| Literature DB >> 35750370 |
Abstract
Essential tremor (ET) is a highly prevalent neurologic disease and is the most common of the many tremor disorders. ET is a progressive condition with marked clinical heterogeneity, associated with a spectrum of both motor and non-motor features. However, its disease mechanisms remain poorly understood. Much debate has centered on whether ET should be considered a degenerative disorder, with underlying pathological changes in brain causing progressive disease manifestations, or an electric disorder, with overactivity of intrinsically oscillatory motor networks that occur without underlying structural brain abnormalities. Converging data from clinical, neuroimaging and pathological studies in ET now provide considerable evidence for the neurodegenerative hypothesis. A major turning point in this debate is that rigorous tissue-based studies have recently identified a series of structural changes in the ET cerebellum. Most of these pathological changes are centered on the Purkinje cell and connected neuronal populations, which can result in partial loss of Purkinje cells and circuitry reorganizations that would disturb cerebellar function. There is significant overlap in clinical and pathological features of ET with other disorders of cerebellar degeneration, and an increased risk of developing other degenerative diseases in ET. The combined implication of these studies is that ET could be degenerative. The evidence in support of the degenerative hypothesis is presented.Entities:
Keywords: Basket cell neurons; Cerebellum; Climbing fibers; Clinical; Degenerative; Dentate nucleus; Essential tremor; Neuroimaging; Pathology; Purkinje cell
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35750370 DOI: 10.1016/bs.irn.2022.02.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Rev Neurobiol ISSN: 0074-7742 Impact factor: 4.280