Hypertrophic Olivary Degeneration and Palatal or Oculopalatal Tremor

被引:74
|
作者
Tilikete, Caroline [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Desestret, Virginie [1 ,2 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Hosp Civils Lyon, Hop Neurol Pierre Wertheimer, Neuroophthalmol & Neurocognit, Bron, France
[2] Lyon 1 Univ, Lyon, France
[3] CNRS UMR5292, INSERM U1028, CRNL, ImpAct Team, Bron, France
[4] INSERM U1217, UMR CRS 5310, Inst NeuroMyogene, SynatAc Team, Lyon, France
来源
FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY | 2017年 / 8卷
关键词
symptomatic palatal tremor; progressive ataxia and palatal tremor; pendular nystagmus; hypertrophic degeneration of inferior olive; dentato-olivary pathway; Guillain-Mollaret triangle; ACQUIRED PENDULAR NYSTAGMUS; PROGRESSIVE ATAXIA; MOVEMENT-DISORDERS; INFERIOR OLIVE; MRI FINDINGS; SPASTIC PARAPARESIS; MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS; CEREBELLAR-ATAXIA; MYOCLONUS; NUCLEUS;
D O I
10.3389/fneur.2017.00302
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Hypertrophic degeneration of the inferior olive is mainly observed in patients developing palatal tremor (PT) or oculopalatal tremor (OPT). This syndrome manifests as a synchronous tremor of the palate (PT) and/or eyes (OPT) that may also involve other muscles from the branchial arches. It is associated with hypertrophic inferior olivary degeneration that is characterized by enlarged and vacuolated neurons, increased number and size of astrocytes, severe fibrillary gliosis, and demyelination. It appears on MRI as an increased T2/FLAIR signal intensity and enlargement of the inferior olive. There are two main conditions in which hypertrophic degeneration of the inferior olive occurs. The most frequent, studied, and reported condition is the development of PT/OPT and hypertrophic degeneration of the inferior olive in the weeks or months following a structural brainstem or cerebellar lesion. This "symptomatic" condition requires a destructive lesion in the Guillain-Mollaret pathway, which spans from the contralateral dentate nucleus via the brachium conjunctivum and the ipsilateral central tegmental tract innervating the inferior olive. The most frequent etiologies of destructive lesion are stroke (hemorrhagic more often than ischemic), brain trauma, brainstem tumors, and surgical or gamma knife treatment of brainstem cavernoma. The most accepted explanation for this symptomatic PT/OPT is that denervated olivary neurons released from inhibitory inputs enlarge and develop sustained synchronized oscillations. The cerebellum then modulates/accentuates this signal resulting in abnormal motor output in the branchial arches. In a second condition, PT/OPT and progressive cerebellar ataxia occurs in patients without structural brainstem or cerebellar lesion, other than cerebellar atrophy. This syndrome of progressive ataxia and palatal tremor may be sporadic or familial. In the familial form, where hypertrophic degeneration of the inferior olive may not occur (or not reported), the main reported etiologies are Alexander disease, polymerase gamma mutation, and spinocerebellar ataxia type 20. Whether or not these are associated with specific degeneration of the dentato-olivary pathway remain to be determined. The most symptomatic consequence of OPT is eye oscillations. Therapeutic trials suggest gabapentin or memantine as valuable drugs to treat eye oscillations in OPT.
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页数:11
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