Cervical Dystonia Flashcards
What is choreathetosis?
A hyperkinetic movement with proximal + distal flying movements commonly caused by dopamine-blocker drugs
What is an example of myoclonus?
hiccup - sudden contraction of a muscle
What is dystonia?
Sustained involuntary contraction of a muscle
What is essential vs resting tremor?
Essential - regular tremor which gets worse with intention. Regular oscillations about a joint
Resting tremor - as in Parkinson’s disease (10%), treated with Vim thalamus stimulation
How is dystonia inherited?
Common in white people, especially Ashkenazi Jewish. It is autosomal dominant (DYT-1) with 1/3 penetrance
What is cervical dystonia also called?
Spasmodic torticollis
What is Blepharospasm?
Bilateral contraction of orbicular oculi (close eyes)
What is the etiology of Writer’s cramp?
Software problem causing spasm (limb dystonia)
What is spasmodic dysphonia?
Laryngeal dystonia
What is segmental vs multifocal dystonia?
Segmental - dystonia of adjacent parts of body
Multifocal - dystonia of nonadjacent parts of body (i.e. blepharospasm + limb dystonia)
What is the largest psychiatric complication of cervical dystonia?
Withdrawal from social interactions as they become self-conscious from overactive shoulder and neck muscles
90% experience pain
What is the relative prevalence of cervical dystonia, and what age / gender does it normally affect?
9/100000, normally affects women aged 41-42 years (onset)
What are the four types of movement in cervical dystonia?
Torticollis -> rotation, most common
Laterocollis -> lateral bending
Retrocollis -> extension
Anterocollis -> flexion
What are the two classifications of dystonia by etiology?
- Idiopathic - most common, can be with or without hereditary pattern
- Symptomatic - associated with underlying syndrome or trauma
What is the mechanism of botulism toxin and what are the two types?
Inhibits Ach release at neuromuscular junction
Type A - cleaves SNAP-25
Type B - cleaves VAMP (synaptobrevin)