ジストニー性チック
WordNet
- shrub with terminal tufts of elongated leaves used locally for thatching and clothing; thick sweet roots are used as food; tropical southeastern Asia, Australia and Hawaii (同)Cordyline terminalis
- the syllable naming the seventh (subtonic) note of any musical scale in solmization (同)te, si
- a local and habitual twitching especially in the face
PrepTutorEJDIC
- シ(全音階の第7音)
- (眼・手足の)けいれん
UpToDate Contents
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English Journal
- Evidence-based review and assessment of botulinum neurotoxin for the treatment of movement disorders.
- Hallett M1, Albanese A, Dressler D, Segal KR, Simpson DM, Truong D, Jankovic J.
- Toxicon : official journal of the International Society on Toxinology.Toxicon.2013 Jun 1;67:94-114. doi: 10.1016/j.toxicon.2012.12.004. Epub 2013 Feb 4.
- Botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) can be injected to achieve therapeutic benefit across a large range of clinical conditions. To assess the efficacy and safety of BoNT injections for the treatment of certain movement disorders, including blepharospasm, hemifacial spasm, oromandibular dystonia, cervical dy
- PMID 23380701
- Isolated frontalis, corrugator and procerus dystonia: a blepharospasm variant.
- Fabiani G, Munhoz RP, Teive HA.
- Arquivos de neuro-psiquiatria.Arq Neuropsiquiatr.2012 Aug;70(8):639-40.
- PMID 22899039
- Microdeletions detected using chromosome microarray in children with suspected genetic movement disorders: a single-centre study.
- Dale RC1, Grattan-Smith P, Nicholson M, Peters GB.
- Developmental medicine and child neurology.Dev Med Child Neurol.2012 Jul;54(7):618-23. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8749.2012.04287.x. Epub 2012 Apr 19.
- AIM: Chromosome microarray (CMA) can determine copy number variants such as microdeletions or microduplications. Microdeletions of movement disorder genes including epsilon-sarcoglycan (SGCE) and thyroid transcription factor-1 (TITF1) have been described in patients with myoclonus dystonia and benig
- PMID 22515636
Related Links
- dystonic tic Complex tic Neurology A distinct, coordinated pattern of sequential movements, which appear purposeful–eg, touching the nose, touching other people, smelling objects, jumping, copropraxia, and echopraxia, See Tic.
- One of my patients who had Dystonic Tic has repetitive consistent head turning which could be construed as an entirely different movement called cervical dystonia. He will turn his head and look off into the corner of a room ...
★リンクテーブル★
[★]
- 英
- dystonic tic
- 関
- 単純チック
[★]
- 関
- dystonia、dystonic disorder