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Tics, tremors and trusses. A very brief history of movement disorders Dr Graham Lennox Consultant Neurologist Great Western Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. What are movement disorders?. Parkinsonism Tremor Chorea Dystonia Myoclonus Tics Stereotypies Restless legs.
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Tics, tremors and trusses A very brief history of movement disorders Dr Graham LennoxConsultant NeurologistGreat Western Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
What are movement disorders? • Parkinsonism • Tremor • Chorea • Dystonia • Myoclonus • Tics • Stereotypies • Restless legs
Medieval movement disorders • Tremor and palpitations • Chorea and convulsions
Tremor • Galen, Sylvius and others distinguished between action tremor and rest tremor
Chorea • Referred to a wide range of phenomena, including complex stereotyped movements such as St Vitus’ dance
Referred to a wide range of phenomena, including complex stereotyped movements such as St Vitus’ dance
Thomas Sydenham • 1624 born into Dorset landed gentry • 1642 Magdalen Hall, Oxford, then parliamentary army • 1648 Oxford BM; elected a fellow of All Souls • 1655 resigned from All Souls; later attended Montpellier • 1663 licensed by Royal College of Physicians • 1676 Cambridge MD; Pembroke Hall where his eldest son was by then an undergraduate.
Thomas Sydenham • Mainly famous for his treatment of infectious diseases • Laudanum (opium) • Cinchona (quinine) for malaria • Detailed description of gout
Thomas Sydenham “Among the remedies which it has pleased Almighty God to give to man to relieve his sufferings, none is so universal and so efficacious as opium.” “A man is as old as his arteries.”
Thomas Sydenham • Sydenham’s chorea mentioned in an aside • Link to rheumatic fever not noted
Schedula Monitoria de Novae Febris Ingressa (1686) • “This is a kind of convulsion, which attacks boys and girls from the tenth year to the time of puberty. It first shows itself by limping or unsteadiness in one of the legs, which the patient drags. The hand cannot be steady for a moment. It passes from one position to another by a convulsive movement, however, much the patient may strive to the contrary.”
Schedula Monitoria de Novae Febris Ingressa (1686) • “This is a kind of convulsion, which attacks boys and girls from the tenth year to the time of puberty. It first shows itself by limping or unsteadiness in one of the legs, which the patient drags. The hand cannot be steady for a moment. It passes from one position to another by a convulsive movement, however, much the patient may strive to the contrary.” • "Before he can raise a cup to his lips, he makes as many gesticulations as a mountebank; since he does not move in a straight line, but has his hand drawn aside by spasms, until by some good fortune he brings it at last to his mouth. He then gulps it off at once, so suddenly and so greedily as if he were trying to amuse the lookers-on."
Modern view of Sydenham’s • Mixture of chorea and tics • Often psychiatric features • Antibiotics • Dopamine blocking drugs
Samuel Johnson • Biographer of Sydenham (and many others) • Poet, essayist, lexicographer, literary critic, hack and wit • Son of a bookseller • Childhood scrofula and myopia • Briefly studied at Pembroke College, Oxford
Johnson’s movement disorder • Rejected as schoolmaster: • “He has such a way of distorting his face which though he can’t help, the gent. think it may affect some young lads” • Started his own school, teaching David Garrick: • “He did not appear to have been profoundly reverenced by his pupils. His oddities of manner, and uncouth gesticulations, could not but be the subject of merriment to them”
Multiple movements • “His mouth is continually opening and shutting, as if he were chewing something; he has a singular method of twirling his fingers, and twisting his hands: his vast body is in constant agitation, see-sawing backwards and forwards: his feet never a moment quiet” (Fanny Burney)
Vocalisations • “In the intervals of articulating he made various sounds with his mouth, sometimes as if ruminating, or what is called chewing the cud, sometimes giving a half-whistle, sometimes making his tongue play backwards from the roof of his mouth, as if clucking like a hen, and sometimes protruding it against his upper gums in front too, as if pronouncing quickly under his breath too, too, too” (James Boswell)
Suppressibility • “He could sit motionless, when he was told to do so, as well as any other man.” • (Sir Joshua Reynolds)
Complex motor rituals and compulsions • Twirling and leaping in doorways • Standing with his feet at particular angles • Touching posts in the street • Avoiding cracks in the pavement • Holding teacup in outstretched arm
Self-injurious behaviour • Repetitive leg rubbing • “Not only did he pare his nails to the quick, but scraped the joints of his fingers with a pen-knife until they seemed quite red and raw”
Gilles de la Tourette syndrome • Early onset • Multiple motor and phonic tics • Obsessive-compulsive disorder
Gilles de la Tourette syndrome • Brief descriptions in 1489 in a priest and more completely by Thomas Willis in 1701 in an Oxfordshire family
Thomas Willis • Local boy, born on a farm in Great Bedwyn • Moved to North Hinksey then Oxford • Initially consulted in the Abingdon market place
Thomas Willis • “Father of neuroscience” • Major contributions to neuroanatomy • Many original descriptions of disorders such as restless legs syndrome, narcolepsy, achalasia of the oesophagus etc
Gilles de la Tourette syndrome • Fuller description in 1825 by Itard of the Marquise de Dampierre, who had lifelong tics with coprolalia and whose case was subsequently re-reported in 1850, 1851, 1873 and 1885 (twice)
Gilles de la Tourette • Born into a provincial medical family, studied in Paris • Described as having boundless energy and a very short-temper, prepared to argue over anything, and as ugly as a Papuan idol • Many literary and artistic interests
Gilles de la Tourette • Translated Beard’s description of the jumping Frenchmen of Maine • Asked by Charcot to study the ‘chaos of the choreas’ • Found no jumping Frenchmen but in 1885 described 9 patients, 6 of whom he had examined personally, with his syndrome
Gilles de la Tourette • Drew attention to the association with learning difficulties, and a family history of ‘mental instability’ • Emphasised the pathognomonic coprolalia (present in 5 of his cases)
Georges Gilles de la Tourette • Later (probably already ill) influenced by his contemporary Guinon, who thought that all cases progressed on to psychosis and who distinguished between TS (incurable) and hysterical tics (alleviated by hypnosis) • Died, probably of neurosyphilis
Sigmund Freud • Attended lectures by Charcot and Gilles de la Tourette on tics • Attributed the multiple motor and phonic tics of Frau Emmy von N to hysteria resulting from repressed childhood trauma, and treated her with hypnosis and catharsis on two occasions with benefit
Subsequent thinking • Psychodynamic interpretations remained popular during early 20th century • Similar phenomena (‘acquired Tourettism’) following von Economo’s encephalitis • Turning point in 1961 with reports of response to haloperidol (and frontal lobectomy)
Now • Genetics • Drug treatments • Neurosurgical treatments
James Parkinson • Born into a medical family, briefly studied at The London Hospital, apprenticed to his father who was a GP in Hoxton • Industrial revolution and expansion of London • French revolution and radical politics
Medical interests • Busy GP • Parish doctor (surgeon, apothecary and man-midwife) • First fever wards in London, improving outcome from typhus • Medical attendant to local psychiatric hospitals • Campaigning for better conditions and against impressment into services
Medical Interests • Papers on: • Child care and child abuse • Appendicitis • Resuscitation from drowning • Lightning injury • Gout • “Hints on the improvement of trusses (for the use of the labouring poor)”
Other scientific interests • Textbook of chemistry • Three volume textbook on palaeontology (‘Organic remains of a former world’), founder member of the London Geological Society, first description of the geological strata of London and its fossils