The Pathophysiology of Dystonic Tremors and Comparison With Essential Tremor.

J Neurosci

Human Motor Control Section, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-1428

Published: November 2020


Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

There are two types of dystonic tremor syndromes (DTS), dystonic tremor (DT) and tremor associated with dystonia (TAWD), and neither is understood. DTS likely share some mechanisms with nontremulous dystonia, and there may also be overlaps with essential tremor (ET). We studied 21 ET (8 females, 13 males) and 22 DTS human patients (10 females, 12 males), including 13 human patients with DT (writer's cramp with writing tremor) and 9 human patients with tremor associated with dystonia (TAWD; cervical dystonia with hand tremor). Tremors were analyzed using accelerometry and surface EMG of the antagonist pairs of arm muscles during posture, simple kinetic movement, and writing. Cerebellar inhibition was performed to assess cerebello-thalamo-cortical involvement. DT exhibited higher variability of peak frequency and greater instability of tremor burst intervals over time (higher tremor stability index) than ET or TAWD regardless of tasks. Intermuscular coherence magnitude between the antagonist pairs increased during the writing task in DT, but not ET or TAWD. ET and TAWD exhibited different phase relationships of the temporal fluctuations of voluntary movement and tremor in the kinetic condition. A linear discriminant classifier based on these tremor parameters was able to distinguish the three groups with a classification accuracy of 95.1%. Cerebellar inhibition was significantly reduced in DT, but not in TAWD, compared with ET and healthy controls. Our study shows that the two DTS are distinct entities with DT closer to nontremorous dystonia and TAWD closer to ET. This study provides novel findings about characteristics and pathophysiology of the two different types of dystonic tremor syndromes compared with essential tremor. Patients with DTS are classified into DT who have dystonia and tremor in the same area, and tremor associated with dystonia (TAWD) who have dystonia and tremor elsewhere. Our results showed that DT exhibits increased tremor variability, instability, and intermuscular coherence, and decreased cerebello-thalamo-cortical inhibition compared with TAWD. Our study shows that DT and TAWD are distinct phenotypes, and that the physiological characteristics of DT are more similar to nontremorous dystonia, and TAWD is closer to ET.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7687063PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1181-20.2020DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

dystonia tawd
20
tremor
18
essential tremor
12
dystonic tremor
12
tremor associated
12
associated dystonia
12
human patients
12
tawd
11
dystonia
9
types dystonic
8

Similar Publications

Background: Questionable signs of dystonia are a common finding in patients with essential tremor (ET). Brain structural alterations in ET patients plus dystonic soft signs (ET + ds) in comparison to ET patients without dystonic soft signs (ET-ds) or patients with tremor associated with manifest dystonia (TAWD) have not been examined yet. Therefore, our study aims to explore alterations of brain grey matter in patients with ET + ds.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Pathophysiology of Dystonic Tremors and Comparison With Essential Tremor.

J Neurosci

November 2020

Human Motor Control Section, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-1428

There are two types of dystonic tremor syndromes (DTS), dystonic tremor (DT) and tremor associated with dystonia (TAWD), and neither is understood. DTS likely share some mechanisms with nontremulous dystonia, and there may also be overlaps with essential tremor (ET). We studied 21 ET (8 females, 13 males) and 22 DTS human patients (10 females, 12 males), including 13 human patients with DT (writer's cramp with writing tremor) and 9 human patients with tremor associated with dystonia (TAWD; cervical dystonia with hand tremor).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Prevalence of Dystonic Tremor and Tremor Associated with Dystonia in Patients with Cervical Dystonia.

Sci Rep

January 2020

Department of Medical Biophysics, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Palacký University Olomouc, Hněvotínská 976/3, 775 15, Olomouc, Czech Republic.

The link between dystonia and tremor has been known for decades, but the question of whether they are two separate illnesses or just different manifestations of one disease with the same pathophysiological background remains unanswered. We distinguish two types of tremor in dystonia: dystonic tremor (DT), which appears on the body part affected by dystonia, and tremor associated with dystonia (TAWD), which appears in locations where the dystonia does not occur. In this study, the frequency of occurrence of different forms of tremor was determined by clinical examination in a group of adult-onset isolated cervical dystonia (CD) patients treated with regular local injections of botulinum toxin A in our department.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To investigate the frequency and the main clinical features of tremor in primary adult-onset dystonia (PAOD).

Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted on 429 patients with PAOD from eight Italian movement disorder centres.

Results: Of the 429 dystonic patients, 72 (16.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF