Neuro - Tremor Flashcards
A 64yo man presents with a bilateral tremor in his hands. What is your differential diagnosis?
- Postural tremor
- essential tremor
- exaggerated physiological tremor e.g. anxiety, thyrotoxicosis
- alcohol abuse
- peripheral neuropathies - Resting tremor
- Parkinson’s disease - Intention tremor
- cerebellar disease e.g. MS, stroke, tumours
Which features suggest an essential tremor?
- Bilateral postural tremor (5-10 Hz)
- slowly progressive (intermittent then persistent)
- worse with voluntary movement, stress, fatigue, caffeine
- resolves at rest
- improves with alcohol consumption - Bilateral distribution: teens and 60s
- FHx in 50-70% (autosomal dominant inheritance)
Discuss options for the management of an essential tremor.
- no Tx
- 1st line: PROPRANOLOL or PRIMIDONE (AED)
- 2nd line: other B-blockers or AEDs
- 3rd line: deep brain stimulation or thalamotomy
What is the pathophysiology of Parkinson’s disease?
Build up of intraneuronal Lewy bodies… degeneration of dopaminergic neurones in substantia nigra… impaired motor function.
Which clinical features suggest Parkinson’s disease?
- resting ‘pill-rolling’ tremor (3-5 Hz): induced by concentration, improved by activity
- bradykinesia e.g. reduced arm swing, hypomimia
- lead-pipe/cogwheel rigidity
- postural instability
- altered gait e.g. forward-flexed shuffling, festination, ‘en-block’ turning
- psych features e.g. depression, psychosis
- fatigue and sleep disturbance
What investigations would you perform in a case of suspected Parskinson’s?
clinical diagnosis
What are the medical management options for a patient with Parkinson’s disease?
1st line:
- motor Sx affecting QoL: LEVODOPA + CARBIDOPA
- motor Sx not affecting QoL:
- MAO-B inhibitor e.g. RASAGELINE, SELEGILINE
- dopamine agonist e.g. ROPINIROLE
2nd line: LEVODOPA + MAO-B inhibitor OR dopamine agonist OR COMT inhibitor e.g. ENTACAPONE
What are the pros + cons of levodopa comapred to other PD meds? What is its MOA?
MOA: dopamine precursor
Pros:
- best effect on motor Sx + ADLs
- fewer specified adverse effects
Cons:
- more motor complications (esp. long term) e.g. on/off, dyskinesias, freezing
- other s/e: hypotension, psychosis, tachycardia
What are the specified adverse effects of dopamine agonists and MAO-B inhibitors?
- excessive sleepiness
- hallucinations
- impulse control disorders
Describe the 3 parkinson’s plus syndromes.
- Lewy body dementia: progressive neuronal degeneration (cholinergic + dopaminergic) due to accumulation of Lewy bodies
- dementia with visual hallucinations
- parkinsonism
- ANS dysfunction
- REM sleep disorder
- fluctuating cognition/alertness/attention - progressive supranuclear palsy: progressive neuronal degeneration from accumulation of Tau proteins
- supranuclear ophthalmoplegia (problems with downwards eye movements)
- parkinsonism
- ataxia
- dementia - multiple system atrophy
- orthostatic hypotension (L+S BP)
- parkinsonism
- poor response to dopamine meds