Tics, tremors and trusses - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 67
About This Presentation
Title:

Tics, tremors and trusses

Description:

Tics, tremors and trusses A very brief history of movement disorders Dr Graham Lennox Consultant Neurologist Great Western Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:118
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 68
Provided by: lennox
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Tics, tremors and trusses


1
  • Tics, tremors and trusses
  • A very brief history of movement disorders
  • Dr Graham LennoxConsultant NeurologistGreat
    Western Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

2
What are movement disorders?
  • Parkinsonism
  • Tremor
  • Chorea
  • Dystonia
  • Myoclonus
  • Tics
  • Stereotypies
  • Restless legs

3
Medieval movement disorders
  • Tremor and palpitations
  • Chorea and convulsions

4
Tremor
  • Galen, Sylvius and others distinguished between
    action tremor and rest tremor

5
Chorea
  • Referred to a wide range of phenomena, including
    complex stereotyped movements such as St Vitus
    dance

6
  • Referred to a wide range of phenomena, including
    complex stereotyped movements such as St Vitus
    dance

7
Thomas Sydenham 1624-1689
8
Thomas Sydenham
  • 1624 born into Dorset landed gentry
  • 1642 Magdalen Hall, Oxford, then parliamentary
    army
  • 1648 Oxford BM elected a fellow of All Souls
  • 1655 resigned from All Souls later attended
    Montpellier
  • 1663 licensed by Royal College of Physicians
  • 1676 Cambridge MD Pembroke Hall where his eldest
    son was by then an undergraduate.

9
Thomas Sydenham
  • Mainly famous for his treatment of infectious
    diseases
  • Laudanum (opium)
  • Cinchona (quinine) for malaria
  • Detailed description of gout

10
Thomas Sydenham
Among the remedies which it has
pleased Almighty God to give to man to relieve
his sufferings, none is so universal and
so efficacious as opium. A man is as old as
his arteries.
11
Thomas Sydenham
  • Sydenhams chorea mentioned in an aside
  • Link to rheumatic fever not noted

12
Schedula Monitoria de Novae Febris Ingressa
(1686)
  • This is a kind of convulsion, which attacks boys
    and girls from the tenth year to the time of
    puberty. It first shows itself by limping or
    unsteadiness in one of the legs, which the
    patient drags. The hand cannot be steady for a
    moment. It passes from one position to another by
    a convulsive movement, however, much the patient
    may strive to the contrary.

13
Schedula Monitoria de Novae Febris Ingressa
(1686)
  • This is a kind of convulsion, which attacks boys
    and girls from the tenth year to the time of
    puberty. It first shows itself by limping or
    unsteadiness in one of the legs, which the
    patient drags. The hand cannot be steady for a
    moment. It passes from one position to another by
    a convulsive movement, however, much the patient
    may strive to the contrary.
  • "Before he can raise a cup to his lips, he makes
    as many gesticulations as a mountebank since he
    does not move in a straight line, but has his
    hand drawn aside by spasms, until by some good
    fortune he brings it at last to his mouth. He
    then gulps it off at once, so suddenly and so
    greedily as if he were trying to amuse the
    lookers-on."

14
Chorea classification
15
Modern view of Sydenhams
  • Mixture of chorea and tics
  • Often psychiatric features
  • Antibiotics
  • Dopamine blocking drugs

16
Samuel Johnson 1709-1784
17
Samuel Johnson
  • Biographer of Sydenham (and many others)
  • Poet, essayist, lexicographer, literary critic,
    hack and wit
  • Son of a bookseller
  • Childhood scrofula and myopia
  • Briefly studied at Pembroke College, Oxford

18
Samuel Johnson
19
Johnsons movement disorder
  • Rejected as schoolmaster
  • He has such a way of distorting his face
    which though he cant help, the gent. think it
    may affect some young lads
  • Started his own school, teaching David Garrick
  • He did not appear to have been profoundly
    reverenced by his pupils. His oddities of
    manner, and uncouth gesticulations, could not but
    be the subject of merriment to them

20
Multiple movements
  • His mouth is continually opening and shutting,
    as if he were chewing something he has a
    singular method of twirling his fingers, and
    twisting his hands his vast body is in constant
    agitation, see-sawing backwards and forwards
    his feet never a moment quiet (Fanny Burney)

21
Vocalisations
  • In the intervals of articulating he made various
    sounds with his mouth, sometimes as if
    ruminating, or what is called chewing the cud,
    sometimes giving a half-whistle, sometimes making
    his tongue play backwards from the roof of his
    mouth, as if clucking like a hen, and sometimes
    protruding it against his upper gums in front
    too, as if pronouncing quickly under his breath
    too, too, too (James Boswell)

22
Suppressibility
He could sit motionless, when he was told
to do so, as well as any other man. (Sir
Joshua Reynolds)
23
Complex motor rituals and compulsions
  • Twirling and leaping in doorways
  • Standing with his feet at particular angles
  • Touching posts in the street
  • Avoiding cracks in the pavement
  • Holding teacup in outstretched arm

24
Self-injurious behaviour
  • Repetitive leg rubbing
  • Not only did he pare his nails to the quick, but
    scraped the joints of his fingers with a
    pen-knife until they seemed quite red and raw

25
Johnsons diagnosis?
26
Gilles de la Tourette syndrome
  • Early onset
  • Multiple motor and phonic tics
  • Obsessive-compulsive disorder

27
Gilles de la Tourette syndrome
  • Brief descriptions in 1489 in a priest and more
    completely by Thomas Willis in 1701 in an
    Oxfordshire family

28
Thomas Willis 1621-1675
29
Thomas Willis
  • Local boy, born on a farm in Great Bedwyn
  • Moved to North Hinksey then Oxford
  • Initially consulted in the Abingdon market place

30
(No Transcript)
31
Thomas Willis
  • Father of neuroscience
  • Major contributions to neuroanatomy
  • Many original descriptions of disorders such as
    restless legs syndrome, narcolepsy, achalasia of
    the oesophagus etc

32
Gilles de la Tourette syndrome
  • Fuller description in 1825 by Itard of the
    Marquise de Dampierre, who had lifelong tics with
    coprolalia and whose case was subsequently
    re-reported in 1850, 1851, 1873 and 1885 (twice)

33
Georges Gilles de la Tourette 1857-1904
34
Johnsons diagnosis?
35
Gilles de la Tourette
  • Born into a provincial medical family, studied in
    Paris
  • Described as having boundless energy and a very
    short-temper, prepared to argue over anything,
    and as ugly as a Papuan idol
  • Many literary and artistic interests

36
Gilles de la Tourette
  • Translated Beards description of the jumping
    Frenchmen of Maine
  • Asked by Charcot to study the chaos of the
    choreas
  • Found no jumping Frenchmen but in 1885 described
    9 patients, 6 of whom he had examined personally,
    with his syndrome

37
Gilles de la Tourette
  • Drew attention to the association with learning
    difficulties, and a family history of mental
    instability
  • Emphasised the pathognomonic coprolalia (present
    in 5 of his cases)

38
1893
39
Georges Gilles de la Tourette
  • Later (probably already ill) influenced by his
    contemporary Guinon, who thought that all cases
    progressed on to psychosis and who distinguished
    between TS (incurable) and hysterical tics
    (alleviated by hypnosis)
  • Died, probably of neurosyphilis

40
(No Transcript)
41
Sigmund Freud
  • Attended lectures by Charcot and Gilles de la
    Tourette on tics
  • Attributed the multiple motor and phonic tics of
    Frau Emmy von N to hysteria resulting from
    repressed childhood trauma, and treated her with
    hypnosis and catharsis on two occasions with
    benefit

42
Subsequent thinking
  • Psychodynamic interpretations remained popular
    during early 20th century
  • Similar phenomena (acquired Tourettism)
    following von Economos encephalitis
  • Turning point in 1961 with reports of response to
    haloperidol (and frontal lobectomy)

43
Now
  • Genetics
  • Drug treatments
  • Neurosurgical treatments

44
James Parkinson 1755-1824
45
James Parkinson
  • Born into a medical family, briefly studied at
    The London Hospital, apprenticed to his father
    who was a GP in Hoxton
  • Industrial revolution and expansion of London
  • French revolution and radical politics

46
Medical interests
  • Busy GP
  • Parish doctor (surgeon, apothecary and
    man-midwife)
  • First fever wards in London, improving outcome
    from typhus
  • Medical attendant to local psychiatric hospitals
  • Campaigning for better conditions and against
    impressment into services

47
(No Transcript)
48
Medical Interests
  • Papers on
  • Child care and child abuse
  • Appendicitis
  • Resuscitation from drowning
  • Lightning injury
  • Gout
  • Hints on the improvement of trusses (for the use
    of the labouring poor)

49
Other scientific interests
  • Textbook of chemistry
  • Three volume textbook on palaeontology (Organic
    remains of a former world), founder member of
    the London Geological Society, first description
    of the geological strata of London and its fossils

50
(No Transcript)
51
Parkinson the political radical
  • Campaigner for parliamentary reform and the
    extension of suffrage
  • Published many pamphlets as Old Hubert and under
    his own name
  • In Revolutions without bloodshed or,
    reformation preferable to revolt (1794) called
    for wildly radical reforms

52
  • Taxes might be proportioned to the abilities of
    those on whom they are levied, and not made to
    fall heavier on the poor than the rich
  • The heavy excise taxes on the necessities of
    life (soap, starch, candles, beer) be removed

53
  • Workmen might no longer be punished with
    imprisonment for uniting to obtain an increase in
    wages
  • Some proportion might be preserved between crime
    and punishment

54
  • Children of the poor might be given such
    instruction as might enable them to earn their
    living, and form a just notion of their rights
    and duties as members of society

55
London Corresponding Society
  • Popgun plot (1794) allegedly to kill King George
    III with a poison dart

56
  • Subpoenad to attend the Privy Council and
    cross-examined by Pitt and the Attorney General
    when a fellow committee member was being tried
    for high treason
  • Not charged but steered clear of politics
    thereafter

57
An essay on the shaking palsy
58
An essay on the shaking palsy (1817)
Describes Tremor Slowness, difficulty
writing Posture Gait Sleep disturbance Constipatio
n Drooling
59
An essay on the shaking palsy (1817)
  • Does not describe
  • Rigidity
  • Dementia (beyond terminal slight delirium)

60
An essay on the shaking palsy (1817)
  • 6 cases
  • 1 followed in detail from onset to death
  • 1 seen 12 years into the disease with a stroke,
    and then followed
  • 1 seen briefly for treatment of pulmonary empyema
  • 2 casually met with in the street
  • 1 only seen at a distance

61
Impact
  • Charcot amplified the description of the tremor,
    described cases without tremor, pointed out the
    core feature of rigidity, mentioned the
    association with dementia, and referred to it as
    Parkinsons disease

62
Impact
  • British authors (such as Gowers) continued to
    prefer the terms shaking palsy and paralysis
    agitans until late in the 19th century

63
Subsequent developments
  • Lewy bodies
  • Dopamine
  • Drug treatments
  • Neurosurgical treatments

64
Is it a disease?
  • Several genetic causes
  • LRRK 2 is the commonest, and accounts for 3 of
    sporadic PD as well as much familial PD
  • LRRK 2 cases have Lewy bodies or tau pathology

65
Summary
  • Sydenham and the choreas
  • Willis, Gilles de la Tourette and the tics
  • Parkinson and his disease

66
  • If I have seen further it is because I am
    standing on the shoulders of giants
  • Isaac Newton

67
  • If I have not seen as far as others, it is
    because giants were standing on my shoulders.
  • Hal Abelson
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com