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Interdisciplinary home visits to improve outcomes for advanced Parkinson's disease patients [Meeting Abstract]

Stone, B; Lemen, AC; Sweeney, MM; Fleisher, J; Dacpano, G; Harris, M; Gilbert, RM; Nirenberg, MJ; Di Rocco, A
ISI:000356598201760
ISSN: 1531-8257
CID: 2116382

Modafinil and armodafinil improve attention and global mental status in Lewy bodies disorders: preliminary evidence

Varanese, Sara; Perfetti, Bernardo; Gilbert-Wolf, Rebecca; Thomas, Astrid; Onofrj, Marco; Di Rocco, Alessandro
PMID: 24038163
ISSN: 0885-6230
CID: 557312

Tic modulation using sensory tricks

Gilbert, Rebecca Wolf
BACKGROUND: A sensory trick, or geste antagoniste, is defined as a physical gesture (such as a touch on a particular body part) that mitigates the production of an involuntary movement. This phenomenon is most commonly described as a feature of dystonia. Here we present a case of successful modulation of tics using sensory tricks. CASE REPORT: A case report and video are presented. The case and video demonstrate a 19-year-old male who successfully controlled his tics with various sensory tricks. DISCUSSION: It is underappreciated by movement disorder physicians that sensory tricks can play a role in tics. Introducing this concept to patients could potentially help in tic control. In addition, understanding the pathophysiological underpinnings of sensory tricks could help in the understanding of the pathophysiology of tics.
PMCID:3607913
PMID: 23532712
ISSN: 2160-8288
CID: 1062662

Huntington disease

Chapter by: Gilbert, Rebecca M; Steven Frucht, Steven
in: The differential diagnosis of chorea by Walker, Ruth H (Ed)
Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2011
pp. 50-67
ISBN: 0195393511
CID: 2766622

Parkinsonism and motor neuron diseases: Twenty-seven patients with diverse overlap syndromes

Gilbert, Rebecca M Wolf; Fahn, Stanley; Mitsumoto, Hiroshi; Rowland, Lewis P
It has long been recognized that signs of motor neuron disease (MND) may accompany clinical evidence of parkinsonism in different neurodegenerative conditions. By using the Columbia University Division of Movement Disorders database, we reviewed data from 5,500 cases of parkinsonism and recorded the presence of upper motor neuron (UMN) dysfunction, lower motor neuron (LMN) dysfunction, or both. Among the 27 patients so identified, we counted those with autonomic dysfunction, cerebellar dysfunction, or dementia. Among the 27 cases, seven had UMN signs and LMN signs as well as parkinsonism and were diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)-parkinsonism (Brait-Fahn disease). Three of the seven had dementia that was not deemed to be frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Six other patients had no LMN signs but had UMN signs and parkinsonism and were classified as having primary lateral sclerosis (PLS)-parkinsonism. Four patients had both UMN and LMN signs with parkinsonism as well as the characteristic dementia of FTD; they were diagnosed with FTD-parkinsonism-ALS. Seven patients had MND, parkinsonism, and autonomic or cerebellar dysfunction, a combination compatible with multiple system atrophy (MSA). Three patients had syndromes compatible with hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP). In sum, we found that MND occurs in association with diverse parkinsonian syndromes; some are heritable, others sporadic and causes are uncertain. Having MND may be a risk factor forparkinsonism. A prospective study may elucidate this possibility. (c) 2010 Movement Disorder Society
PMID: 20669307
ISSN: 1531-8257
CID: 112429