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A pilot tolerability and efficacy study of levetiracetam in patients with chronic myoclonus
Frucht, S J; Louis, E D; Chuang, C; Fahn, S
Levetiracetam was recently approved as adjunctive therapy for partial onset seizures. The authors conducted an open-label trial of levetiracetam in eight patients with chronic myoclonus. Patients were assessed by using the Unified Myoclonus Rating Scale. Levetiracetam was well tolerated. Three of five patients with cortical myoclonus experienced reductions in their myoclonus scores, providing support for a larger, placebo-controlled trial in cortical myoclonus.
PMID: 11571347
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 2761112
The natural history of embouchure dystonia [Case Report]
Frucht, S J; Fahn, S; Greene, P E; O'Brien, C; Gelb, M; Truong, D D; Welsh, J; Factor, S; Ford, B
Focal task-specific dystonias are unusual disorders of motor control, often affecting individuals who perform complex repetitive movements. Musicians are especially prone to develop these disorders because of their training regimens and intense practice schedules. Task-specific dystonia occurring in keyboard or string instrumentalists usually affects the hand. In contrast, there have been few descriptions of musicians with task-specific dystonia affecting the muscles of the face and jaw. We report detailed clinical observations of 26 professional brass and woodwind players afflicted with focal task-specific dystonia of the embouchure (the pattern of lip, jaw, and tongue muscles used to control the flow of air into a mouthpiece). This is the largest and most comprehensively studied series of such patients. Patients developed embouchure dystonia in the fourth decade, and initial symptoms were usually limited to one range of notes or style of playing. Once present, dystonia progressed without remission and responded poorly to oral medications and botulinum toxin injection. Patients with embouchure dystonia could be separated by the pattern of their abnormal movements into several groups, including embouchure tremor, involuntary lip movements, and jaw closure. Dystonia not infrequently spread to other oral tasks, often producing significant disability. Effective treatments are needed for this challenging and unusual disorder.
PMID: 11746620
ISSN: 0885-3185
CID: 1431622
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome in advanced Parkinson's disease [Case Report]
Gordon, P H; Frucht, S J
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome is a serious complication of levodopa withdrawal in patients with Parkinson's disease. We report a patient with advanced parkinsonism who developed neuroleptic malignant syndrome in the setting of inadequate levodopa intake. His symptoms improved with levodopa replacement, but dramatically worsened when enteral feeding was begun due to interference with intestinal absorption of levodopa.
PMID: 11746631
ISSN: 0885-3185
CID: 2761102
Evidence for familial aggregation of tremor in normal individuals
Louis, E D; Ford, B; Frucht, S; Rabinowitz, D; Ottman, R
BACKGROUND: Tremor occurs in most normal individuals, and this tremor may offer basic clues about the mechanisms of neuromuscular control. It is not known whether genetic factors influence the magnitude of tremor in normal families. OBJECTIVE: To assess the familial aggregation of tremor in normal families. METHODS: Control subjects from the Washington Heights-Inwood community in northern Manhattan, NY, were enrolled in a family study. These subjects and their first- and second-degree relatives underwent a videotaped tremor examination. Two neurologists rated the severity of tremor on the videotaped examination, assigning a total tremor score (0 to 36 [maximum]). Associations between the control subjects' and their relatives' total tremor scores were assessed using correlation coefficients and linear regression analysis. In addition, maximum likelihood methods were used to fit a linear mixed-effects model to the total tremor scores of probands and their siblings, after excluding any relatives with essential tremor. RESULTS: There were 56 control subjects and 226 relatives. Tremor was clinically detectable in 221 (97.8%) of 226 relatives. There was an association between the control subjects' total tremor scores and those of their siblings (r = 0.40; p = 0.018), those of all of their first-degree relatives (siblings and children combined, r = 0.20; p = 0.037), but not those of their second-degree relatives (r = 0.002; p = 0.99). In analyses of probands and normal siblings, the estimate of the variance of the family-specific component of the age-adjusted total tremor score was different from zero (p < 0.005), and the family specific component was estimated to account for 52% of the variability in the scores. CONCLUSIONS: Tremor aggregates in normal families, suggesting that genetic factors may contribute to its etiology. Other studies might be designed by investigators to identify these genes through genetic linkage or association analysis. Identification of such genes would help to elucidate the mechanisms underlying this ubiquitous condition.
PMID: 11445637
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 2762092
Risk of tremor and impairment from tremor in relatives of patients with essential tremor: a community-based family study
Louis, E D; Ford, B; Frucht, S; Barnes, L F; X-Tang, M; Ottman, R
Essential tremor (ET) is a common condition that is present in as many as 23% of elderly individuals. Our objective was to determine the risk of ET and to study the impairment resulting from ET among relatives of ET cases compared to relatives of controls. ET cases and matched controls from the Washington Heights-Inwood community, New York, and their first- and second-degree relatives underwent a standardized tremor examination. The risk of having ET in relatives of cases vs relatives of controls was compared using Cox proportional hazards models. Five hundred ninety-one subjects were examined (59 ET cases, 72 controls, 234 case relatives, and 226 control relatives). ET was present in 25 (22.5%) of the 111 first-degree relatives of cases compared to 6 (5.6%) of 107 first-degree relatives of controls [relative risk (RR) = 4.67, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.90-11.49, p = 0.0008]. RRs were higher in relatives of cases with onset < or =50 years than in those with later onset (RR = 10.38 vs 4.82). Sixteen (64%) of twenty-five affected first-degree case relatives exhibited moderate tremor while performing tasks such as writing, drinking, or pouring. Relatives of ET patients are five times more likely to develop the disease than are members of the population and ten times more likely if the proband's tremor began at an early age. The majority of the affected relatives can expect to experience impairment resulting from tremor.
PMID: 11409428
ISSN: 0364-5134
CID: 2762102
The clinical spectrum of associated chest wall movements after thoracotomy/surgery [Meeting Abstract]
Constantino, AEA; Ford, B; Greene, P; Jennings, D; Frucht, S
ISI:000168270600315
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 2762342
Evidence for familial aggregation of tremor in normal families [Meeting Abstract]
Watner, DB; Ford, B; Frucht, S; Rabinowitz, D; Ottman, R; Louis, ED
ISI:000168270600058
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 2762652
Risk of tremor and functional consequences of tremor in relatives of patients with essential tremor: A community-based family study [Meeting Abstract]
Louis, ED; Ford, B; Frucht, S; Tang, MX; Ottman, R
ISI:000168270600795
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 2763072
Mirtazapine in parkinsonian tremor and essential tremor [Meeting Abstract]
Gordon, PH; Pullman, SL; Louis, ED; Frucht, SJ; Fahn, S
ISI:000168270600063
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 2763062
Mild tremor in relatives of essential tremor patients: What does this tell us about the penetrance of the disease? [Meeting Abstract]
Ford, B; Jurewicz, EC; Frucht, S; Ottman, R; Louis, ED
ISI:000168270600062
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 2763052