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dystonia
Involuntary, sustained or intermittent slow muscle contractions of opposing muscles resulting in repetitive movements or abnormal posture. [6]
Etiology:
1) phenothiazines (dopamine receptor antagonists)
- acute dystonic reaction
- tardive dystonia
2) dopa-responsive dystonia
- damage to the basal ganglia
- post traumatic, occupational
- anoxia, hypoxia
- dopamine receptor antagonists: neuroleptics, metoclopramide [9]
3) secondary dystonias [9]
- Wilson's disease
- Huntington's disease
- Hallervorden-Spatz disease (pantothenic kinase-associated neurodegeneration)
- Leigh disease
- lipid storage disease
- parkinsonism
- CNS infections
- encephalitis, postencephalitic dystonia
- brain tumors
4) focal dystonia
- cervical dystonia commonly affects women
- torticollis is the most common focal dystonia
- blepharospasm is the second most common focal dystonia
- cranial dystonia affects muscles of the head face & neck
- Meige syndrome is cranial dystonia + blepharospams [6,9]
- oromandibular dystonia affects the muscles of the jaw, lips, & tongue
- particular repetitive activities including writer's cramp
5) dystonia musculorum deformans
6) laryngeal dystonia
7) idiopathic
Epidemiology:
- more common in younger patients (drug-induced)
Genetics:
1) autosomal dominant inheritance
2) DYT-1 gene with GAG deletion
Clinical manifestations:
1) generally begins within 48 hours of administering offending agent (drug-induced)
2) involuntary movements, sustained or intermittent, slow, repetitive, directional
3) twisting & posturing without lapse in muscle tone
4) postures assumed are often bizarre with forceful extensions & twisting about individual joints
5) may be generalized or focal
6) examples:
a) torticollis
b) blepharospasm
c) oculogyric crisis (deviation & upward fixation of eyes)
Laboratory:
- serum ceruloplasmin & 24 hour urine copper (for Wilson disease) [6]
Differential diagnosis:
- tardive dystonia
- fixed posturing of the face & neck (anterocollis, retrocollis, torticollis), extremities, & trunk
- focal or generalized
- torsion dystonia
- twisting & sustained contractions of muscles resulting in rapid, repetitive, distressing movements
- generally begins with inversion of foot & spasm of the proximal limb muscles, with gait ataxia
- scoliosis, torticollis, & tortipelvis may occur [9]
Management:
1) treatment of generalized dystonia is generally unsatisfactory
a) high doses of anticholinergics
1] benztropine 2 mg IV
2] diphenhydramine (Benadryl) 50 mg IV
b) benzodiazepines
c) baclofen delivered intrathecally via implanted pump especially if coexistent spasticity [9]
d) anticonvulsants
2) drug-inducted dystonia
- valbenazine, deutetrabenazine, tetrabenazine, amantadine, clonazepam [6]
2) focal dystonias
- local injection of botulinum A toxin (Botox) is treatment of choice [6]
3) L-dopa/carbidopa (L-dopa responsive dystonia)
4) response to deep brain stimulation (DBS)
a) stimulation of globus pallidus
b) battery lasts only 2 years (2006) due to high level of stimulation required
Related
dsytonia deafness syndrome; Mohr-Traneberg syndrome; deafness-dystonia-optic atrophy syndrome; X-linked progressive deafness type 1
Specific
dystonia juvenile-onset
dystonia type 16
dystonia-12 (rapid-onset dystonia parkinsonism)
dystonia-5; autosomal-dominant dopa-responsive dystonia; progressive dystonia with diurnal fluctuation; autosomal dominant Segawa syndrome; dystonia-parkinsonism with diurnal fluctuation (DYT5)
L dopa-responsive dystonia
myoclonic dystonia; alcohol-responsive dystonia; dystonia-11
orofacial dystonia; orofacial dyskinesia; Meige's syndrome; Brueghel's syndrome
primary cranial dystonia; idiopathic tosional dystonia
spasmodic dysphonia (laryngeal dystonia)
tardive dystonia
torsion dystonia
torsion dystonia 1 (primary or idiopathic dystonia)
torticollis; loxia; collum distortum; wryneck; cervical dystonia; spasmodic retrocollis
trismus; ankylostoma; lockjaw
writer's cramp; mogigraphia; hand dystonia; Scrivener's palsy
X-linked torsion dystonia
General
movement disorder
sign/symptom
Database Correlations
OMIM correlations
References
- Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, 13th ed.
Companion Handbook, Isselbacher et al (eds), McGraw-Hill
Inc. NY, 1995, pg 39
- Harrison's Online, McGraw-Hill, 2002
- Geriatrics Review Syllabus, American Geriatrics Society,
5th edition, 2002-2004
- Bronstein J, In: Intensive Course in Geriatric Medicine &
Board Review, Marina Del Ray, CA, Sept 29-Oct 2, 2004
- Kupsch A et al for the Deep-Brain Stimulation for Dystonia
Study Group.
Pallidal deep-brain stimulation in primary generalized or
segmental dystonia,
N Engl J Med 2006, 355:1978
PMID: 17093249
- Medical Knowledge Self Assessment Program (MKSAP) 15, 16, 17, 18, 19.
American College of Physicians, Philadelphia 2009, 2012, 2015, 2018, 2021.
- Medical Knowledge Self Assessment Program (MKSAP) 19
Board Basics. An Enhancement to MKSAP19.
American College of Physicians, Philadelphia 2022
- Tarsy D, Simon DK.
Dystonia.
N Engl J Med. 2006 Aug 24;355(8):818-29.
PMID: 16928997
- Robottom BJ, Weiner WJ, Comella CL.
Early-onset primary dystonia.
Handb Clin Neurol. 2011;100:465-79
PMID: 21496603
- Lutsep HL
Fast Five Quiz: Movement Disorders.
Medscape 2021. July 8
https://reference.medscape.com/viewarticle/954124
- Moberg-Wolff EA, Kishner S.
Dystonias
Medscape. Aug 5, 2020
https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/312648-overview
- The Dystonias Fact Sheet
https://www.ninds.nih.gov/Disorders/Patient-Caregiver-Education/Fact-Sheets/Dystonias-Fact-Sheet
- NINDS Dystonias Information Page
https://www.ninds.nih.gov/Disorders/All-Disorders/Dystonias-Information-Page