Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0233565 (bradykinesia)
2,352 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report the clinical features of four female patients with dopa-responsive dystonia (DRD), and the survey of the family members. The patients were 2 sisters and 2 sporadic patients from 3 families. Their age of onset ranged between 5 and 13 years. The clinical manifestation was characterized by limb dystonia which was relieved by L-dopa treatment. Diurnal fluctuation disappeared 15 years later in one patient. There was a wide spectrum of Parkinsonian features and variability of dystonia. Response of L-dopa was still excellent 20 years later. In survey of the family members, there was neither bradykinesia, rigidity, tremor nor dystonia.
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PMID:Dopa-responsive dystonia: clinical and family study in Taiwanese. 868 79

The authors report a kindred in which GTP-CH deficiency resulted in a myoclonus-dystonia syndrome. The proband, a 17-year-old boy, presented with early-onset myoclonus and later, dystonia and bradykinesia. Blood prolactin was increased and CSF homovanillic acid, 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid, and biopterin were all reduced. L-Dopa/carbidopa administration resulted in clinical improvement. In the paternal branch, the grandfather and three relatives had myoclonus-dystonia and resting or postural tremor of limbs. The authors found a missense mutation in the exon 6 of GCH-1 gene (K224R).
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PMID:Autosomal dominant GTP-CH deficiency presenting as a dopa-responsive myoclonus-dystonia syndrome. 1239 38

Functional imaging of the dopamine transporter (DAT) defines integrity of the dopaminergic system and has its main clinical application in patients with mild, incomplete, or uncertain parkinsonism. Imaging with specific single positron emission computerised tomography ligands for DAT (FP-CIT, beta-CIT, IPT, TRODAT) provides a marker for presynaptic neuronal degeneration. Striatal uptake correlates with disease severity, in particular bradykinesia and rigidity, and monitoring of progression assists in clinical trials of potential neuroprotective drugs. DAT imaging is abnormal in idiopathic Parkinson's disease, multiple system atrophy and progressive supranuclear palsy and does not distinguish between these disorders. Dopamine loss is seen even in the earliest clinical presentations of true parkinsonism; a normal scan suggests an alternative diagnosis such as essential tremor, vascular parkinsonism (unless there is focal basal ganglia infarction), drug-induced parkinsonism, or psychogenic parkinsonism. Congruence between working clinical diagnosis and DAT imaging increases over time in favour of baseline DAT imaging results. Additional applications are characterising dementia with parkinsonian features (abnormal results in dementia with Lewy bodies, normal in Alzheimer's disease); and differentiating juvenile-onset Parkinson's disease (abnormal DAT) from dopa-responsive dystonia (normal DAT).
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PMID:Role of dopamine transporter imaging in routine clinical practice. 1546

We report a case of a 46-year-old Japanese woman with hereditary progressive dystonia with marked diurnal fluctuations and dopa-responsive dystonia (HPD/DRD). She developed difficulty in walking at the age of 44 years due to bradykinesia as well as hand tremors, muscle rigidity, increased tendon reflexes and mild dystonia in the lower extremities, all of which responded remarkably to low doses of levodopa (150 mg/day). Biopterin and neopterin concentrations in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) were decreased. Analysis of the guanosine 5'-triphosphate cyclohydrolase I (GCH1) gene revealed a novel mutation (W53X) in one allele. The GCH1 activity that was expressed in mononuclear blood cells was almost half the normal value (usually 2-20% of the normal value (39.0+/-9.2 pmol/ml) in patients with HPD/DRD). The relatively conserved GCH1 activity that is expressed in stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells may be related to the late clinical symptoms in this patient.
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PMID:A case of late-onset Segawa syndrome (autosomal dominant dopa-responsive dystonia) with a novel mutation of the GTP-cyclohydrase I (GCH1) gene. 1628 69

Large deletions in the GCH1 gene have been reported in a minority of cases of dopa-responsive dystonia (DRD). In this study, we performed an extensive clinical and genetic investigation of 22 affected members in eight families. Sequence analysis revealed five different mutations in five families (n = 10); Ser81Pro (novel), Ser76X, Gly203Arg, 249del A, and IVS5 + 3insT. Applying multiple ligation-dependent probe amplification analysis, we detected a large heterozygous deletion of exons 1-3 in the remaining three families (n = 12), which was verified by quantitative real-time PCR analysis. Therefore, the large deletion accounted for 37.5% of the total families and 55% of our DRD population. The deletion appeared to have high penetrance and was associated with multifocal dystonia and adult onset in males. Adult-onset patients were commonly presenting with resting tremor, rigidity, and bradykinesia, indistinguishable from those in Parkinson's disease. In conclusion, a high frequency of multiexonic deletion of GCH1 was identified in the Taiwanese DRD population. By dosage analysis, we were able to detect a mutation in all patients. Our study demonstrates that dosage analysis is necessary for molecular diagnostics in DRD patients of Han Chinese ethnicity.
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PMID:High frequency of multiexonic deletion of the GCH1 gene in a Taiwanese cohort of dopa-response dystonia. 2008 37

Dystonia is a hyperkinetic movement disorder that can be highly stigmatizing and disabling. Substantial evidence from animal models, neuropathological, neurophysiological, neuroimaging and clinical studies emphasizes the role of dopaminergic dysfunction in the pathophysiology of dystonia, illustrating possible pathophysiological overlap with parkinsonism. Furthermore, basal ganglia dysfunction has been implicated in the pathogenesis of dystonia, and is well established to underlie the manifestations of Parkinson's disease. Clinically, parkinsonian features are a key characteristic of some combined dystonias, including dopa-responsive dystonia, and Parkinson's disease often presents with dystonia. Moreover, many treatments effective in Parkinson's disease, both medical and surgical, also offer some benefit in dystonia. Therefore, mild parkinsonian features might logically accompany idiopathic and inherited isolated dystonias. However, as the current literature is particularly scant, the present review aimed to investigate mild parkinsonism in idiopathic and inherited dystonia. We found limited evidence alluding to the presence of mildly reduced arm-swing, increased tone, and non-decremental bradykinesia in adult-onset focal dystonia. Tremor, with postures, action and rest, also occurs commonly in idiopathic isolated dystonia, and can simulate Parkinson's disease tremor and be a cause of 'scans without evidence of dopaminergic deficit'. Parkinsonian features in monogenic isolated dystonias have been less well investigated, despite the potential benefit of correlating pathophysiological and clinical findings. The recognition and improved clinical characterization of parkinsonian features in idiopathic and inherited isolated dystonia extends the clinical spectrum of motor features in dystonia, which may help avoid incorrect diagnosis and inform therapeutic research.
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PMID:Mild parkinsonian features in dystonia: Literature review, mechanisms and clinical perspectives. 2782 43