Tremor is associated with familial clustering of dystonia

  • Sebastian Loens
  • Feline Hamami
  • Katja Lohmann
  • Thorsten Odorfer
  • Chi Wang Ip
  • Simone Zittel
  • Kirsten E Zeuner
  • Judith Everding
  • Jos Becktepe
  • Katrin Marth
  • Friederike Borngräber
  • Katja Kollewe
  • Christoph Kamm
  • Andrea A Kühn
  • Mathias Gelderblom
  • Jens Volkmann
  • Christine Klein
  • Tobias Bäumer

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Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Dystonia is a movement disorder of variable etiology and clinical presentation and is accompanied by tremor in about 50% of cases. Monogenic causes in dystonia are rare, but also in the group of non-monogenic dystonias 10-30% of patients report a family history of dystonia. This points to a number of patients currently classified as idiopathic that have at least in part an underlying genetic contribution. The present study aims to identify clinical and demographic features associated with heritability of yet idiopathic dystonia.

METHODS: Seven hundred thirty-three datasets were obtained from the DysTract dystonia registry, patients with acquired dystonia or monogenic causes were excluded. Affected individuals were assigned to a familial and sporadic group, and clinical features were compared across these groups. Additionally, the history of movement disorders was also counted in family members.

RESULTS: 18.2% of patients reported a family history of dystonia. Groups differed in age at onset, disease duration and presence of tremor on a descriptive level. Logistic regression analysis revealed that tremor was the only predictor for a positive family history of dystonia (OR 2.49, CI = 1.54-4.11, p < 0.001). Tremor turned out to be the most common movement disorder in available relatives of patients, and presence of tremor in relatives was associated with tremor in index patients (X2(1) = 16.2, p < 0.001).

CONCLUSIONS: Tremor is associated with an increased risk of familial clustering of dystonia and with a family history of tremor itself. This indicates a hereditable dystonia-tremor syndrome with a clinical spectrum ranging from tremor-predominant diseases to dystonia.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1353-8020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 05.2023

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PubMed 37086575