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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This paper presents an example of 18(th) century medical thinking. The author, Dr Georg Ernst Stahl (1659-1734) was the founder of the phlogiston theory in the field of chemistry, a medical professor, and a court physician in Saxony and Prussia.
His
description includes a definition of
tremor
, the internal and external causes of
tremor
, the types of
tremor
, the diagnostic and prognostic signs, and the treatment. From a present (contemporary) point of view, some compounds that were then used in treatment may have had a limited therapeutic effect on some kinds of
tremor
. Protopin has an anticholinergic and GABA-ergic effect, and rhoeadin (tetrahydrobenzazepin) may have had an effect similar to that of neuroleptics. Nevertheless, it is not clear whether the recommended quantity of these compounds was sufficient for a clinical effect. Most of the prescribed drugs could only have had a placebo effect.
...
PMID:How to treat tremor. 1516 83
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome (LNS) is a rare X-recessive disorder that leads to virtually complete deficiency of the purine salvage enzyme hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT). Partial HPRT deficiency results in uric acid overproduction with subsequent hyperuricemia, nephrolithiasis, renal failure and gouty arthritis. In contrast, at complete HPRT deficiency, besides overproduction of uric acid neurological problems appear including spasticity, choreoathetosis, mental retardation, and compulsive self-mutilation. The cause for the uric acid overproduction has been clarified, but the connection between the enzyme deficiency and the neurological manifestations in LNS remains unclear. A hypothesis, which explains this relation, is proposed in the paper. The hypothesis has several important points most substantial of which is the accelerated biosynthesis of semiessential amino acid
histidine
that against the background of accelerated purine de novo biosynthesis results in 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamideribotide (AICAR) and histamine accumulation. The histamine and AICAR were determined to be the compounds that cause the neurobehavioral symptoms of LNS for several reasons. First, in the basal ganglia a balance between the direct (activating) and the indirect (inhibiting) pathways arising on the basis of the antagonistic and reciprocal dopamine-adenosine interactions normally exists. This balance can tonically regulate smooth voluntary movements and the activity of the thalamus, which, in turn, processes the afferent sensorimotor signals from the whole body to the all areas of the cerebral cortex and is concerned to modulate mental development and bring sensory information into awareness. Second, histamine is known to induce a selective damage in dopaminergic neurons inhibiting the direct dopaminergic pathway, which could lead to muscular rigidity, and slowness in initiating movements as well as
tremor
that are characteristic of Parkinsonism in LNS. Third, AICAribosid (AICAR breakdown product) is a potent adenosine A2a receptor antagonist inhibiting the indirect dopamine-adenosinergic pathway and, therefore, could be responsible for the choreoathetosis, dystonia and ballismus found in LNS. The excitatory-inhibitory disbalance in the basal ganglia could result in inadequate modification of the thalamus activity with subsequent mental retardation and symptoms that include the patients not being aware for their own bodies that could give rise to self-mutilation. Finally, a possibility for the creation of a new animal model that could exactly match the human LNS is proposed in the paper.
...
PMID:The biochemical basis of the neurobehavioral abnormalities in the Lesch-Nyhan syndrome: a hypothesis. 1519 65
John Quincy Adams, the sixth and perhaps most scholarly American president, served courageously despite familial essential
tremor
, depression, and cerebrovascular disease.
His
cousin Samuel Adams and his father John Adams also had essential
tremor
, which the later called "quiveration". Alcoholism and depression affected several members of J.Q. Adams's family. Following his own time as president, J.Q. Adams returned to duty as the congressman who most assiduously fought slavery, a fight he continued even after he had suffered a major left hemispheric stroke.
His
fatal collapse in Congress, protesting the Mexican War, is legendary among the final illnesses of American statesmen.
...
PMID:Illnesses of the brain in John Quincy Adams. 1554 5
We report a 65-year-old man with rigid-bradykinetic parkinsonism, vertical gaze palsy, difficulty in eye-lid opening, and marked pseudo-bulbar palsy. He felt difficulty of it, hand movement at 59 years old. When he was 60 years old, monotonous speech and slowness of movement appeared. He visited a neurologist who noted vertical gaze palsy, neck rigidity, and bradykinesia. He was diagnosed as progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) and given 300 mg L-Dopa/Benserazide by the neurologist. This medication improved his rigidity and bradykinesia. At 62 years of the age, his eye-lids closed involuntary and it was difficult to open. In addition, he began to complain of wearing-off, autonomic symptoms, and dysphagia. Anti-parkinsonian drugs were increased, but his bradykinesia progressed. At 64 years of the age, he was admitted to the Neurology Service of Juntendo Hospital. On admission, he was alert and not demented. No aphasia, apraxia, or agnosia was noted. In the cranial nerves, upward and downward gaze were markedly restricted.
His
face was hypomimic and seborrhoic. It was difficult to swallow liquid or solid for him. No weakness was noted, but he walked in small steps with freezing and falling tendency to backward. Rigidity was noted on his extremities and stronger on his left side than right.
Tremor
was absent. Bradykinesia of his body and extremities was marked. No cerebellar ataxia was noted. Deep tendon reflexes were within normal range. Planter response was flexor bilaterally. Myerson's sign was noted. Sensory and autonomic function were normal. He was treated with L-Dopa, Pergolide, and Bromocriptine. However, these medications improved his bradykinesia and gait disturbance only slightly, dysphagia became progressively worse. He developed aspiration pneumonia when he was 65 years old and admitted to Juntendo Hospital. A large amount of sputum was aspirated from his trachea. Two days after from admission, he was found dead on his bed. He was discussed in a neurological CPC and the chief discussant arrived at a conclusion that the patient had progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP). Other differential diagnoses included Parkinson's disease, pallido-nigroluysian atrophy (PNLA), multiple system atrophy (MSA), and corticobasal degeneration(CBD). Many participants considered that PSP or PNLA was most likely. Post-mortem exmination revealed marked nigral neuronal loss and gliosis. The globus pallidus and the luysian body changed mildly. However, the frontal cortex was relatively spared, there were many ballooned neurons in the cortical layer. Other parts were spared. With sliver (Bodian and Gallyas-Braak) and anti-phsphorylated tau stain, abundant astrocytic plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, and argyrophilic threads on the frontal cortex, striatum, and substantia nigra were seen. There was no tufted astrocyte which was hallmark of diagnosis of PSP. In addition, several Lewy bodies were seen in the brainstem. Because astrocyte plaque was considered specific for pathology of CBD, the pathologist revealed that the pathological diagnosis of this patient was CBD. Nevertheless, discussion was focused on the relatively mild degeneration of the frontal cortex for CBD.
...
PMID:[A 65-year-old man with rigid-bradykinetic parkinsonism, vertical gaze palsy, difficulty of eye-lid opening, and marked pseudo-bulbar palsy]. 1578 4
We report a 67-year-old man with rt. hand resting
tremor
and rigidity after lt. putaminal hemorrhage. He had hypertension and alcoholic liver cirrhosis as past history. When he was 62 years old, he realized rt. hemiplegia suddenly and admitted in Juntendo Urayasu hospital. Brain CT showed intracranial hemorrhage in lt. putamen. He was treated with neurosurgery operation for rejecting hemorrhage. Mild rt. hemiparesis remained but he could live independently. He was medicated sulpiride for depression after cerebrovascular accident. On 63 years old, resting
tremor
and rigidity appeared on his rt. hand.
His
doctor stopped sulpiride and treated with L-Dopa/Benserazide and trihexiphenidyl.
His
parkinsonism was stable with this treatment for four years.
His
doctor considered that he was Parkinson's disease or drug-induced parkinsonism. On 67 years old, he became akinetic-mutism state suddenly and admitted in the hospital.
His
consciousness turned alert soon and discharged after two weeks. This episode was considered as epilepsy. After one week from discharge, he was found cardio-pulmonary arrest and confirmed dead in the hospital. Post-mortem examination revealed necrosis in the posterior-lateral part of lt. putamen due to hemorrhage. However, there was no degenerative change of the striatum or the substantia nigra and no Lewy bodies in his brain. Other pathological changes were also not found.
His
parkinsonism might be caused putaminal pathology due to hemorrhage.
...
PMID:[A 67-year-old man with rt. hand resting tremor and rigidity after lt. putaminal hemorrhage]. 1591 60
A 74-year-old man became unable to walk two days following the initiation of administration of oral distigmine bromide, 10 mg per day, for his constipation. Neurological examination revealed bradykinesia, rigidity and fine postural
tremor
without laterality. T2 weighted MRI showed mild front-temporal atrophy and multiple hyperintensities in both deep white matters.
His
symptoms fully improved one week after discontinuance of distigmine bromide. This is the first case report of distigmine bromide induced Parkinsonism.
...
PMID:[Distigmine bromide induced Parkinsonism. A case report]. 1618 Jul 10
Spinocerebellar ataxia type 14 (SCA14) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder, first described in a Japanese family, showing linkage to chromosome 19q13.4-qter. Recently, mutations have been identified in the PRKCG gene in families with SCA14. The PRKCG gene encodes the protein kinase Cgamma (PKCgamma), a member of a serine/threonine kinase family involved in signal transduction important for several cellular processes, including cell proliferation and synaptic transmission. To identify the disease-causing mutation in a large group of ataxia patients, we searched for mutations in the PRKCG gene. We ascertained 366 unrelated patients with spinocerebellar ataxia, either pure or with associated features such as epilepsy, mental retardation, seizures, paraplegia, and
tremor
. A C-to-G transversion in exon 4, resulting in a
histidine
-to-glutamine change at codon 101 of the PKCgamma protein, was identified in patients from a family with slowly progressive pure cerebellar ataxia. Functional studies performed in HEK293 cells transfected with normal or mutant construct showed that this mutation affects PKCgamma stability or solubility, verified by time-dependent decreased protein levels in cell culture. In conclusion, the H101Q mutation causes slowly progressive uncomplicated ataxia by interfering with PKCgamma stability or solubility, which consequently may cause in either case a decrease in the overall PKCgamma-dependent phosphorylation.
...
PMID:A novel H101Q mutation causes PKCgamma loss in spinocerebellar ataxia type 14. 1618 24
The
shaking
pup (shp) is a canine mutation that affects the myelin protein proteolipid protein (PLP) and its smaller and less abundant isoform, DM20, with proline replacing
histidine
(36), resulting in a severe myelin deficiency in the central nervous system. We present evidence that the mutation leads to disrupted trafficking of the shp PLP/DM20 within oligodendrocytes. Immunohistochemical studies revealed significantly reduced levels of PLP/DM20 and other major myelin components such as myelin basic protein (MBP), myelin associated glycoprotein (MAG), and 2',3'-cyclic nucleotide 3'-phosphodiesterase (CNP) in shp myelin. The distribution of shp PLP/DM20 proteins were altered and mostly retained in perinuclear cytoplasm and proximal processes, which co-localized with distended rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) within oligodendrocytes. No abnormal accumulation of MAG, MBP, or CNP in the cell body was found. These results suggest that mutated PLP/DM20 in the shp could be selectively retained in RER, causing disruption of their translocation to the periphery to myelinate axons.
...
PMID:His36Pro point-mutated proteolipid protein retained in the endoplasmic reticulum of oligodendrocytes in the shaking pup. 1626 68
We report a Japanese man with familial parkinsonism who died at age 54.
His
younger brother, his mother, the mother's 4 brothers, and their mother were also affected with similar parkinsonism. The patient had had nystagmus since adolescence. He noticed difficulty in walking and micrographia at age 42. Neurological examination at age 45 in our hospital revealed pendular nystagmus, moderate rigidity in his neck and upper limbs, postural
tremor
in hands and shuffling gait. He received L-dopa/benzerazide 200 mg and his movement was mildly improved. Then he developed forced closing of eyelids suggesting either blepharospasms or apraxia of eye lid opening. He became apathetic at age 48. He was admitted to our hospital at age 49. On admission, he showed mild dementia and sexually disinhibited behaviours. Moderate downward gaze palsy and rigidity were seen. Increase of L-dopa/benzerazide and pergolide did not improve his parkinsonism and his disinhibited behaviors became worse. L-dopa/benzerazide and pergolide were decreased and he received electroconvulsive therapy at a psychiatric hospital with temporally improvement in his movement. He became unable to walk at age 52 and he was mutic and bedridden. He died of pneumonia at age 54. The patient was discussed in a neurological CPC, and a chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had a familial form of dementia with Lewy bodies. Many participants thought that he had frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17. The pathological examination of his brain showed severe neuronal loss in the substantia nigra, subthalamus, and pallidum. Ballooned neurons were observed in the cerebral cortex. Immunohistochemistry using anti-tau antibodies revealed tau-positive neurons, glial cells and threads in the cerebral cortex, white matter and subcortical nuclei; these tau deposition reacted with an anti-4-repeat tau antibody, but not reacted to an anti-3-repeat tau antibody. Sequencing of genomic DNA of the patient showed a missense mutation in exon 10 of tau that caused a substitution at codon N279K. These neuropathological and molecular studies revealed the diagnosis of the patient was FTDP-17 with N279K mutation.
...
PMID:[A 54-year-old man with familial parkinsonism, gaze palsy, and dementia]. 1637 98
A 33-year-old welder with 3 years of exposure to manganese (Mn) bearing welding fumes was seen by neurologists for cognitive and motor complaints. He exhibited signs and symptoms of Parkinson's disease, including
tremor
, bradykinesia, gait disturbance and cogwheel rigidity. However, he was young and had significant inattention and forgetfulness, had found levodopa unhelpful and moved with a cock-walk gait, all of which suggested manganism.
His
serum and urine levels of Mn were, in fact, elevated, and his brain MRI had increased T1-weighted signal intensities in the basal ganglia bilaterally (globus pallidus) consistent with Mn deposition. Two years later, he underwent comprehensive neuropsychological testing. Clinical history indicated a mild
tremor
and emotional dysfunction with irritability, anxiety, and depression with psychotic features. He showed deficits in cognitive flexibility, information processing and speed, and greatly reduced motor speed, which are consistent with a fronto-subcortical process. These findings support a diagnosis of early onset parkinsonism from welding.
...
PMID:Parkinsonism due to manganism in a welder: neurological and neuropsychological sequelae. 1645 89
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