| Literature DB >> 22275907 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Essential tremor (ET) is one of the most common neurological diseases. Although a large number of medications have been tested, there are only two first-line medications, primidone and propranolol, which is a situation that has not changed in approximately 30 years. Several recent reviews have summarized the current pharmacotherapeutic options for ET and the approach to the management of ET patients. Yet there remain a number of important issues, both scientific and clinical, that have not been broached in the literature and that have therapeutic implications.Entities:
Keywords: clinical; essential tremor; pharmacology; treatment
Year: 2012 PMID: 22275907 PMCID: PMC3257846 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2011.00091
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Medications that have been evaluated in the treatment of ET (Zesiewicz et al., 2005; Benito-Leon and Louis, 2007; Lyons and Pahwa, 2008b; Deuschl et al., 2011).
| First-line medications | Primidone |
| Propranolol | |
| Additional medications | Acetazolamide |
| Alprazolam | |
| Atenolol | |
| Botulinum toxin | |
| Clonazepam | |
| Clozapine | |
| 3,4-diaminopyridine | |
| Ethanol | |
| Gabapentin | |
| Isoniazid | |
| Levetiracetam | |
| Nadolol | |
| Nimodipine | |
| Octanol | |
| Olanzapine | |
| Oxcarbazepine | |
| Phenobarbital | |
| Pindolol | |
| Pregabalin | |
| Sodium oxybate | |
| Sotalol | |
| Tiagabine | |
| Topiramate | |
| Trazodone | |
| Zonegran |
Sources of clinical and pharmacological heterogeneity in ET.
| Feature | Comment |
|---|---|
| Head tremor | May be less responsive to medications than arm tremor (Song et al., |
| Voice tremor | May be less responsive to medications than arm tremor (Lyons and Pahwa, |
| Previously treated patients may be less responsive to medications, although no data directly address this issue | |
| Short duration vs. long duration ET | Longer duration could be less responsive to medications, although no data directly address this issue |
Treatment efficacy endpoints in ET.
| Advantages | Disadvantages | |
|---|---|---|
| Patient’s subjective self-rating | Reflects the patient’s own perception | Completely subjective |
| Clinically meaningful | Difficult to quantify | |
| Clinician’s rating | Objective | Does not generate interval data |
| Clinically grounded | May not be sensitive to small changes | |
| Incorporates clinical experience | ||
| Easily administered | ||
| Performance-based test of function | Objective | Does not generate interval data |
| Assesses functionally relevant items | ||
| Easily administered | ||
| Accelerometry | Objective | Clinical meaning is intrinsically unclear |
| Precise | More difficult to administer | |
| Generates interval data |
Essential tremor: common misdiagnoses.
| Study | Jain et al. ( | Schrag et al. ( |
|---|---|---|
| True diagnoses of “ET” patients | Parkinson’s disease | Dystonic tremor |
| Dystonic tremor | Neuropathic tremor | |
| Myoclonus dystonia | Drug-induced tremor | |
| Primary writing tremor | Post-traumatic tremor | |
| Enhanced physiological tremor |