Tremor and movement disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Examples of hyperkinetic movement disorders

A
Tremor
Tics
Chorea
Myoclonus
Dystonia
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2
Q

What is tremor?

A

Rhythmic sinusoidal oscillation of a body part, usually due to alternate activation of agonist and antagonist muscles

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3
Q

How is tremor classified?

A

Position (resting, posture, movement)

Distribution (Which body part)

Frequency

Amplitude

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4
Q

What does examination of the patient with tremor involve?

A

Examine at rest, on posture and during movement

Ask patient to write something and copy a spiral

Complete physical and neuro exam

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5
Q

What investigations should be carried out in young patients (

A

TFT, copper and coeuruloplasmin

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6
Q

How is dystonia defined?

A

Involuntary sustained muscle contraction

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7
Q

Which gene is responsible for torsion dystonia and what are it’s clinical features?

A

DYT1

Starts before 28
Starts in a limb usually leg
Majority progress over 5-10 years to become generalised
Often FH

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8
Q

What is the surgical treatment of choice for dystonia?

A

Deep brain stimulation

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9
Q

What is the treatment of choice for focal dystonia

A

Injection of botox

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10
Q

For patients who do not respond to botox what is the next step?

A

Surgery- Improvement in pain and function reported, benefit weeks to months after operation, trials still ongoing

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11
Q

What is chorea?

A

Brief irregular purposeless movements which flit and flow from one body part to another

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12
Q

What are Tics?

A

Involuntary stereotyped movements or vocalisations

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13
Q

What is myoclonus?

A

Brief electric shock like jerks, hiccups or hypnic jerks (when falling asleep) are common

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14
Q

Clinical features of huntingtons

A

Behavioural disturbance
dementia
Movement disorder, usually chorea

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15
Q

What is the inheritance pattern of Huntington’s?

A

Autosomal dominant

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16
Q

What is the genetic cause of Huntingtons

A

CAG triplet repeat expansion affecting the huntingtin gene on chromosome 4

17
Q

How can tics be classified?

A

Motor or vocal

Both can be further divided into simple or complex

18
Q

What causes myoclonus?

A

Brief activation of muscle groups leading to a jerk of affected body part

19
Q

What is negative myoclonus

A

A temporary cessation of muscle activity eg liver flap