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1.
《Clinical neurophysiology》2021,132(9):2282-2289
ObjectiveEssential tremor (ET) and Parkinsonian tremor (PT) are often clinically misdiagnosed due to the overlapping characteristics of their hand tremor. We aim to examine if ET and PT influence the multiscale dynamics of hand tremor, as quantified using complexity, differently, and if such complexity metric is of promise to help identify ET from PT.MethodsForty-eight participants with PT and 48 with ET performed two 30-second tests within each of the following conditions: sitting while resting arms or outstretching arms horizontally. The hand tremor was captured by accelerometers secured to the dorsum of each hand. The complexity was quantified using multiscale entropy.ResultsCompared to PT group, ET group had lower complexity of both hands across conditions (F > 34.2, p < 0.001). Lower complexity was associated with longer disease duration (r2 > 0.15, p < 0.009) in both PT and ET, and within PT, greater Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale-III UPDRS-III scores (r2 > 0.18, p < 0.009). Receiver-operating-characteristic curves revealed that the complexity metric can distinguish ET from PT (area-under-the-curve > 0.77, cut-off value = 48 (postural), 49 (resting)), which was confirmed in a separate dataset with ET and PT that were clearly diagnosed in prior work.ConclusionsThe PT and ET have different effects on hand tremor complexity, and this metric is promising to help the identification of ET and PT, which still needs to be confirmed in future studies.SignificanceThe characteristics of multiscale dynamics of the hand tremor, as quantified by complexity, provides novel insights into the different pathophysiology between ET and PT.  相似文献   

2.
Psychogenic tremor (PT) is visually indistinguishable from voluntarily mimicked tremor. Healthy volunteers have difficulties with carrying out simultaneously two tasks due to the phenomenon known as dual task interference. Therefore, performing voluntary rhythmic movements would be a burden for carrying out fast ballistic movements with the contralateral hand. We hypothesized that, similarly to healthy volunteers performing rhythmic movements, patients with PT should show the effects of dual task interference, and this may distinguish them from patients with other types of tremor. We studied 6 patients with PT, 9 with Parkinson's disease (PD) and predominantly unilateral tremor, 11 with essential tremor (ET), and 10 normal volunteers (NV) mimicking tremor. They were requested to perform a unilateral simple reaction time task (SRT) to a visual imperative signal in two different conditions: at rest (rSRT) and during contralateral hand tremor (tSRT). Reaction time was significantly longer in tSRT than in rSRT in PT and in NV groups (P < 0.01 for both groups). However, no significant differences were observed between rSRT and tSRT in PD and ET. The delay of unilateral tSRT with respect to rSRT suggests an effect of tremorlike oscillatory movements on reaction time that is consistent with the concept of dual-task interference in NV or PT patients but not in PD or ET. These observations may be useful in the evaluation of psychogenic movement disorders.  相似文献   

3.
Rest tremor associated with essential tremor (ET) is a condition that poses challenges in diagnosing Parkinson's disease (PD). We investigated tremor parameters in PD and ET patients with rest tremor. Fifteen patients with PD and 15 patients with ET underwent electrophysiological examination to evaluate characteristics of muscle bursting in rest postures. Rest tremor amplitude of PD patients was significantly higher than that of patients with ET (p = 0.002), whereas burst duration and frequency were significantly higher in ET than in PD group (p = 0.002, p < 0.001, respectively). Patients with PD, however, showed some overlap of these electrophysiological values with values from patients with ET. By contrast, rest tremor pattern showed no overlap between the two diseases, because all patients with ET presented a synchronous pattern whereas PD patients had an alternating pattern (p < 0.001), a finding that differentiated the patients on an individual basis. The electromyographic pattern of rest tremor may help to differentiate PD from ET.  相似文献   

4.
The spectrum of involuntary movements seen in essential tremor (ET) is limited. Jaw tremor is one such movement. The prevalence and clinical correlates of jaw tremor have not been studied in detail. The objective of this study was to estimate the prevalence and examine the clinical correlates of jaw tremor in ET using ET cases from three distinct settings (population, tertiary-referral center, brain repository). All ET cases underwent a videotaped tremor examination in which tremors (including limb, head, voice, and jaw) were assessed. The prevalence [95% confidence interval (CI)] of jaw tremor was lowest in the population sample (7.5%; 3.9%-14.2%), intermediate in the tertiary-referral center (10.1%; 6.8%-14.7%), and highest in the brain repository (18.0%; 12.3%-25.5%; P = 0.03). Jaw tremor was associated with older age (P < 0.001), more severe action tremor of the arms (P < 0.001), and presence of head and voice tremor (P < 0.001). Jaw tremor was present in 4/14 (28.6%) ET cases with consistent rest tremor vs. 15/193 (7.8%) cases without rest tremor (odds ratio = 4.8; 95% CI = 1.3-7.0; P = 0.009). The prevalence of jaw tremor was 7.5% to 18.0% and was dependent on the mode of ascertainment, being least prevalent in a population-based sample. ET cases with jaw tremor had a more clinically severe and more topographically widespread disorder. The association in our study between jaw tremor and rest tremor, along with the published observation that jaw tremor can occur in Parkinson's disease (PD), raises the question whether jaw tremor in ET is a marker for subsequent conversion to PD.  相似文献   

5.
Background   Rest tremor is a hallmark of Parkinson’s disease (PD), but its pathogenesis remains incompletely understood. Nigro-striatal dopamine deficiency correlates best with bradykinesia, but not with tremor. Oscillating neurons in one or multiple localizations within the basal gangliathalamo-cortical loop may cause rest tremor, and an active contribution of the cerebellum and the cerebello-thalamo-cortical projections has been postulated. Objective   To compare the pattern of grey matter volume in PD patients with and without tremor to identify structural correlates of rest tremor. Methods   Voxel-based morphometry (VBM) of a high-resolution 3 Tesla, T1-weighted MR images, pre-processed according to an optimized protocol using SPM2, was performed in 24 patients with mild to moderate PD comparing local grey matter volume in patients with (n = 14) and without rest tremor (n = 10). Results   Grey matter volume is decreased in the right quadrangular lobe and declive of the cerebellum in PD with tremor compared to those without (PFDR < 0.05). Conclusions   These results demonstrate for the first time morphological changes in the cerebellum in PD patients with rest tremor and highlight the involvement of the cerebellum and cerebello- thalamo-cortical circuit in the pathogenesis of parkinsonian rest tremor.  相似文献   

6.
BackgroundEssential tremor (ET) is one of the most common movement disorders. Normally ET affects the distal upper extremities, but it can also be accompanied by midline symptoms. Ventralis intermedius (VIM) thalamic deep brain stimulation (DBS) has been shown to be effective in reducing hand tremor, but its effects on head tremor have been inconsistent.MethodsTwenty-nine DBS patients with a diagnosis of ET met inclusion criteria. All implantations targeted VIM. The factors examined included age, gender, disease duration, presence or absence of head tremor, handedness, and the Fahn-Tolosa-Marin rating scale (TRS). This analysis specifically focused on TRS head tremor sub-scores at baseline, 6 months and 12 months post-DBS. Additionally, DBS lead entry angles were examined.ResultsTwenty-three ET patients underwent unilateral DBS and six underwent staged bilateral DBS. At both 6 and 12 months following DBS, stimulation resulted in diminished head tremor (ON vs OFF; p < 0.0001). The most important predictor of head tremor suppression was the entry angle of the DBS lead in the sagittal projection relative to the AC–PC axial plane (AC–PC angle). Head tremor reduction was greater among more vertical AC–PC angles.ConclusionA more vertical AC–PC angle of the DBS lead trajectory was associated with improved head tremor suppression. Further studies will be necessary to confirm this potentially important finding.  相似文献   

7.
ObjectiveDAT-SPECT, is a well-established procedure for distinguishing drug-induced parkinsonism from Parkinson's disease (PD). We investigated the usefulness of blink reflex recovery cycle (BRrc) and of electromyographic parameters of resting tremor for the differentiation of patients with drug-induced parkinsonism with resting tremor (rDIP) from those with resting tremor due to PD.MethodsThis was a cross-sectional study. In 16 patients with rDIP and 18 patients with PD we analysed electrophysiological parameters (amplitude, duration, burst and pattern) of resting tremor. BRrc at interstimulus intervals (ISI) of 100, 150, 200, 300, 400, 500 and 750 msec was also analysed in patients with rDIP, patients with PD and healthy controls. All patients and controls underwent DAT-SPECT.ResultsRest tremor amplitude was higher in PD patients than in rDIP patients (p < 0.001), while frequency and burst duration were higher in rDIP than in PD (p < 0.001, p < 0.003, respectively). Resting tremor showed a synchronous pattern in all patients with rDIP, whereas it had an alternating pattern in all PD patients (p < 0.001). DAT-SPECT was normal in rDIP patients while it was markedly abnormal in patients with PD.ConclusionsIn the absence of DAT-SPECT, the pattern of resting tremor can be considered a useful investigation for differentiating rDIP from PD.  相似文献   

8.

Background and purpose

Essential tremor (ET) is a common and heterogeneous disorder characterized by postural/kinetic tremor of the upper limbs and other body segments and by non-motor symptoms, including cognitive and psychiatric abnormalities. Only a limited number of longitudinal studies have comprehensively and simultaneously investigated motor and non-motor symptom progression in ET. Possible soft signs that configure the ET-plus diagnosis are also under-investigated in follow-up studies. We aimed to longitudinally investigate the progression of ET manifestations by means of clinical and neurophysiological evaluation.

Methods

Thirty-seven ET patients underwent evaluation at baseline (T0) and at follow-up (T1; mean interval ± SD = 39.89 ± 9.83 months). The assessment included the clinical and kinematic evaluation of tremor and voluntary movement execution, as well as the investigation of cognitive and psychiatric disorders.

Results

A higher percentage of patients showed tremor in multiple body segments and rest tremor at T1 as compared to T0 (all p-values < 0.01). At T1, the kinematic analysis revealed reduced finger-tapping movement amplitude and velocity as compared to T0 (both p-values < 0.001). The prevalence of cognitive and psychiatric disorders did not change between T0 and T1. Female sex, absence of family history, and rest tremor at baseline were identified as predictive factors of worse disease progression.

Conclusions

ET progression is characterized by the spread of tremor in multiple body segments and by the emergence of soft signs. We also identified possible predictors of disease worsening. The results contribute to a better understanding of ET classification and pathophysiology.  相似文献   

9.
An olfactory deficit is present in patients with essential tremor (ET), but it is often milder than that in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). In both, the deficit occurs early in the disease. Isolated rest tremor without other signs of parkinsonism can occur in patients with ET. If the rest tremor in these patients represents a manifestation of ET rather than early PD, we hypothesized that their University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test (UPSIT) scores would be similar to those of ET patients without rest tremor. The mean UPSIT score in 13 ET patients with isolated rest tremor did not differ from that of 58 ET patients without rest tremor (29.3 +/- 4.3 vs. 29.4 +/- 6.4; P = 0.69). Several ET patients with rest tremor had UPSIT scores that fell outside of the range that is seen in 95% of patients with PD. These data raise the possibility that some ET patients with isolated rest tremor may not have early PD and that the pathological process that is responsible for their ET is also involving the basal ganglia.  相似文献   

10.
目的 探讨震颤分析在帕金森病(parkinson's disease,PD)和原发性震颤(essential trem-or,ET)鉴别诊断中的应用价值.方法 选取2017年9月至2020年11月在福建省立金山医院门诊和住院确诊的PD患者27例(PD组)和ET患者23例(ET组),所有患者均至少有一侧上肢静止性或姿势性...  相似文献   

11.
《Clinical neurophysiology》2021,132(8):1878-1886
ObjectiveA role of the motor cortex in tremor generation in essential tremor (ET) is assumed, yet the directionality of corticomuscular coupling is unknown. Our aim is to clarify the role of the motor cortex. To this end we also study ‘familial cortical myoclonic tremor with epilepsy’ (FCMTE) and slow repetitive voluntary movements with a known cortical drive.MethodsDirectionality of corticomuscular coupling (EEG-EMG) was studied with renormalized partial directed coherence (rPDC) during tremor in 25 ET patients, 25 healthy controls (mimicked) and in seven FCMTE patients; and during a self-paced 2 Hz task in eight ET patients and seven healthy controls.ResultsEfferent coupling around tremor frequency was seen in 33% of ET patients, 45.5% of healthy controls, all FCMTE patients, and, around 2 Hz, in all ET patients and all healthy controls. Ascending coupling, seen in the majority of all participants, was weaker in ET than in healthy controls around 5–6 Hz.ConclusionsPossible explanations are that tremor in ET results from faulty subcortical output bypassing the motor cortex; rate-dependent transmission similar to generation of rhythmic movements; and/or faulty feedforward mechanism resulting from decreased afferent (sensory) coupling.SignificanceA linear cortical drive is lacking in the majority of ET patients.  相似文献   

12.
Re-emergent tremor (RET) and the classical parkinsonian rest tremor were considered as two different phenomena of the same central tremor circuit. However, clinical and accelerometric characteristics of these tremors were not previously compared in a single study. We evaluated disease characteristics and accelerometric measurements of two tremor types in 42 patients with Parkinson’s disease. Disease specific features and accelerometric measurements of peak frequency, amplitude at peak frequency and the root mean square (RMS) amplitude of two tremor types were compared. Eighteen patients had RET and the mean latency of the RET was 9.48 (±9.2) s. Groups of only rest tremor and RET did not differ significantly in age of disease onset, disease duration and severity and mean levodopa equivalent dose. Comparison of peak frequency and amplitude at peak frequency were not different between the groups, but RMS amplitude was significantly higher in the RET group (p = 0.03). RMS amplitude of RET was also correlated with disease severity (r = .48, p = 0.04). These results support the previous notion that rest tremor and RET are analogue, both are triggered by the same central ossilator with RET being only the suppression of the rest tremor due to arm repositioning.  相似文献   

13.
目的了解北京地区社区中老年人原发性震颤(essential tremor,ET)的临床特征及其与预后的关系。方法2000年在北京城区、近郊平原、远郊山区调查了2835名55岁以上中老年人,采用筛查和临床诊断两步法确诊患者。发现ET患者135例,对其中合并静止性震颤的患者进行分析,并于2004年对其进行随访。结果其中合并上肢静止性震颤患者17例,占12.6%,合并静止性震颤组震颤总分、头部震颤的比例、肢体震颤总分均明显高于对照组。两组年龄、性别组成、病史无显著性差异,姿势性震颤和动作性震颤的程度差异不明显。4年后随访到13例(13/17),其中3例死亡,实际调查的10例中有9例仍诊断为ET,另1例诊断为临床很可能ET。结论有相当部分社区ET患者可以合并静止性震颤,合并静止性震颤的患者提示病情较重。  相似文献   

14.
An increased R2 recovery component of the blink reflex (R2-BRrc) has been observed in Parkinson's disease (PD), cranio-cervical dystonia, dystonic tremor and essential tremor with associated resting tremor (rET), while the BRrc was reported normal in patients with essential tremor (ET). Distinguishing rET from tremor dominant PD (tPD) may be challenging especially in the first stages of the diseases, in the absence of DAT-SPECT investigation. We evaluated the possible usefulness of BRrc for differentiating subjects with de novo tPD from those with rET. We investigated R2-BRrc at interstimulus intervals (ISI) of 100, 150, 200, 300, 400, 500 and 750 ms in 11 participants with tPD, 10 with rET and 20 healthy controls. All participants underwent DAT-SPECT and cardiac MIBG scintigraphy.R2 recovery was significantly enhanced in tPD compared to controls at all investigated ISIs (p < 0.001), while in subjects with rET patients BRrc was significantly increased compared to controls at ISI 150, 200, 300, 400, 500 and 750 ms (p < 0.001).At ISI 100 R2-BRrc distinguished patients participants with de novo tPD from those with rET with a sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of 100%. Our findings demonstrate the usefulness of BRrc for differentiating de novo tPD from rET.  相似文献   

15.
Tremor is clinically evaluated and classified on the basis of its response to limb posture (resting, postural, and kinetic tremor), but the mechanisms underlying this powerful influence remain unclear and no satisfactory method exists to identify or quantify underlying tremor subtypes. Postural change is closely linked to changes in gravitational load. We therefore assessed the effect of changes in muscle load on essential tremor (ET) and parkinsonian tremor (PT) independently of postural change. A motor accurately delivered a series of constant (0.2-1.2 Nm) flexion and extension torques about the affected wrist while subjects maintained a constant wrist angle by isometrically contracting wrist flexors or extensors against the applied loads. Linear regression of tremulous electromyogram (EMG) spectral peak amplitude against the applied loads estimated the magnitudes of the load-dependent (LDT) and load-independent (LIT) tremor components. The amplitude of ET was linearly related to increase in gravitational load. It thus contained a large LDT component and a small or absent LIT component. Muscle loading revealed significant LDT and LIT components in PT. LIT was dominant at zero load (classic rest tremor) but both components were present during loading (classic postural tremor). Muscle loading more clearly identifies tremor subtypes than postural effects alone. The method could be applied in clinical and pathophysiological studies.  相似文献   

16.
To investigate over time changes in striatal dopamine transporter (DAT), we performed two sequential N‐ω‐fluoropropyl‐2β‐carbomethoxy‐3β‐(4‐iodophenyl) tropane single photon computed tomography (SPECT) scans in 20 subjects with essential tremor (ET), in 13 with Parkinson disease (PD) and in 23 healthy controls (HC, one scan only). We also performed an [99mTc]ethyl cysteinate dimer bicisate SPECT exam for regional brain network analysis in 9 ET, in a second group of 18 PD (9 with tremor, tPD and 9 akinetic‐rigid dominant, arPD) and in 8 HC. PD subjects had a reduced DAT binding in comparison to ET and HC with an annual decline rate of 7.3% in the contralateral putamen. There were no mean uptake differences between ET and HC at baseline and no uptake loss over time in ET. A discriminant analysis grouped 30% (first scan) and 5% (second scan) of ET as PD and a partition analysis showed overlap between ET and PD for caudate nucleus uptake. Spatial covariance analysis revealed that the expression of the PD‐related regional pattern separated both tPD and arPD from ET and HC. In conclusion, PD and ET do not share a common pattern of dopaminergic loss over time. However, mild impairment of dopamine transporter in the caudate nucleus may contribute to tremor onset in ET. © 2010 Movement Disorder Society  相似文献   

17.
The objective was to design, build, and assess Kinesia?, a wireless system for automated assessment of Parkinson's disease (PD) tremor. The current standard in evaluating PD is the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS), a qualitative ranking system typically completed during an office visit. Kinesia integrates accelerometers and gyroscopes in a compact patient‐worn unit to capture kinematic movement disorder features. Objectively quantifying PD manifestations with increased time resolution should aid in evaluating efficacy of treatment protocols and improve patient management. In this study, PD subjects performed the tremor subset of the UPDRS motor section while wearing Kinesia. Quantitative kinematic features were processed and highly correlated to clinician scores for rest tremor (r2 = 0.89), postural tremor (r2 = 0.90), and kinetic tremor (r2 = 0.69). The quantitative features were used to develop a mathematical model that predicted tremor severity scores for new data with low errors. Finally, PD subjects indicated high clinical acceptance. © 2009 Movement Disorder Society  相似文献   

18.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Rest tremor is the most frequent sign of Parkinson's disease (PD) after bradykinesia, occurring with various severity in about 75% of patients. An objective assessment of rest tremor is difficult. The aim of the study was to analyze rest tremor in PD with the three-dimensional gauging system CMS 10; more specifically, the impact of levodopa treatment on rest tremor, the influence of clinical factors, and the correlation between rest tremor and clinical scales were assessed. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Ninety-five patients with PD (mean age 67.6 years) and 30 healthy people in a control group (mean age 59.3 years) were examined. Clinical scales (UPDRS, Hoehn and Yahr, Schwab and England, as well as Webster scale) were used to assess severity of PD. The assessment of rest tremor was performed within the more and less affected upper limb with the three-dimensional gauging system CMS 10 (Zebris GmbH) before and 1-2 hours after levodopa intake. Frequency (Hz), amplitude (deg), velocity (deg/ms) and acceleration (deg/s2) of the tremor were evaluated. Results were compared with averaged results for left and right upper limb in the control group. RESULTS: The method used in this study objectively showed asymmetry in rest tremor. After levodopa intake, all evaluated parameters of rest tremor were decreased (mainly the amplitude and frequency, and to a lesser degree, velocity and acceleration). The motor part of UPDRS showed the best correlation with rest tremor. CONCLUSIONS: The three-dimensional measuring system CMS 10 is useful in the objective assessment of rest tremor in PD. Rest tremor in PD is under the influence of PD form, the intake of levodopa dose, the amount of levodopa, gender and level of education.  相似文献   

19.

Objective

To investigate the prevalence and the temporal structure of bilateral coherence in physiological (PT) and essential (ET) hand tremor.

Methods

Triaxial accelerometric recordings from both hands in 30 healthy subjects and 34 ET patients were analyzed using spectral coherence and wavelet coherence methods. In 12 additional healthy subjects, the relation between the hand tremor and the chest wall acceleration was evaluated using partial coherence analysis.

Results

The majority of both PT and ET subjects displayed significant bilateral coherence. While in PT, bilateral coherence was most frequently found in resting hand position (97% of subjects), in ET the prevalence was comparable for resting (54%) and postural (49%–57%) positions. In both PT and ET, epochs of strong coherence lasting several to a dozen seconds were separated by intervals of insignificant coherence. In PT, bilateral coherence at the main tremor frequency (8–12 Hz) was coupled with the ballistocardiac rhythm.

Conclusion

The oscillations of the two hands are intermittently synchronized in both PT and ET. We propose that in postural PT, bilateral coherence at the main tremor frequency arises from transient simultaneous entrainment of the left and right hand oscillations to ballistocardiac forcing.

Significance

Bilateral coherence of hand kinematics provides a sensitive measure of synchronizing influences on the left and right tremor oscillators.  相似文献   

20.
Summary. Mixed-type tremors pose a clinical diagnostic challenge. The aim of the study was to better characterize patients with combined postural and rest tremor. Patients were categorized into four groups: essential tremor (ET) (n = 7), combined rest + postural tremor (n = 17), PD (n = 17), and control subjects (n = 9). All underwent the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test (UPSIT). The mixed-tremor group was also evaluated with SPECT imaging using the dopamine transporter (DaT) ligand 123I-labeled FP-CIT. There was no significant difference in olfaction scores between the mixed tremor and essential tremor groups (23.2 ± 6.6 vs 21.7 ± 4.9) or between these groups and controls (27.2 ± 5.0). The patients with PD had significantly lower scores than all the other groups (13.7 ± 5.4, p < 0.001). Of the 12 patients with mixed tremor evaluated by SPECT, 9 had normal findings. This study suggests that rest tremor is part of the spectrum of ET, even in patients with long-standing disease. However, in a minority of patients, there might be transformation of ET–PD. Correspondence: Ruth Djaldetti, Rabin Medical Center, Department of Neurology, Beilinson Campus, Petah Tiqwa 49100, Israel  相似文献   

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