Tremor and Other Hyperkinetic Movements (Mar 2017)

Early Head Tremor in Essential Tremor: A Case Series and Commentary

  • Elan D. Louis,
  • Funmi M. Badejo,
  • Ashley D. Cristal,
  • James Meyers,
  • Nora Hernandez,
  • Karen P. Chen,
  • Kelly V. Naranjo,
  • Jemin Park,
  • Lorraine N. Clark

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7916/D8KW5MRG
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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Background: Classically, the onset of head tremor in essential tremor (ET) patients follows that of hand tremor, such that there is a somatotopic spread of involved areas. Here we present a series of seven self-reportedly “unaffected” relatives of ET cases. These seven were clinically asymptomatic and had normal levels of arm tremor on examination, yet each evidenced a transient head wobble on examination. We estimate the prevalence of this phenotype within the two studies from which cases were ascertained.Methods: ET cases and their self-reportedly affected and unaffected relatives, enrolled in two family studies, underwent a medical history and videotaped neurological examination.Results: In seven self-reportedly “unaffected” relatives, a transient and subtle head wobble was seen, always during sustained phonation, speech, or reading aloud. Total tremor score (a measure of arm tremor) ranged from 5 to 12 (i.e., mild tremor within the range of normal). The prevalence of this phenotype of early head tremor was 3.7% in one study and 23.1% in the other.Discussion: We present a series of seven individuals who had early head tremor in an evolving transition state from normal to ET. These cases raise a number of broad clinical, phenotypic, and pathophysiological issues about ET.