| Literature DB >> 34941736 |
Elina Zakin1, David M Simpson2.
Abstract
Task-specific focal dystonia is characterized by muscle contraction(s) during a specific task, resulting in abnormal postures or movements. Specifically, writer's cramp involves the upper extremity during the act of writing. Musician's dystonia has a highly variable presentation, and thus makes therapeutic options more limited. Treatments include oral pharmacologic agents, neuromodulation, surgery and, most often, botulinum toxin (BoNT) injection. Selection of target muscles for toxin injection continues to be an area of active research for these task-specific movements. We present a review of the literature selected from a predefined search of the MEDLINE and ClinicalTrials.gov databases. We include six controlled studies of botulinum toxin for the management of writer's cramp and focal task-specific dystonia (FTSD), including musician's dystonia. Overall, 139 patients were included across all studies, with 99 individuals injected for writer's cramp and the remaining 40 individuals with FTSD. The age range of all patients was 18-80 years old. We included studies that utilized only the BoNT-A serotype. These studies utilized various severity scales to quantify response to toxin injection, with ratings of instrument or pen control included as subjective ratings. Of the included 139 patients in this review, pooled data for toxin response show that 73% of patients who received the drug demonstrated improvement. Specific techniques for muscle localization and targeting were difficult to study as variable methods were employed. This remains an area of ongoing exploration.Entities:
Keywords: botulinum toxin; musician’s dystonia; task-specific dystonia; writer’s cramp
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34941736 PMCID: PMC8708945 DOI: 10.3390/toxins13120899
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Summary of Studies Using Botulinum Toxin-A in Focal Task-Specific Dystonia.
| Study | Study Design | Study Objective | Sample Size | Study Method/Endpoints | Results |
| Frucht et al., 2021 | Double blind placebo controlled, crossover study of incobotulinumtoxin-A in focal musician’s hand dystonia | Determine safety/efficacy of incobotulinumtoxin-A | -Primary outcome measure for active drug week 8 in comparison to baseline by blinded video rating yielded | ||
| Kruisdijk et al., 2005 | Double-blind, randomized, placebo controlled trial | Determine efficacy of BoNT-A injections in patients with writer’s cramp | Patients randomized to treatment with toxin v placebo over 2 sessions (over 12 weeks), with the following outcome measures: | -14 of 20 patients (70%) receiving BoNT-A reported a beneficial effect and chose to continue treatment, versus 6 of 19 patients (31.6%) in the placebo group ( | |
| Wissel et al., 1996 | Blinded study evaluating local toxin injection | Quantify treatment efficacy using writing performance and computer assisted analysis scales of writing speed | -Assessed baseline WCRS (writer’s cramp rating scale score) and computer based writing speed analysis followed by repeat analysis at the time of patient’s subjective best response at follow-up visits (graded—0% no change to 100% | -Of all 124 injection sessions during mean follow up of one year, 76% produced a good improvement | |
| Cole et al., 1995 | Double blind placebo controlled study of botulinumtoxin injection for focal dystonia (writer’s cramp, stenographer’s cramp and musician’s dystonia) | Determine clinical response to toxin v placebo in focal limb dystonia | Assessed response using 3 measures:1. Subjective rating by patient report on dystonia efficacy | -10 patients had greater subjective improvement with botulinum toxin than with placebo | |
| Tsui et al., 1993 | Double-blind, placebo-controlled study | Determine efficacy of botulinumtoxin-A in patients with writer’s cramp | -Measured pen control in patients following two treatments, three months apart (toxin v. normal saline injection) | 12 of 20 patients had improvement in pen control following BoNT-A injection, but only 4 out of 20 had improvement in writing | |
| Yoshimura et al., 1992 | Placebo-controlled, blinded study | Investigate efficacy of botulinumtoxin in focal limb dystonia | Measure subjective improvement following injection in placebo v. control group. Muscle selection performed via EMG of muscles during task | -Report that subjective improvement noted after 53% of injections, noted to be substantially improved in 24% of patients. |