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Essential Tremor. David Hilmers MLK Lecture Series April 28, 2008. Case. 65 year old woman states that she has had trouble holding food on her fork ever since she was a teen ager because she has the “shakes.” She has no other neurologic problems. What is the differential diagnosis?.
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Essential Tremor David Hilmers MLK Lecture Series April 28, 2008
Case 65 year old woman states that she has had trouble holding food on her fork ever since she was a teen ager because she has the “shakes.” She has no other neurologic problems. What is the differential diagnosis? Video clip of ET: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nsifBzm_Jw8
Background • ET is so-called “benign” disorder but most report significant disability • Incidence increases steadily with age • Most affected become symptomatic in mid-late adulthood • Probably autosomal dominant but no specific genes found • Nearly 5x more likely to have ET if first degree relative with ET • However, 50% of cases without affected family member • Existence of local clusters seem to indicate environmental factors (?toxins like lead?) but no correlations made • Patients often have other movement disorders
Pathophysiology • Kinetic arm tremor is hallmark of ET (associated with movement) • Pathways are not well established but seem to involve: • Thalamus • Sensorimotor cortex • Olivary nuclei • Cerebellum • Ablations of lesions in these areas can reduce ET • Some autopsy studies have shown increased Lewy bodies and cerebellar injury in ET
Clinical assessment • Check for possible drug causes • Most commonly, beta-2 agonists, valproate, lithium, steroids, thyroxine, TCA’s, neuroloeptics • Cocaine, amphetamines • Underlying conditions (hyperthyroidism, hyperparathyroidism, hypoglycemia) • Withdrawal from substance abuse (ETOH, cocaine) • Overuse of caffeine, energy drinks and supplements
Neuro examination • Should have normal tone, strength, coordination • See if tremor is present at rest with distraction (counting backwards), consider other diagnosis if present • Does it occur with walking? (if so, possible PD) • Look for tremor with posture • Hands outstretched then bring hands towards face with fingers almost touching • In ET tremor should be almost immediate while in PD is a delay up to 9 seconds
Neuro exam (2) • Look for intention tremor • Finger to nose, pouring water from cup to cup, etc • May be present during these activities but should NOT be worse or only present during test; should not be present at rest • If only intention tremor, think cerebellar dysfunction or Wilson’s disease • Specific tasks • Handwriting size is normal or slightly large in ET • If small, may be PD (micrographia) • Can have patient draw spiral to see amplitude of tremor
Effect of alcohol on ability to draw spiral in patient with Essential Tremor
Neurophysiologic studies • When differentiating types of tremors is difficult, may use physiological studies • Only done in specialized laboratories • Record EMG in tremor-producing muscles at rest, with posture and during kinetic tasks • Characteristics frequencies and amplitudes may help with diagnosis
Differential diagnosis of ET • Enhanced physiological tremor • Usually low amplitude and high frequency • Usually postural and exaggeration of normal amount of tremor present in normal individuals • Often caused by emotion or drugs • Parkinson’s disease • “Pill rolling” tremor • Usually begins on one side (ET is bilateral) • Associated with other signs of PD (bradykinesia, rigidity, and postural instability) • However, some people who have ET go on to develop PD
Differential dx (2) • Cerebellar tremor • Lower frequency than ET • Does not occur at rest • Can affect one or both sides • Associated findings of dysmetria, dysynergia upon rapid alternating movements • Commonly see titubation of head or trunk
Differential Dx (3) • Dystonic tremor • Often focal, such as head bobbing, without hand involvement • Variable frequency and amplitude is irregular • Remember that ET may also have tremor of jaw or of voice • Psychogenic tremor • Onset is usually sudden • Can appear with rest, with posture, or intention • Often disappears when patient distracted • Unlike ET, can be great source of fatigue for patient
Differential Dx (4) • Orthostatic tremor • High frequency (13-18 Hz) • Lower extremities when standing • Improves when patient walks • Will see “rippling” of gastroc or quads • May radiate into upper limbs • Task specific tremor • Only occur during a motor task like writing • Also seen in musicians and athletes
Treatment • Reassurance • Tremor may increase in severity but there is treatment available • Unlikely to shorten lifespan • Mild disease • Lifestyle modifications such as avoidance of caffeine and nicotine • Small amounts of alcohol are effective on occasion (be sure to ask about ETOH abuse) • Propranolol prn • Moderate to severe tremor • Additional medications • Surgery – implantation of thalamic nucleus stimulator • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qaHx15M_NRE&NR=1
Stepped pharmacologic approach • First line • Primidone • Long acting beta blocker • Second line • Botox has been tried (injecting agonist-antagonist muscles) but results are inconsistent • Anticonvulsants (gabapentin, topiramate) • Benzodiazepines (alprazolam, clonazepam) • CCB (nimodipine) • Investigational drugs • Drugs which have similar effects as ethanol (octanol) and primidone (barbiturate t2000) without associated adverse effects
References • Fatta B Nahab, Elizabeth Peckham, Mark Hallett, Essential Tremor, Deceptively Simple…Pract Neurol 2007; 7: 222–233 • Up to date • You Tube (search under Essential Tremor)