000 nab a22 7a 4500
999 _c17977
_d17977
003 PC17977
005 20250602124328.0
008 250602b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _cH12O
041 _aeng
100 _9892
_aBenito León, Julián
_eNeurología
100 _9309
_aLabiano Fontcuberta, Andrés
_eNeurología
245 0 0 _aLinking Essential Tremor to the Cerebellum: Clinical Evidence.
_h[revisión]
260 _bCerebellum (London, England);
_c2016
300 _a15(3):253-62.
500 _aFormato Vancouver: Benito León J, Labiano Fontcuberta A. Linking Essential Tremor to the Cerebellum: Clinical Evidence. Cerebellum. 2016 Jun;15(3):253-62.
501 _aPMID: 26521074
504 _aContiene 100 referencias
520 _aEssential tremor (ET) might be a family of diseases unified by the presence of kinetic tremor, but also showing etiological, pathological, and clinical heterogeneity. In this review, we will describe the most significant clinical evidence, which suggests that ET is linked to the cerebellum. Data for this review were identified by searching PUBMED (January 1966 to May 2015) crossing the terms "essential tremor" (ET) and "cerebellum," which yielded 201 entries, 11 of which included the term "cerebellum" in the article title. This was supplemented by articles in the author's files that pertained to this topic. The wide spectrum of clinical features of ET that suggest that it originates as a cerebellar or cerebellar outflow problem include the presence of intentional tremor, gait and balance abnormalities, subtle features of dysarthria, and oculomotor abnormalities, as well as deficits in eye-hand coordination, motor learning deficits, incoordination during spiral drawing task, abnormalities in motor timing and visual reaction time, impairment of social abilities, improvement in tremor after cerebellar stroke, efficacy of deep brain stimulation (which blocks cerebellar outflow), and cognitive dysfunction. It is unlikely, however, that cerebellar dysfunction, per se, fully explains ET-associated dementia, because the cognitive deficits that have been described in patients with cerebellar lesions are generally mild. Overall, a variety of clinical findings suggest that in at least a sizable proportion of patients with ET, there is an underlying abnormality of the cerebellum and/or its pathways.
710 _9267
_aServicio de Neurología-Neurofisiología
856 _uhttp://pc-h12o-es.m-hdoct.a17.csinet.es/pdf/pc/1/pc17977.pdf
_ySolicitar documento
942 _2ddc
_cREV
_n0