor disturbance or dementia, yet she had PSP. Her clinical features were those of pure akinesia. Pathologic changes were also relatively mild except for those in the substantia nigra. Possibility of post-encephalitic parkinsonism without encephalitis was also discussed, however, over all distribution of her pathologic changes was more consistent with PSP.
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PMID:[A 85-year-old woman with the onset of progressive gait disturbance at 80 years of the age]. 912 48

We report a 74-year-old woman with parkinsonism and dementia, who died 4 years after the onset of the disease. She was well until 70 years of the age (1993) when she noted slowness in the movement in her left hand. She also developed gait disturbance and the similar symptoms spread to the right upper and lower extremities. Two years after the onset, she had difficulty in walk, and was admitted to our hospital on March 9, 1995. Her daughter had the onset of hand tremor at 50 years of the age and gait disturbance at 52. Her gait improved after levodopa treatment, but her MRI revealed a liner T2-high signal lesion along the outer surface of each putamen. On admission, the patient was alert but slighted demented. Higher cerebral functions were normal. She had a masked face and small voice. Her gait was of small step without arm swing. Retropulsion was present. Rigidity was noted in the neck but not in the limbs. She was bradykinetic but tremor was absent. She was treated with levodopa/carbidopa, dops, and bromocriptine with considerable improvement and was discharged on March 30, 1995. On January 19, 1996, she developed fever and hallucination; she became more akinetic and admitted again. She showed marked dementia and stage IV parkinsonism. She was treated by supportive measures with improvement in the general condition, but she was found to have a gastric cancer for which a subtotal gastrectomy was performed on March 11, 1996. Post-operative course was uneventful, but her parkinsonism progressed to stage V. She was transferred to another hospital on May 13, 1996. In July 21, 1996, she developed dyspnea and fever and was admitted to our hospital again. She was somnolent. Rigidity was moderate to marked and she was unable to stand or walk. By supportive cares, her general condition improved and was discharged to home on November 4, 1996. She developed fever on June 13, 1997 and admitted to our service again. Her BP was 150/90 mmHg. She was alert but markedly demented. Laboratory examination revealed increases in liver enzymes (GOT 75 IU/l, GPT 101 IU/l) and renal dysfunction (BUN 68 mg/dl, creatinine 3.27 mg/dl). Subsequent hospital course was complicated by renal failure and thrombocytopenia (33,000/ml). She expired on July 1, 1997. The patient was discussed in a neurologic CPC, and a chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had diffuse Lewy body disease and her daughter striatonigral degeneration. Some participants thought both the patient and her daughter had diffuse Lewy body disease. Post-mortem examination revealed marked degeneration of the substania nigra and the locus coeruleus. The medial part of the nigra also showed marked cell loss. Lewy bodies were found in the remaining nigral and coeruleus neurons. Cortical Lewy bodies were very few and the striatum was intact. Pathologic diagnosis was Parkinson's disease. Dementia was in part attributed to the marked degeneration of the medial part of the substantia nigra.
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PMID:[A 74-year-old woman with parkinsonism and dementia who died four years after the onset]. 973 28