3- Hyperkinetic Movement Disorder Flashcards
Define tremor. How is tremor classified in terms of clinical characteristics? ๐๐
๐ก Rhythmic involuntary movement of a body part. Happens at rest, while moving or posturing.
1. Resting Tremor
Involuntary movement at rest, usually affecting hands and fingers.
Seen in Parkinsonโs disease (PD).
2. Intentional - Action Tremor
Occurs with movement from one point to another, โfinger-to-noseโ test.
Amplitude of tremor increases as extremity approaches target
Seen in cerebellar dysfunction.
Treatment: Wrist weights
3. Essential - Postural Tremor
Posture-maintaining tremor associated with sustained muscle contraction or stress
Accentuated by goal-directed activities, i.e. holding a cup of tea.
Occurs during sustained contraction of muscles to maintain the position of a body part against gravity, resulting in flexion-extension movement of the hand.
Treatment: Beta-blockers (e.g., propranolol).
Most common type of tremor, Benign (patients should be reassured about this)
Cuccurollo 4th Edition Chapter 12 Movement Disorder pg867-868
Braddom 6th Edition Chapter 45 Movement Disorder pg973
1. Postural Tremors
Physiologic - Essential - Basal Ganglia Disease - Cerebellar Disease - Peripheral Neuropathy - Post-Traumatic - Alcoholic
2. Kinetic Tremors
Cerebellar Disease
3. Task-specific Tremors
Writing - Vocal - Orthostatic
PMR Secrets 3rd Edition Chapter 56 Movement Disorders pg471-472 Box 56-3
List 3 Characteristics of resting tremor. ๐๐
- Appears within the body part completely at rest โ resting tremor
- Subsides with action โ its not intentional
- Subsides with assuming a posture โ its not porstural
Braddom 6th Edition Chapter 45 Movement Disorder pg974
List 4 Characteristics of essential tremor - How it is treated? ๐๐
Characteristics
- It is a postural tremor โ itโs essential to keep the posture
- Flexion-extension movement of the hand
- Accentuated by goal-directed activities
- Can interfere with hydration and nutrition
- Slowly progressive with age.
- Worsen with anxiety, stress, and stimulants
Treatment
- Propranolol remains the most effective medication for essential tremor
- Less effective but occasionally useful medications are lorazepam, clonazepam, diazepam, alprazolam, gabapentin, and topiramate.
Neurology Secrets 6th Edition Chapter 12 pg150
Braddom 6th Edition Chapter 45 Movement Disorder pg973
List 6 Causes of Physiologic tremor ๐
- Stress induced
- Anxiety
- Caffeine (coffee, tea)
- Stimulants (amphetamines, cocaine)
- Dopaminergic drugs (levodopa, dopamine agonists)
- Alcohol withdrawal
- Exercise
- Fatigue
- Thyrotoxicosis
- Hypoglycemia
- Beta Agonist
Neurology Secrets 6th Edition Chapter 12 pg149 Table 12-1
Braddom 6th Edition Chapter 45 Movement Disorder pg973
PMR Secrets 3rd Edition Chapter 56 Movement Disorders pg471
Provide 4 strategies to treat intention tremors. ๐๐
Non-Pharmacological:
- Avoiding triggers (stimulants and coffee)
- Physical therapies โ strengthening exercises
- Balance and coordination
- Weighted tools (wrist splints, leg, walkers, utensils)
- Proximal splinting for feeding and dressing
Pharmacological:
- Beta โ blockers (propranolol)
- Anticonvulsants: Keppra, Carbamazepine, gabapentin
- Benzodiazepines (clonazepam)
- Topiramate (topamax)
Surgical:
- Thalamic DBS.
- Thalamotomy (stereotactic).
Ref: Braddom pg 1245; 2011 โ symptomatic management of multiple sclerosis article; J Neurol (2007) 254:133โ145.
List 8 features of an essential tremor that differentiates it from Parkinson tremor:
Think the opposite
- Decreases with rest
- Decreases with alcohol
- Increases with movement (intention).
- Increases with stress (PD increases with stress tooโฆ Delisa pg 646)
- 4-8 Hz (PD = 3.5 Hz).
- Familial inheritance strongly present (autosomal dominant).
- Involves head and voice
- Onset 10-80 yrs old as opposed to after 50
Ref: Movement disorders in clinical practice textbook pg 6-7.
Dystonia: Definition, Types, Aggravating & Alleviating Factors, Treatment ๐๐
DYSTONIA
Sustained muscle contractions, causing twisting repetitive movements, which may progress to prolonged abnormal postures
Primary dystonia (autosomal dominant) is the most common
Course can be very variable with spontaneous remissions and exacerbations
TYPES
๐ก Most common dystonia: Cervical dystonia (focal) > Blepharospasm (focal)
1. Focal dystonia
One part of the body is involved
Blepharospasm, oromandibular dystonia, cervical dystonia and writerโs cramp
2. Segmental dystonia
Two or more contiguous parts involved
Meige syndrome (blepharospasm + oromandibular)
Brachial dystonia and crural dystonia
3. Multifocal dystonia
Two or more noncontiguous parts are involved.
4. Hemidystonia
One side of the body is affected.
5. Generalized dystonia
FACTORS
- Aggravated by anxiety, stress, and fatigue
- Relieved by rest and/ or sleep or tactile stimuli
TREATMENT
Conservative โ Focal dystonias
- Massage therapy
- Relaxation techniques.
- Physiotherapy โ strengthening, stretching.
Medication
- Baclofen (cranial dystonia)
S/E local weakness: patients with blepharospasm may have ptosis, whereas dysphagia is a potential complication of treatment for cervical dystonia โ resolve spontaneously after 2 to 4 weeks.
- Benzodiazepines: Clonazepam (Rivotril) (blepharospasm)
- Levodopa (Sinemet) for dopa-responsive dystonia (DRD), 10% of children
- Botulinum toxin injections. (Most effective for focal dystonia)
Surgical
- DBS of the globus pallidus internus
- Intrathecal baclofen infusions (lower limb dystonia and spasticity)
Cuccurollo 4th Edition Chapter 12 Movement Disorder pg869
Braddom 6th Edition Chapter 45 Movement Disorder pg973
PMR Secrets 3rd Edition Chapter 56 Movement Disorders pg473 Box 56-4
Neurology Secrets 6th Edition Chapter 12 pg155
Define Athetosis & List 4 causes.
Slow, non-rhythmic, writhing (twisting) involuntary movements and inability to maintain the position.
Cuccurollo 4th Edition Chapter 12 pg867
DeLisa 5th Edition Table 26.8
Etiologies:
- Stroke.
- Tumor.
- Cerebral palsy (CP)
- Idiopathic.
- Basal ganglia disease (Parkinson Disease)
- Wilsonโs disease.
- Huntingtonโs disease.
Define choreoathetoid.
Athetoid movements, slow involuntary twisting movements with superimposed faster or jerky chorea type movements.
Define chorea. List 4 causes of chorea.
Fast, non-rhythmic, unpredictable, incoherent, purposeless, jerky movement of limbs
Usually interfere with purposeful activity.
Cuccurollo 4th Edition Chapter 12 pg867
Causes: any chorea + extrapyramidal
- Huntingtonโs disease (HD)
- Sydenham chorea (SC)
- Levodopa (Sinemet)
- Typical Antipsychotics (ExtraPyramid)
- Anti-emetics (ExtraPyramid)
- Hyperthyroid
- SLE
Define Hemiballismus
Sudden, violent, involuntary movements on one side of the body
Lesion in subthalamic nucleus (regulates globus pallidus)
Cuccurollo 4th Edition Chapter 12 pg867
Myoclonus Definition, Types ๐ , Treatment
Sudden, jerky, irregular, or periodic involuntary contractions of a muscle or group of muscles
Types
- Spontaneous: stimulus sensitive, occurs with muscle contraction, muscle stretch, or superficial stimuli like touch
- Non-Spontaneous: non-stimulus sensitive, occurs at rest
- Positive: Involuntary contraction of the muscle.
- Negative: Involuntary relaxation of the muscle.
- Physiologic: After exercise
- Hypnagogic jerks: During sleep
Treatment
- Anti-epileptic (Keppra)
- Botox Injection
Cuccurollo 4th Edition Chapter 12 Movement Disorder pg868
Define Akathisia. What medications is it often associated with? ๐
Reversible motor restlessness, with unpleasant sensation of inner tension or anxiety
20-40% of patient on antipsychotic drugs (extra-pyramidal reaction to dopamine blockage).
Cuccurollo 4th Edition Chapter 12 Movement Disorder pg867
Define Tic - Types - Reliving factor
Tic
Abnormal movements (motor tics) or abnormal sounds (phonic tics) that are brief, involuntary, rapid, and non rhythmic.
Irresistible urge to move prior to the tic, resulting in a tension that builds and is subsequently relieved by execution of the tic.
Tourette syndrome
Both motor tics and phonic tics are presented
Types
- Simple Tics
- Simple Motor: eye blink, facial grimace, shoulder shrug, or head jerk.
- Simple Vocal: throat clearing, grunting, coughing, snorting, or animal sounds
- Complex Tics
- Complex Motor: touching, grooming, scratching, kicking, hand shaking,
- Complex Vocal: words, phrases
Worsen by
- Stress, anxiety, and fatigue
Relieved by
- Concentrating on a task or activities such as playing a musical instrument or reading.
Cuccurollo 4th Edition Chapter 12 pg867
Braddom 6th Edition Chapter 45 Movement Disorder pg974
What is the classic triad of Huntingtonโs Disease (HD)? ๐๐
Cause of death? Treatment?
๐ก Huntington is the abnormal protein product of HD gene that accumulates in brain cells.
Triad
- Family history (dominant inheritance)
- Chorea/choreoathetosis
Involuntary, continuous, abrupt, rapid, brief, unsustained, irregular movements that flow randomly from one body part to another.
- Dementia and personality changes
Loss of recent memory, impairment of judgment, concentration, and acquisition
Apathy, social withdrawal, agitation, impulsiveness, depression, mania, paranoia, delusions, hostility, hallucinations, and psychosis
Caudate and putamen atrophy on neuroimaging studies is another feature supportive of the diagnosis of HD.
Other motor symptoms include
- Dysarthria, dysphagia
- Postural instability, ataxia
- Myoclonus, and dystonia
Death
- 15โ20 years after onset (aspiration pneumonia)
Treatment
- Neuroleptics/Dopamine Receptor Blockers
- Presynaptic Dopamine Depleters
Cuccurollo 4th Edition Chapter 12 Movement Disorder pg874 Table 12-4