Lecture 20: Movement Disorders, Clinical Phenomenology Flashcards

1
Q

What are movement disorders?

A

Conditions characterized by abnormal voluntary movements or excessive involuntary movments

- you can have hypokinetic or hyperkinetic features
- reflect dysfunction among basal ganglia structures and between the basal ganglia, cerebellum and other CNS areas
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2
Q

Dystonia

A

SUSTAINED muscle contraction usually producing TWISTING movements or abnormal postures that are PATTERNED and usually directional
Example: Writer’s dystonia…if someone with this guy holds a pen, arm will be in a contracted state…writers cramp

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3
Q

Tremor

A

rhythmic, oscillatory movements caused by alternate contraction of opposing muscle groups….PERIODIC MOTION
Differentiation from myoclonus because tremors are rhythmical and myoclonus has a fast and slow phase
Example: PD vs. Essential tremor
Former = assymetrical and latter is symmetrical
PD will have SMALL handwriting, while essential tremor has shaky handwriting

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4
Q

How do you classify the tremor?

A

i. At rest: PD/parkinsonism
ii. postural: ET, PD, physiologic
iii. Kinetic (when you are moving): ET, cerebellar

iv. Task specific: dystonia
v. All actions: Rubral/cerebellar, ET

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5
Q

When you see tremor, how do you differentiate between PD vs. ET?

A
PD = rest tremor, asymmetric, micrographia
ET = postural/action tremor, symmetric, shaky-graphia (tremor while you are writing)
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6
Q

Tics

A

intermittent, repeated, and stereotyped movements or sounds (ex. Throat clearing, excessive blinking) under SOME UNDER VOLUNTARY CONTROL
(urge to make the “tic”…need an urge)
Example: Tourette’s Syndrome (motor AND vocal tic)
Great imitator…defining feature is the fact that the patient has “urge”
Motor tic = blinking
Vocal ticks = blowing hair

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7
Q

Myoclonus

A

SHOCK-LIKE or lightning-like contraction or JERK
-defined by sleep
Example: CJD

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8
Q

How do you classify myoclonus?

A

i. Physiologic: hypnic jerks (jerks right when you’re about to sleep)…what you do when you jerk awake during lecture…LOL
ii. Hereditary: ET, epileptic, degenerative
iii. Secondary: metabolic, drugs

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9
Q

Chorea

A

“Dance”; irregular, rapid, random movements that seem to flow from one body part to another
Example: huntington’s disease

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10
Q

Ballism

A

Form of chorea in which LARGE AMPLITUDE jerking or flinging movement, usually of proximal extremity predominates
Example: on a spectrum with chorea

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11
Q

Athetosis

A

WRITHING movement of flexion, extension, pronation, supination of fingers and hands, and sometimes of toes and feet

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12
Q

Hypokinetic:

A

Too few, too small, too slow

Example: PD = hypokinetic

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13
Q

Hyperkinetic

A

too much, too big, too fast
Example: Essential Tremor
Huntington’s

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14
Q

Phenomenology

A

the study of the development of human consciousness and self-awareness as a preface to or a part of philosophy

  • in relation to movement disorders, you just say what you see
  • terminology of movement disorders
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15
Q

What are the clinical symptoms of PD?

A

Major symptom: rest tremor, bradykinesia (hypokinesia), cogwheel rigidity (stiffness of muscles around a joint)
Minor symptom: micrographia, takes many steps to turn

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16
Q

What are problems with Levodopa?

A

Short ass half life

- can cause a peak-dose chorea
- end of dose dystonia
17
Q

What is the mechanism of Direct Brain stimulation (DSB)?

A

Direct stimulation INHIBITS Subthalamic nucleus
-subthalamic nucleus normally excites GPi/SNr, thereby decreasing thalamic and motor cortical activity…so inhibiting subthalamic nucleus = will lead to increase thalamic and cortical activity
DSB can also be applied to inhibit GPi

18
Q

What are other surgical treatments of Parkinsonism?

A

i. pallidotomy/thalamotomy

ii. intraduodenal pump for steady blood level of levodopa

19
Q

What are examples of atypical parkinsonian syndromes?

A

I. multiple systems atropjhy

ii. progressive supranuclear palsy
iii. corticobasal degeneration
iv. Wilson’s disease

20
Q

What atypical parkinsonian syndrome can be treated?

A

Wilson’s disease