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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Clinical, biological and electrophysiological features from a cohort of 39 multifocal motor neuropathies with conduction blocks (NMM with CB) have been studied. There were 29 males and 10 females with an average of 47.3. At the first evaluation, the mean duration of the symptoms was of 8 years with extremes between 1 and 28. Pain and paresthesias were present in respectively 10 and 18 p. 100 of the patients. Fasciculations and cramps were observed in more than 2/3 of the cases. Three patients had
tremor
at rest. Upper limb muscular weakness was the predominant initial symptom (84.6 p. 100). The weakness always affected distal and unilateral muscles. Radial and cubital nerve distribution are mainly affected and in half of the cases an unilateral motor deficit in the lower limb was associated. Muscle atrophy was frequent (74 p. 100) and rapidly developed in the first 2 years. Reflexes were decreased or absent in 64 p. 100. In 78 p. 100 of cases, biological study showed normal serum immunoelectrophoresis and
CSF
. IgM anti-GM1 antibodies were found in 24/36 patients. Very high titres were found in 5 cases. All patients had CB in upper limbs. The preferential localizations of the CB were equally at the median and ulnar nerves. Only 7 patients had CB localized to the lower limbs. In many cases, marked reduction of the motor amplitude prevented the detection of CB, marked reduction of the motor amplitude prevented the detection of CB. Moderate fibrillation potentials were found in 28 p. 100 of patients. Giant muscular unit potentials were frequent (21/39). F-waves in nerve with CB were always abnormal with marked increased latencies. Late responses sometimes seemed to be repeater F-waves. Axon reflexes were detected in 5 cases. The late responses abnormalities could precede the block. Clinical, biological and electrophysiological described arguments could may distinguish NMM with CB from motor neuron disease and relate them to the group of chronic demyelinating neuropathies.
...
PMID:[Multifocal motor neuropathies with conduction blocks. 39 cases]. 968 22
We report a 64-year-old Japanese woman who died one year after the onset of progressive gait disturbance and dementia. She noted a difficulty in holding a glass and hand
tremor
in June of 1996 when she was 63 years old. In July of 1996, she tended to lean toward left when she walked. She also noted truncal titubation. In November of 1996, she started to have visual hallucination and delusion in which she said "I see something is flying on the wall.", "Somebody has come into my room", and things like that. She was admitted to our service on November 22, 1996. On admission, she was alert and general physical examination was unremarkable. Neurologic examination revealed disturbance in recent memory. Hasegawa's dementia rating scale was 22/30. She showed vivid visual hallucination with colors in which she saw faces of dwarfs and angels, a space ship, and others. Higher cerebral functions were normal. She showed left oculomotor palsy which was a sequel of an aneurysm and subarachnoid hemorrhage nine years before. Otherwise cranial nerves were unremarkable. She showed ataxic gait, limb ataxia, truncal titubation, and postural hand
tremor
. She had no weakness and no muscle atrophy. Deep tendon reflexes were within normal limits. Plantar response was flexor. Sensation was intact. Laboratory examination was also unremarkable. Complete survey for occult malignancy was negative.
CSF
was under a normal pressure and cell count was 1/microliter, total protein 27 mg/dl, and sugar 68 mg/dl. Cranial CT scan was unremarkable. MRI was not obtained because of the presence of an aneurysm clip in the left internal carotid-posterior communication artery junction. She showed progressive deterioration in her mental function. By January 1997, she became unable to stand or walk with marked dementia. Repeated
CSF
exams and cranial CT scans were unremarkable. She suffered from several episodes of aspiration pneumonia. A trial of three days methylprednisolone pulse therapy was given starting on March 7, 1997, which was of no effect on her neurologic status. On March 28, 1997, she was intubated because of acute respiratory distress syndrome. In April 2, her body temperature rose to 38 degrees C. On April 9, 1997, her blood pressure dropped and resuscitation was unsuccessful. She was pronounced dead on the same day. The patient was discussed in a neurologic CPC and the chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had primary leptomeningeal lymphoma. Other possibilities entertained among the audience included brain stem encephalitis of unknown type, carcinomatous cerebellar degeneration plus limbic encephalitis, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, thalamic degeneration, and progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy. Post-mortem examination revealed thickening and clouding of the leptomeninges; Gram-positive diplococci were found in the leptomeninges. This meningitis appeared to have been an complication in the terminal stage of her illness. Microscopic examination revealed astrocytosis in the midbrain tegmentum. Cerebral cortices showed only mild astrtocytosis. No cerebellar atrophy was seen and Purkinje cells were retained which excluded paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration. Neuropathologic diagnosis was bacterial meningitis, however, the presence of brain stem encephalitis prior to the onset of bacterial meningitis could not be excluded. It is interesting to note that the diagnosis of the primary neurologic disease of this patient was not easy even after autopsy. As autopsy permission was obtained only for the brain, it was not clear whether or not this patient had an occult malignancy somewhere in her body, however, there was no evidence to indicate paraneoplastic degeneration of the central nervous system. As the patient did not have meningeal signs until one month before her death, it is difficult to ascribe her entire neurologic problems to her meningitis. Finally, her visual hallucination was vivid and colorful; we thought this might have been
...
PMID:[A 64-year-old woman with progressive gait disturbance and dementia for one year]. 978 11
We report a patient with familial myoclonus showing an extremely benign clinical course. The patient was a 70-year-old woman, who first noticed
shaking
of hands at age of 25. The symptom did not worsen for more than 40 years. She visited our hospital at the age of 70 because of disturbance in chores because of worsening of her hand
shaking
in the past one year. A family history showed that 4 members had similar symptoms and that the two were afflicted with fits of loss of consciousness. On neurologic examination, rhythmic myoclonic jerks were noted in all the extremities, more in the upper limbs, both at rest and during action. Tandem gait was mildly disturbed. The remainings of neurologic examination were normal. SEP and jerk-locked back averaging provided evidence of cortical myoclonus. EEG showed multifocal polyspike discharges. Gene analysis for DRPLA, pyruvate and lactate levels in serum and the cerebrospinal fluid, serum amino acid levels, and
CSF
HVA and 5-HIAA levels were all normal. No brain atrophy was noted in cranial MRI. Myoclonus was markedly reduced after administration of clonazepam. The clinical features and electrophysiological data of our patient are consistent with the clinical diagnosis of familial essential myoclonus and epilepsy/benign adult familial myoclonic epilepsy.
...
PMID:[A case of familial myoclonus showing extremely benign clinical course]. 980 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.
...
PMID:[Dementia and human inmmunodeficiency virus infection]. 983 49
We report six patients with glutaric aciduria type 1 in four families. The patients had marked clinical variability, even within families. Three of the patients studied were normal until the onset of neurologic abnormalities, that presented as an encephalitis-like illness in the first year of age. One patient had an early and important developmental delay, but never suffered an encephalopathic crisis. Two patients have intellectual preservation; one of them has a mild
tremor
and choreoathetosis since the first year of age, and the other had only two afebrile seizures in infancy and no other neurologic signs. Three patients are severely handicapped, with a severe dystonic-dyskinetic disorder and unable to even sit. All the six patients have macrocephaly and in all the computed tomography showed enlarged
CSF
spaces and sulcal separation over the frontal and temporal lobes. Urine organic acids study of all patients showed large quantities of glutaric acid.
...
PMID:[Glutaric aciduria type 1: phenotypic variability. Report of 6 patients]. 985 Jul 48
A 20-year-old farmer who had headache and fever for 1 month, suddenly developed left hemiplegia,
tremor
in left arm and titubation followed by deep coma. Cranial CT scan revealed an infarction in right crus of midbrain. His
CSF
revealed 66 mg/dl protein, 10 lymphocytes/mm3, and 70 mg/dl glucose.
CSF
was positive for cryptococcal antigen. He improved following i.v. amphotericin 0.5 mg/kg and fluconazole 200 mg daily, continued for 6 and 12 weeks respectively. Infarctions though rare in cryptococcal meningitis should be considered in patients with chronic meningitis with vasculitis.
...
PMID:Midbrain infarction: a rare presentation of cryptococcal meningitis. 1035 Jan 99
Two women (aged 12 and 32 years) and a man aged 40 years presented with fluctuating confusional states, depressed level of consciousness, seizures and
tremor
or myoclonic activity; hallucinations occurred in two of them. Laboratory examinations showed antibodies to thyroid peroxidase in serum, elevated protein levels in
CSF
and normal cerebral MRI. The EEG findings were indicative of diffuse encephalopathy. Hashimoto's encephalopathy was diagnosed. One patient improved dramatically on prednisone therapy, the other two patients recovered spontaneously. Hashimoto's encephalopathy is a subacute, fluctuating encephalopathy with combinations of impaired level of consciousness, involuntary movements, and epileptic or psychiatric symptoms. It occurs in patients with antithyroid antibodies. It is important to consider this diagnosis, since some patients may benefit from treatment with corticosteroids.
...
PMID:[Variable manifestations of Hashimoto's encephalopathy]. 1041 87
A 77-year-old woman underwent right fronto-temporal craniotomy for a right ruptured IC-PC aneurysm (case 1), and a 44-year-old woman underwent right fronto-temporal craniotomy for a right ruptured BA-SCA aneurysm (case 2). They were clipped completely without any troubles during surgery. But postoperative CT scan demonstrated contralateral cerebellar infarction. We recognized left-hand
tremor
as a neurological deficit caused by cerebellar infarction in case 1. Concerning the mechanism of contralateral cerebellar infarction after pterional craniotomy, we think that it could be; --1) changing of venous blood flow by overdrainage of cerebrospinal fluid, 2) destruction of the bridging vein because of cerebral transformation with rapid decompression, 3) ischemia caused by brain retraction and compression during operation, 4) hypertension or hypoxia during operation, 5) crossed cerebellar diaschosis, and so on. In our 2 cases, we believe that perioperative
CSF
overdrainage caused the contralateral cerebellar infarction or CCD. To avoid this kind of infarction, we should try to take more protective and careful procedures as well as closer perioperative management.
...
PMID:[Contralateral cerebellar infarction after aneurysmal clipping with pterional craniotomy: report of two cases]. 1044 41
A 36-year-old Japanese woman was admitted to our hospital, because of facial palsy, ophthalmoplegia, cerebellar ataxia, and rhythmic myoclonus of the neck. About a few weeks before admission, she developed symptoms of common cold and general fatigue. Her laboratory data were unremarkable, and her
CSF
was normal. Serum levels of antibodies to gangliosides were within normal limits. Her MRIs of the brain and neck were normal. Both somatosensory evoked cortical potential study and auditory evoked brainstem response study were normal. She was diagnosed as postinfectious brainstem encephalitis, and the administration of corticosteroid was started. After the treatment, her symptoms improved. To our knowledge, it is rare to see myoclonus to the neck without palatal
tremor
in patients with brainstem encephalitis.
...
PMID:[Rhythmic involuntary movement of the neck in a patient with brainstem encephalitis]. 1065
The natural history, management, and long-term outcome for patients with benign, intrinsic tectal plate gliomas remain controversial in spite of their propensity to cause late-onset hydrocephalus. A 10-year retrospective review has identified 11 consecutive children with tectal plate lesions. Headache, vomiting, a decline in school performance,
tremor
, and complex partial seizures were common presenting symptoms. All patients presented with signs and symptoms of hydrocephalus. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging delineated an intra-axial mass lesion of the midbrain primarily localized to the tectal plate which uniformly was hyperintense on T2-weighted imaging and had a more variable appearance on T1-weighted imaging and rare enhancement with gadolinium. No patient underwent surgical resection, chemotherapy, or radiotherapy. Three of 11 patients (27%) showed evidence of progression in size or a new focus of enhancement on MR imaging, which was clinically asymptomatic. In this series, no patient with a tectal plate lesion less than 1.5 cm in maximal diameter and without gadolinium enhancement showed any evidence of clinical or radiological progression. Although intrinsic tectal lesions in children are clinically indolent and the initial management consists of
CSF
diversion, these lesions may eventually progress and still warrant long-term follow-up with serial MR imaging.
...
PMID:Management of intrinsic gliomas of the tectal plate in children. A ten-year review. 1070 25
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