Literature DB >> 23196730

Demographic and clinical features of patients with blepharospasm in southern Taiwan: a university hospital-based study.

Wen-Juh Hwang1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Blepharospasm is a common focal dystonia. Severe blepharospasm has a disabling impact on work and everyday activities and may cause social embarrassment and catastrophic traffic accidents.This retrospective case-series study explored the demographic and clinical features and also the impact of blepharospasm on patients in southern Taiwan, where the climate is hot and humid and motorcycles are a popular mode of transportation.
METHODS: One hundred eleven patients with essential blepharospasm who had been given botulinum toxin type A injections at a university hospital were enrolled. Data were collected from medical records and face-to-face interviews with the patients and their families.
RESULTS: The mean age of onset was 58 years. The female/male ratio was 2.6: 1. Eighty-one percent of our patients had seen an ophthalmologist at the beginning of their condition. Photophobia, sleep benefit,and diurnal change of clinical symptoms were present in over 80% of the patients. The initial diagnostic accuracy was 37% for ophthalmologists and 44% for neurologists. Myasthenia gravis caused most confusion in the differential diagnosis. Eighteen percent of the patients had been involved in motorcycle and car accidents. Regular botulinum toxin type A injections improved both eyelid spasm and subjective ocular symptoms in most patients.
CONCLUSION: Blepharospasm is under-recognized, and its differentiation from myasthenia gravis needs to be improved. Patients with blepharospasm are advised to receive regular botulinum toxin type A injections and to avoid riding motorcycles and driving cars.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23196730

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Neurol Taiwan        ISSN: 1028-768X


  4 in total

1.  Multiple Neural Networks Malfunction in Primary Blepharospasm: An Independent Components Analysis.

Authors:  Xiao-Feng Huang; Meng-Ru Zhu; Ping Shan; Chen-Hui Pei; Zhan-Hua Liang; Hui-Ling Zhou; Ming-Fei Ni; Yan-Wei Miao; Guo-Qing Xu; Bing-Wei Zhang; Ya-Yin Luo
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2017-05-10       Impact factor: 3.169

2.  Epidemiology of benign essential blepharospasm: A nationwide population-based retrospective study in Taiwan.

Authors:  Yng Sun; Pei-Jhen Tsai; Chin-Liang Chu; Wei-Chun Huang; Youn-Shen Bee
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-12-26       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Clinical Features and Evolution of Blepharospasm: A Multicenter International Cohort and Systematic Literature Review.

Authors:  Laura M Scorr; Hyun Joo Cho; Gamze Kilic-Berkmen; J Lucas McKay; Mark Hallett; Christine Klein; Tobias Baumer; Brian D Berman; Jeanne S Feuerstein; Joel S Perlmutter; Alfredo Berardelli; Gina Ferrazzano; Aparna Wagle-Shukla; Irene A Malaty; Joseph Jankovic; Steven T Bellows; Richard L Barbano; Marie Vidailhet; Emmanuel Roze; Cecilia Bonnet; Abhimanyu Mahajan; Mark S LeDoux; Victor S C Fung; Florence C F Chang; Giovanni Defazio; Tomaso Ercoli; Stewart Factor; Ted Wojno; H A Jinnah
Journal:  Dystonia       Date:  2022-05-16

4.  Structural Brain Changes in Blepharospasm: A Cortical Thickness and Diffusion Tensor Imaging Study.

Authors:  Yaomin Guo; Kangqiang Peng; Zilin Ou; Linchang Zhong; Ying Wang; Chuanmiao Xie; Jinsheng Zeng; Weixi Zhang; Gang Liu
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2020-10-29       Impact factor: 4.677

  4 in total

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