movement disorders Flashcards

1
Q

parkinson’s results from..

idiopathic?

A

reduced dopaminergic transmission at basal ganglia level

Idiopathic in ~75% of cases

Mutations in several genes may contribute

~1,000,000 affected
Peak onset 60 years of age

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2
Q

parkinson’s features

A

2 out of 3:
rest tremor
rigidity
bradykinesia

May include masked facies, decreased eye blinking, stooped posture, decreased arm swing

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3
Q

balance btw glutamate, ACh and dopamine

in Parkinson’s

A

less dopamine

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4
Q

ddx parkinsonism

A

Wilson’s
Huntington’s
Multisystem Atrophy

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5
Q

Multisystem Atrophy (formerly Shy Drager Syndrome)

A
ANS insufficiency (blood pools in legs), parkinsonism, LMN signs, cerebellar dysfunction
-think tests?
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6
Q

Huntington’s

A

fam hx and dementia

tx: tetrabenazine for
dyskinesia – interferes with storage of amines

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7
Q

Wilson’s

A

don’t want to miss
Early age onset,
Kayser Fleischer rings (eyes), increased copper in tissues

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8
Q

parkinson’s motor features

A
Bradykinesia
Micrographia
Hypophonia 
Rest Tremor, 4 to 6 Hz, “Pill rolling” 
Rigidity, “Plastic” quality, “Cogwheel” sensation 
Short shuffling steps 
Myerson Sign
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9
Q

lead pipe vs cogwheel rigidity

A

stiff vs jerky

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10
Q

parkinson’s non-motor features

A
Depression, Anxiety 
Cognitive impairment 
Sleep disturbances 
Anosmia 
Orthostatic hypotension – Syncope
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11
Q

park: Neuropsychiatric Symptoms

A

Lewy body dementia

Depression – 50% of patients

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12
Q

park: patho: atrophy where?

degeneration of ?? with presence of ??

A

Frontal atrophy

Degeneration of dopaminergic cells with presence of Lewy bodies that have high concentration of alpha-synuclein

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13
Q

park tx: dopaminamimetic tx

A

-Dopamine agonists cross blood-brain barrier acting on dopamine receptors

-Levadopa converted to dopamine in body
Combined with carbidopa, which inhibits enzyme that breaks down levodopa to dopamine, but does NOT cross blood brain barrier
levels can go up and down
take at sp. times

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14
Q

park tx: selegilline

A

Monoamine oxidase inhibitor (MAO-I)

Added to help with tremor

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15
Q

part tx: Entacapone

A

Catechol O-methyltransferase (COMT) inhibitors

Blocks enzyme that degrades levodopa and dopamine, allows for more sustained levels of response

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16
Q

park tx considerations

A

Time of medications very important to prevent symptom return/withdrawal

Don’t give Levodopa if patient has narrow angle glaucoma, or is on MAOI within 2 weeks of stopping the drug (HTN crisis)

17
Q

combo Carbidopa/Levodopa brand name

A

Sinemet

18
Q

another tx for parkinson’s

A

deep brain stimulation

19
Q

essential tremor

A

Most common movement disorder (hands, head, or voice)

May be worse with stress/emotions, sleep deprived

Autosomal dominant
Generally bilateral

20
Q

essential tremor improved with

A

with alcohol, certain beta-blockers (propranolol)

21
Q

Hemiballismus/hemichorea

A

Dramatic “flailing”
Violent form of chorea
Supportive care

Tx: haloperidol, propranolol, phenytoin, clonazepam, baclofen

22
Q

Huntington’s
genetic inheritance?

onset?

A

Autosomal Dominant –
CAG mutation on Chromosome 4
genetic testing confirms diagnosis

Fatal
Onset 30-50 years of age (50% chance of your children have it)
Chorea “dance”

23
Q

dystonia

tx?

A

Syndrome of involuntary contractions of muscles, twisting and repetitive movements

Treatment is symptomatic
Anticholinergic medications (trihexyphenidyl)
24
Q

If dystonia is due to Wilson’s disease ??

A

copper chelation therapy

25
Q

Tourette Syndrome

age of onset?? how often?

A

Tic
Neurologic and behavioral
Symptoms before age 21
criteria: tics occur for at least 1 year, tics very in number frequency and nature over time

26
Q

Tourettes tx: atypical antipsychotic

A

CBT (cog. behav. therapy)

Clonidine, Botox options
Risperidone, olanzapine, ziprasidone in more severe cases

27
Q

Tarditive dyskenisia:

A

med-induced hyperkinetic disorder

Usually from exposure to central dopamine blockers
1/3 temporary, but can be perminant

28
Q

Myerson sign

A

glabellar tap sign is a medical condition where a patient is unable to resist blinking when tapped on the glabella, the area above the nose and between the eyebrows

29
Q

Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome (NMS):

A

med-induced hyperkinetic disorder

Serious complication, mortality as high as 20%
Muscle rigidity

Treatment is dantrolene, cooling body
tx, problem is recognition, fam hx