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Autoimmune Movement Disorders

Seminars in Neurology, 2018
AbstractAutoimmune movement disorders are rare but potentially treatable entities. They can present with an excess or paucity of movement and may have other associated neurological symptoms. These disorders were originally recognized by their classic clinical presentations and the cancers associated with them.
Conor, Fearon, Orna, O'Toole
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Paraneoplastic movement disorders

Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports, 2009
Neurologic paraneoplastic syndromes (NPSs) result from damage to the nervous system due to the remote effects of cancer not related to metastasis, infection, or metabolic derangements. NPSs are rare, affecting 1 in 10,000 patients with cancer. Pathogenesis is likely related to the immune mechanisms: normal neural tissue is mistakenly attacked due to ...
Shyamal H, Mehta   +2 more
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Movement disorder emergencies

Journal of Neurology, 2008
Movement disorder emergencies include any movement disorder which evolves over hours to days, in which failure to appropriately diagnose and manage can result in patient morbidity or mortality. It is crucial that doctors recognize these emergencies with accuracy and speed by obtaining the proper history and by being familiar with the phenomenology of ...
Kathleen L, Poston, Steven J, Frucht
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Orofacial Movement Disorders

Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Clinics of North America, 2016
Orofacial movement disorders (OMDs) include dystonia, dyskinesia, drug-induced extrapyramidal reactions, and bruxism. The definition, epidemiology, pathophysiology, clinical features, and management are detailed. OMDs are often disabling and affect patients' overall quality of life with pain, difficulty chewing food, speech difficulty, drooling, and ...
Glenn T, Clark, Saravanan, Ram
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Psychogenic movement disorders

Parkinsonism & Related Disorders, 2012
Psychogenic movement disorders are common, but the diagnosis may be difficult. Visual appearance alone is typically not sufficient to make a diagnosis, but such information is certainly important. That a movement is bizarre can be helpful, but still must be considered thoughtfully since organic movement disorders can have endless variety. The diagnosis
Mark, Hallett   +2 more
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Movement Disorders Emergencies

Seminars in Neurology, 2019
AbstractMany acute and potentially life-threatening medical conditions have hyperkinetic or hypokinetic movement disorders as their hallmark. Here we review the clinical phenomenology, and diagnostic principles of neuroleptic malignant syndrome, malignant catatonia, serotonin syndrome, Parkinsonism hyperpyrexia, acute parkinsonism, acute chorea-ballism,
Suraj, Rajan   +2 more
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Psychogenic movement disorders

Current Opinion in Neurology, 2009
This review summarizes the progress made in the area of psychogenic movement disorders (PMDs) over the past 2 years, and a simplified classification of diagnostic certainty is proposed that incorporates electrophysiological assessment.Functional magnetic resonance imaging studies have demonstrated altered blood flow in conversion disorders that may ...
Amitabh, Gupta, Anthony E, Lang
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Psychogenic Movement Disorders

Neurologic Clinics, 2015
Psychogenic movement disorders (PMDs) can present with varied phenomenology that may resemble organic movement disorders. The diagnosis is based on clinical evaluation with a supporting history and classic features on neurologic examination. Ancillary testing, such as imaging and neurophysiologic studies, can provide supplementary information but is ...
Mary Ann, Thenganatt, Joseph, Jankovic
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Movement disorder emergencies

Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports, 2005
For the past 4 years, Dr. Stanley Fahn and I have given a course at the American Academy of Neurology annual meeting on the topic of movement disorder emergencies. The purpose of this review article is to summarize the topic and to present it to readers of this journal.
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Some Movement Disorders

2013
As with my previous writings on the neurology of literature, all the references used have been personally read. Indeed, I should hasten to stress that the prime motive in my reading has been a love of literature, a secondary gain being an insight into the way in which a variety of writers has viewed neurological disease.
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