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Parkinson’s disease with camptocormia

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TLDR
Patients with camptocormia were characterised by prominent levodopa-unresponsive axial symptoms (ie, axial rigidity, gait disorder and postural instability), along with a tendency for greater error in the antisaccade paradigm, and it is suggested that the salient features of parkinsonism observed in patients with camps are likely to represent a specific form of Parkinson’s disease.
Abstract
Background: Camptocormia is defined as an abnormal flexion of the trunk that appears when standing or walking and disappears in the supine position. The origin of the disorder is unknown, but it is usually attributed either to a primary or a secondary paravertebral muscle myopathy or a motor neurone disorder. Camptocormia is also observed in a minority of patients with parkinsonism. Objective: To characterise the clinical and electrophysiological features of camptocormia and parkinsonian symptoms in patients with Parkinson’s disease and camptocormia compared with patients with Parkinson’s disease without camptocormia. Methods: Patients with parkinsonism and camptocormia (excluding patients with multiple system atrophy) prospectively underwent a multidisciplinary clinical (neurological, neuropsychological, psychological, rheumatological) and neurophysiological (electromyogram, ocular movement recording) examination and were compared with age-matched patients with Parkinson’s disease without camptocormia. Results: The camptocormia developed after 8.5 (SD 5.3) years of parkinsonism, responded poorly to levodopa treatment (20%) and displayed features consistent with axial dystonia. Patients with camptocormia were characterised by prominent levodopa-unresponsive axial symptoms (ie, axial rigidity, gait disorder and postural instability), along with a tendency for greater error in the antisaccade paradigm. Conclusion: We suggest that (1) the salient features of parkinsonism observed in patients with camptocormia are likely to represent a specific form of Parkinson’s disease and camptocormia is an axial dystonia and (2) both camptocormia and parkinsonism in these patients might result from additional, non-dopaminergic neuronal dysfunction in the basal ganglia.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Camptocormia: the bent spine syndrome, an update

TL;DR: Camptocormia in Parkinsonism is caused by axial dystonia, which is the hallmark of Parkinson’s disease, and there is no specific pharmacologic treatment for primary axial myopathy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation for camptocormia associated with Parkinson's disease.

TL;DR: Six patients with advanced PD in whom continuous bilateral stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus produced substantial improvement of camptocormia along with other motor symptoms are reported.
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Dystonia and Parkinson's disease: What is the relationship?

TL;DR: Dystonia and Parkinson's disease are closely linked disorders sharing many pathophysiological overlaps and advances in understanding the physiological mechanisms underlying the response of these two different movement disorder syndromes may provide better explanations for the relationship.
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Multiple system atrophy: current and future approaches to management

TL;DR: The available symptomatic treatment, recent results of studies investigating potential neuroprotective drugs, and future approaches for the management in MSA are reviewed.
References
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TL;DR: A simplified, scored form of the cognitive mental status examination, the “Mini-Mental State” (MMS) which includes eleven questions, requires only 5-10 min to administer, and is therefore practical to use serially and routinely.

A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician

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TL;DR: Controversy over the effectiveness of therapeutic measures for parkinsonism is due partially to this wide variability and to the paucity of clinical information about the natural history of the syndrome.
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