Differentials

Parkinson's disease

SIGNS / SYMPTOMS
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SIGNS / SYMPTOMS

Resting and action tremor, with rigidity, bradykinesia, and postural instability. Also, masked facies, cog-wheeling, gait abnormalities, and occasionally early morning dystonia.[13]

INVESTIGATIONS

A dopaminergic agent (e.g., levodopa) trial can clarify the diagnosis. A dopamine transporter (DaT) scan may also be useful. Resting tremor is usually the predominant tremor type (4-6 Hz).

Dystonia

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SIGNS / SYMPTOMS

Dystonic movements or postures, pain, a geste antagoniste (sensory trick), or muscular hypertrophy.

INVESTIGATIONS

If the clinical diagnosis is in doubt, genetic testing can help to diagnose hereditary dystonia. Tremor physiology studies show co-contraction of agonist and antagonist muscle pairs.

Wilson's disease

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SIGNS / SYMPTOMS

Occurs in patients <40 years of age.

Characterised by resting and action tremor.

Other neurological abnormalities present (e.g., dystonia, dysarthria, depression, cognitive impairment).[13]

INVESTIGATIONS

A low serum ceruloplasmin (<200 mg/L [20 mg/dL]) and a high 24-hour urine copper (>100 micrograms) indicates Wilson's disease.[6]

Ophthalmological examination with a slit lamp reveals Kayser-Fleischer rings in most patients who have neurological signs.

Abnormal liver function might be present.

Enhanced physiological tremor

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SIGNS / SYMPTOMS

All normal, healthy individuals exhibit physiological tremor.

It can be enhanced by intake of stimulants and other drugs, by withdrawal from drugs or alcohol, during certain medical conditions (elevated thyroid hormone levels or low glucose level), and by stress and fatigue.[6]

Enhanced physiological tremor occurs in the absence of a neurological disease and is high-frequency postural and kinetic tremor that occurs in the arms, legs, and voice, but not the head.

INVESTIGATIONS

A medicine history looking for agents that cause enhanced physiological tremor, and thyroid function tests screening for hyperthyroidism.

In some patients, quantitative computerised tremor analysis with accelerometers attached to the arms can help in diagnosing enhanced physiological tremor.[78] Frequency shifts under inertial loading of the limbs or reduction of severity by stochastic noise may be observed.[79][80]

It is usually reversible once the cause is corrected.

Drug-induced tremor

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SIGNS / SYMPTOMS

Occurs following ingestion of certain drugs (e.g., antipsychotics, lithium carbonate, theophylline valproic acid, ciclosporin [cyclosporine], caffeine).

The tremor may affect the hands, arms, head, or other muscles, but rarely affects the legs or feet.

The shaking usually involves small, rapid movements, >5 times a second.

INVESTIGATIONS

The tremor will occur in a reasonable time frame following drug ingestion.

Psychogenic tremor

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SIGNS / SYMPTOMS

There are several positive criteria to diagnose psychogenic tremor, such as sudden onset of tremor; an unusual combination of rest, postural, and kinetic tremor; variability of tremor direction, frequency, and amplitude; as well as distractibility and suggestibility.

INVESTIGATIONS

Entrainment is a useful tool. Psychogenic tremor either disappears or the tremor frequency in the affected body part shifts to match exactly the target frequency dictated by a metronome and produced by a rhythmic movement of the less-affected body part (e.g., the contralateral hand).

Orthostatic tremor

SIGNS / SYMPTOMS
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SIGNS / SYMPTOMS

Tremor in legs that occurs on standing, accompanied unsteadiness, tremor disappears on sitting or walking.

INVESTIGATIONS

Electromyography (EMG) of leg muscles (typically quadriceps) while standing, as a high-frequency peak on fast Fourier transform (FFT), usually between 12 Hz and 16 Hz.

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