Movement Disorders

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  • Опубліковано 26 вер 2024
  • This video is intended to serve as an overview of movement disorders for medical students. Students This video is intended to serve as an overview of movement disorders for medical students. Students will learn to identify and classify a movement disorder, look for parkinsonism on the neurological examination, list differential diagnoses of tremor and parkinsonism, and recall early and late treatment options for Parkinson's disease.
    00:06 - Intro
    00:33 - Objectives
    01:41​ - Case of a person with hand shaking
    03:07 - MOVEMENT PHENOMENOLOGY
    04:06 - Parkinsonism
    07:13 - Tremor
    08:50 - Dystonia
    11:35 - Chorea and hemiballismus
    13:23 - Tics
    15:58 - Myoclonus
    17:38 - MOVEMENT PHENOMENOLOGY: Summary
    19:00 - Back to the case: What is the movement phenomenology?
    19:35 - MOVEMENT DISORDER EXAMINATION
    20:00 - Classification of tremor and tremor exam
    22:51 - Examining rigidity
    24:04 - Examining bradykinesia
    25:35 - Examining ataxia and gait
    27:47 - Our patient's examination
    28:56 - PATHOLOGICAL DIFFERENTIAL OF TREMOR
    32:19 - Parkinsonian tremor versus essential tremor
    34:28 - Back to the case: What type of tremor is our patient exhibiting?
    37:31 - DaT Scan: Differentiating parkinson's from essential tremor
    39:43 - EARLY TREATMENT OF PARKINSON'S DISEASE: Levodopa, dopamine agonists, MAO-B inhibitors
    47:47 - Back to the case: Progression of disease
    49:10 - NON-MOTOR FEATURES OF PARKINSON'S DISEASE
    53:10 - Progressive motor symptoms
    55:16 - DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF PARKINSONISM
    57:56 - Atypical parkinsonisms
    1:03:18 - DIAGNOSTIC APPROACH TO PARKINSON'S DISEASE
    1:05:53 - TREATING ADVANCING PARKINSON'S DISEASE
    1:06:01 - Dyskinesias
    1:08:44 - Gait freezing
    1:09:42 - Amantadine, anticholinergics, COMT inhibitors
    1:11:39 - Deep brain stimulation
    Created, produced, and narrated by:
    Igor Rybinnik MD
    Neurology Clerkship Director
    Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School
    Content experts:
    Jennifer Chen MD, Marco Russo MD, Gian Pal MD
    Division of Movement Disorders
    Department of Neurology
    Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School
    Images, videos adapted from:
    - Symptoms and Diagnosis of PSP, CBD and MSA - CurePSP TV
    - "A Day with Jeff - Technology and Essential Tremor," Google.org
    - Joss Whedon, director. Avengers Age Of Ultron. Marvel Studios, 2015
    - Anthony Russo, Joe Russo, directors. Captain America: Civil War. Marvel Studios, 2016
    - "Breaking the Fourth Wall." WandaVision, created by Jac Schaeffer, S01E07, Marvel Studios, 2021
    - "The Tourette's Dictionary." Snapple and Cats, 2017
    - Schenck C, Mahowald M. REM Sleep Behavior Disorder (RBD). University of Minnesota, 1986.
    - "Presentations of tardive dyskinesia symptoms," "Involuntary facial and neck movements in TD." Teva Neuroscience, 2021.
    - Hutchinson, "Topic 14: Parkinson's disease - Examining a patient." University Colege of Dublin School of Medicine, 2013
    - Tubridy N, "Topic 13: Parkinson's disease female patient." University Colege of Dublin School of Medicine, 2013
    - Barton B. "My Parkinson's Story: Medications." Veterans Health Administration, 2013
    - Reich SG. Hemiballismus. Department of Neurology, University of Maryland. Neurosigns.org.
    - Rodriguez-Porcel F, et al. Fulminant Corticobasal Degeneration. Neurology 2016;86(12):1164-1166
    - Nonnekes J, et al. Freezing of gait: a practical approach to management. Lancet Neurol 2015;14(7):768-778
    - Multifocal motor tics and vocal tics in Tourette's syndrome. Neurosigns.org, 2016.
    - Poston K. "Approach to the Exam for Parkinson's Disease," Stanford Medicine 25, 2018.
    - Bhidayasiri R, Tarsy D. Movement Disorders: A Video Atlas (Current Clinical Neurology). 1st Ed, Humana Press, 2012.
    - Poewe W, et al. Nature Rev 2017;3(17013):1-21
    - DaT scan image, Parkinson’s Foundation
    - Haggstrom M. Histopathology of neurofibrillary tangles in the hippocampus in Alzheimer's disease. H&E stain. Wikimedia.org, 2020
    - Rajan, S. Lewy bodies (alpha synuclein inclusions). Wikipedia.org, 2012.
    - Hauser RA. Motor fluctuations.
    Music:
    - "The Plan's Working" by Cooper Cannell
    DISCLAIMER: Please note that this material was simplified for educational purposes. For patient management, please review your clinical society's guidelines and engage expert consultation where appropriate. Also, the opinions of the presenters do not necessarily reflect those of Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital, RWJBarnabus Health, or Rutgers University as a whole.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 106

  • @Malferon
    @Malferon Рік тому +37

    Literally every video you make is gold. To me they've become the standard for even resident level reviews and education for Neurology. I share them with all my junior and even some senior Neurology and Child Neurology resident colleagues. Thanks for all you do

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  Рік тому +5

      Thank you so much!

    • @nowtelDarmendra
      @nowtelDarmendra 11 місяців тому +1

      It's so Amazing, you're bringing the neurology to the world with your expertise experiences in a matter of few hours.....
      How dedicated & 'delicious' ....
      preparation by a wonderful person.....
      No words to appreciate you dear neurologist......

  • @teresasantana9121
    @teresasantana9121 Рік тому +15

    As a Neurology resident, I can't thank you enough for making these videos! They are definitely the best learning tool available on youtube. Keep up the excellent work!

  • @baveshsiva7393
    @baveshsiva7393 Рік тому +16

    My man is back 🫡🔥🥲😩

  • @magdacomanescu4193
    @magdacomanescu4193 Рік тому +6

    And the UA-cam Oscars go to.....the Neurophile!! Can't thank you enough for posting these videos! So useful, well structured, so much passion and hard work behind each one of them!! Congratulations!!

  • @58209
    @58209 Рік тому +5

    i'm watching this as a patient, rather than as a medical student. this is an excellently presented lecture, and helps me understand why my neurologists ask me certain questions or does certain exam room tests.
    thank you for making this publicly available. and thank you for including manually written captions so i could follow along with some of the more difficult medical terminology.

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  Рік тому +2

      Thank you for your kind words and I am sorry that you suffer with a movement disorder. I hope have a therapeutic regimen that works.

  • @hldmyhndPX
    @hldmyhndPX Рік тому +3

    This channel is pure gold. I'm still in 3rd year of med but i can't stop binge watching and gathering new info! Can't wait for the next video

  • @pedroinarionovaisaraujo1859
    @pedroinarionovaisaraujo1859 10 місяців тому +2

    I'm a family medicine resident in Brazil, and watch all your videos. Never stop!

  • @Adam-xe9qy
    @Adam-xe9qy Рік тому +6

    I sincerely thank you for all this amazing quality content. I just started my neurology rotation and each of your videos are just on point to review a certain topic.

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  Рік тому +2

      Awesome! That's the main point of this channel.

  • @user-sw5wn8go3k
    @user-sw5wn8go3k Рік тому +4

    I was so excited to see the notification! Always longing to watching your videos!

  • @thiagoschernikau4769
    @thiagoschernikau4769 Рік тому +1

    You manage to brilliantly combine exceptional medical insights, subtle humor, and remarkable clarity-truly unparalleled content, I'm very grateful!

  • @mazik33n
    @mazik33n 9 місяців тому +1

    Really enjoyed this. Very informative and I love how you add video examples with each section. Exactly what I love to see in a lecture!

  • @vxp999
    @vxp999 9 місяців тому +2

    All your lectures are super amazing!
    Thank you Thank you and 1 million Thank you for you efforts and hard work!
    Waiting for you to drop a new video/lecture! We certainty miss you!
    Every Neurology Resident should be thankful for you channel!

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  8 місяців тому +2

      Next video is coming soon. It's almost done.

    • @vxp999
      @vxp999 8 місяців тому

      Yay! Cant wait!

  • @DocJona
    @DocJona 11 місяців тому +2

    Wow your videos are oustanding! I really enjoy how you explain it in a witty and simplistic way . Please continue with your great work!!. Greetings from 🇦🇷

  • @MrAbdalrahim
    @MrAbdalrahim Рік тому +6

    Welcome Back Doc, glad to see your lectures again, keep it up please.
    Can you describe what is the exact difference between yesterday and today video ??

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  Рік тому +2

      Of course. We used a video of a dystonia in a musician, but it wasn’t obvious enough, so I replaced it with a hand dystonia. Also, I talked about the null point in patients with dystonia, but that really only applies to dystonia tremor. This would introduce confusion to new learners, so we removed it.

  • @samiheikkinen5375
    @samiheikkinen5375 Рік тому +2

    A long waited video, and it didn't dissapoint. Thank you!

  • @abdullahalshighri
    @abdullahalshighri 8 місяців тому +2

    wow what a lecture . Helps a lot in understanding the bigger picture something many medical students struggle with . You read something but never see that exact thing in rotations and you are great at showing the disease natural history and variation in disease presentation. Is there any way we can access these lectures as in download them?

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  8 місяців тому

      I am working on a website to provide the downloads.

  • @rojeenabdullah6951
    @rojeenabdullah6951 7 місяців тому +1

    Literally a LIFE SAVER! Thank you for your videos!

  • @tao072002
    @tao072002 3 місяці тому

    I'm an internal medicine resident and unfortunately, neurology is placed off to the side in our training, so these videos are so so helpful for teaching on neurology topics. Thanks Neurophile!

  • @drfakherimam3084
    @drfakherimam3084 Рік тому +3

    great to see you after a while

  • @gbajusstone6434
    @gbajusstone6434 Рік тому +2

    Finally new video
    I really appropriate the efforts
    You are amazing
    I hope you can make videos everyday 😊

  • @62riad
    @62riad 11 місяців тому +1

    Excellent lecture. Helped me a lot as a trainee.

  • @paull1074
    @paull1074 26 днів тому +1

    Wonderful video. It is so informative. Thank you for doing this. One minor correction. Chorea is not a Latin word, it is Greek. As you mentioned it means "to dance" or simply "dance".

  • @Emmanuel-co6sm
    @Emmanuel-co6sm 3 місяці тому

    I have a case of involuntary movements, but they only last for about 15 seconds maximum, and they usually begin when my left foot moves uncontrollably and toes move uncontrollably, then my left arm, left shoulder, and fingers and wrists kinda twist 180 degrees and my back hunches over and I begin to have a crazy seizure like momment. I'm 15 and have had this for a year now. The terms and videos that were slowed really helped me to kinda get an idea of what my condition could be, but luckily for me, I don't have it too severely like most people in the video.

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  3 місяці тому

      I’m sorry to hear that you are experiencing involuntary movements. I hope you get well soon.

  • @sabirmusthafa
    @sabirmusthafa Рік тому +1

    Amazing lecture...
    Looking forward for a Coma Recovery Scale soon..

  • @drbasumatary2007
    @drbasumatary2007 4 місяці тому +1

    Excellent 👌

  • @OmarTravelAdventures
    @OmarTravelAdventures 2 місяці тому +1

    Outstanding and fun stuff!!!!!

  • @ЮліяПарфенова-х8ж
    @ЮліяПарфенова-х8ж 3 місяці тому +1

    Thanks, this video is very useful.

  • @antonribkin5319
    @antonribkin5319 Рік тому +2

    As always great content! That essential tremor patient with the knife almost made me faint tho..

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  Рік тому +2

      When I saw that video, I thought to myself, “please put the knife down.”

  • @DrAgaKhan
    @DrAgaKhan Рік тому +2

    As always Love and Respect Sir ❤

  • @신동국-i9x
    @신동국-i9x Рік тому +1

    Thank u for comming back with great video!!

  • @keikomunsell1220
    @keikomunsell1220 6 місяців тому +1

    I am a NP works for neurology inpatients. Really help to gain knowledge for neuro patients. Wondering if you offer CME? and also wondering if we can get printed materials for each diseases/disorders? I watch each video multiple times, nicely done. Thx!

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  5 місяців тому

      Unfortunately, I don’t think you can get CME through UA-cam.

  • @frankrobert1917
    @frankrobert1917 5 місяців тому +1

    great lectures.

  • @jrbryanp
    @jrbryanp 11 днів тому +1

    What application do you use to create these videos? I love your work!

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  10 днів тому

      Thank you. The animations are made in PowerPoint. I use Adobe Premiere Pro to put together the final video.

  • @mimm2848
    @mimm2848 Рік тому +1

    Than k you for this a great Teaching video as usual nothing new. You are the best

  • @adewunmibamgbose5291
    @adewunmibamgbose5291 4 місяці тому +1

    good insight

  • @glksivakaran
    @glksivakaran 8 місяців тому +1

    Such a wonderful talk thank you so much

  • @maximradhauer7873
    @maximradhauer7873 3 місяці тому +1

    Amazing video, might I add the Lewis-Body-Dementia in the atypical Parkinsonisms, or am I making a mistake

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  3 місяці тому

      Atypical parkinsonisms are generally CBD, MSA and PSP. I think Lewy Body dementia is its own entity, but it’s certainly in the differential of PD.

  • @marietrask8390
    @marietrask8390 Рік тому +1

    Very educational thankyou.

  • @samiabgb4084
    @samiabgb4084 Рік тому +1

    thank you so so much from Algeria

  • @drabdusshahid629
    @drabdusshahid629 Рік тому +1

    Great lecture... Thank You Man... 🙂

  • @fernandobehrens74
    @fernandobehrens74 Рік тому +1

    Great lecture!

  • @gonzaloalbertomonroycortes3105

    Thank u!!! What a great video

  • @ali_madhoun
    @ali_madhoun Рік тому +1

    Great lecture, thank u ❤👏

  • @juneloveletter3901
    @juneloveletter3901 11 місяців тому +6

    This video is so detailed and yet enjoyable. And you’re so witty! Not only did I learn something, I thoroughly enjoyed doing it. Many thanks! 😊

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  11 місяців тому

      Thank you!

    • @giricr
      @giricr 4 місяці тому +1

      ❤​@@theneurophile

  • @zhiyako4032
    @zhiyako4032 7 місяців тому +1

    4:57 Parkinsonism also causes fractionated turning. Instead of a smooth 180 degrees turn, they take multiple steps to complete it.

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  7 місяців тому +1

      Absolutely. Thank you for pointing that out.

  • @MyCer1
    @MyCer1 Рік тому +1

    Great video!

  • @carolhu6942
    @carolhu6942 Рік тому +1

    your videos are so amazing

  • @AnitaSingh-tv7ci
    @AnitaSingh-tv7ci Рік тому +1

    Wonderful

  • @demaahmed8817
    @demaahmed8817 11 місяців тому +1

    You are awoesome

  • @Physiotherapywithkavya
    @Physiotherapywithkavya 7 місяців тому

    😂
    Although many diseases can have a mix of both.
    *Parkinsonism*
    Presents as bradykinesia (slowness of movement, starts distally, lacks precision of fingers, drag legs, reduced amplitude), Rigidity(explain how it is different from spasticity)and tremor( a hyperkinetic character of a hypokinetic disorder!)
    Tremor is a involuntary ,rythmic, oscillatory movement of a body part. Can occur in action (kinetic/postural) -essential ,drug induced, metabolic/endocrine, enhanced physiological,neuropathic, dystonic, cerebellar
    or
    can occur at rest-idiopathoc Parkinson disease, secondary and atypical Parkinsonism. Test-outstreched hand hold posture, finger to nose, Rigidity assess and rapido alternative movements (asesse bradykinesia),assess coordination,balance and gait
    Dystonia - phenomena characterized by intermittent or sustained muscle contraction causing abnormal often repetitive movements or posture which can be stopped by sesory trick -antagonist gesture( explain antagonist gesture), can be task specific.
    Chorea(Latin -dance)-involutary , breif and irregular movement " hemiballismus variant
    Ticks - sudden, rapid, recurrent, nonrythmic , individually recognisable motor movement : may be accompanied by vocal ticks (explain) coprolalia,echolalia, palililia. Also premonitory urge may be present
    Myoclonus is a hyperkinetic, involuntary movement that is uniquely very brief. Negative and Positive myoclonus (difference)

  • @donnaallgaier-lamberti3933
    @donnaallgaier-lamberti3933 3 місяці тому

    Doctors suspect that my 79-year-old husband has suspected Charcot Marie Tooth Disease (CMT). Physically this means, high arches, hammer toes, neuropathy in toes and feet, wonky walking, loss of smell, slurring his words, tripping and falling etc. He had a nerve test and this is when the physician first noted CMT. Would you consider this a "movement disorder?"

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  3 місяці тому

      I’m sorry to hear that. Charcot Marie Tooth is a neuromuscular disorder and not a movement disorder.

  • @TimZomb
    @TimZomb Рік тому +1

    New video! Great!

  • @ThePublicHealthHeaux
    @ThePublicHealthHeaux Рік тому

    Hi! At 55:36 the audio has a (big!) error where it says "Every patient with Parkinsonism has Parkinson's disease." The caption is correct: "But not every patient..." Seems like a crucial thing to fix! ;)

    • @ThePublicHealthHeaux
      @ThePublicHealthHeaux Рік тому

      PS--I'm a medical copy editor who used to work in pharma and is AVAILABLE for remote work. I'd LOVE to do more work directly with physicians, scientific articles, and/or in medical education.

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  Рік тому

      It should say, “not every patient with Parkinsonism…”

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  Рік тому

      I listened to it again… I do say the correct statement in the video: “But not every patient with Parkinsonism has Parkinson’s disease”

    • @ThePublicHealthHeaux
      @ThePublicHealthHeaux Рік тому

      ​@@theneurophile
      I'm SURE you are saying the correct statement! :)
      But there’s a clear audio/tech issue somehwere. Is this happening to others listening too? 

      Listening to that whole little section again, I'm hearing MANY recurring "hiccups" actually, where the caption is fine but the first part of one of your words isn't coming through. Ex: 55:25, where only the last 2 syllables (maybe 3) of “bradykinesia” can be heard (“‘nesia.”). 55:31, same thing occurs with the word “Parkinsonism” (the second occurrence, starting the sentence “Parkinsonism is absolutely necessary to diagnose Parkinson’s disease.”) where again the first part of this word gets muffled out. Then the next sentence (the ONLY instance I even consciously noticed first time listening) the audio cuts out “But not” from “But not every patient…” Then the word "Parkinsonism" is cut off in another instance (same exact way); then the sentence “Drugs!” gets cut out from the audio (but again, captioning is perfect). 


      I second everybody's THANKS for this amazing video--and the WHOLE series I’ve yet to dig into--btw! Given how I’m using it to help figure out my own really debilitating medical mystery that has led two impeccable compassionate specialists (neuro + neurosurgeon) to separately refer me to a movement disorder specialist, I may appreciate it differently--dare I say more, as it's not a purely academic concern?--than most of the folks commenting. Hopefully these audio hiccups are NOT another symptom emerging! ;D Thank you again!

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  Рік тому

      @@ThePublicHealthHeaux Thank you for that feedback. Technical hiccups are not good. On my end, I tried it on several devices and in multiple locations, and it sounds ok. Is anyone else experiencing these problems? If so, I would have to escalate it to UA-cam.

  • @abdou.b3259
    @abdou.b3259 7 місяців тому

    Doctor Why there is a Babinski sign in Friedrich ataxia?

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  7 місяців тому +1

      There is demyelination of corticospinal tracts in the spine. There is atrophy of the spinal cord after damage. So injuring the corticospinal tracts results in “long tract signs” like Babinski and hyper-reflexia.

  • @dr.alaaelhag8619
    @dr.alaaelhag8619 Рік тому

    Amazing ❤

  • @xDomglmao
    @xDomglmao Рік тому +1

    finally back

  • @Hamza-bhatti
    @Hamza-bhatti 11 місяців тому +1

    Man.... why didn't u make video bout brainstem lesions....😢

  • @rodrigosanjinez
    @rodrigosanjinez Рік тому +1

    Its back!!!!!

  • @abdou.b3259
    @abdou.b3259 7 місяців тому +1

    please ataxia you are the best in the world

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  7 місяців тому +1

      Thank you. If you want a review of the coordination pathway, take a look at our dizziness video. I will add ataxia to the list of things to work on

  • @fafster5368
    @fafster5368 Рік тому +1

    Waiting for the next videos

  • @pixie89
    @pixie89 Рік тому +1

    👌

  • @georgebashour4333
    @georgebashour4333 Рік тому +1

    💙💙

  • @waleedkhalid1181
    @waleedkhalid1181 6 місяців тому

  • @taiwofaruq3105
    @taiwofaruq3105 11 місяців тому

    Is movement disorder curable?

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  11 місяців тому

      It unfortunately depends on the cause.

  • @kevk741
    @kevk741 Рік тому +1

    The question is how many of you watching understand medication injury and things like akathisia? I couldn’t find a neurologist that could identify akathisia or tardive symptoms with someone there screaming that they had it. Even top movement disorder specialists. No one should be prescribing antidepressants or benzodiazepines or stimulants or opiates or any psychotropic until they can identify akathisia. You cannot treat akathisia without turning it into a monster. Benzodiazepine Induced Neurological disorder is real and crippling people. Antidepressant injury and antidepressant tapering issues are also very real. Especially tardive akathisia after years of cumulative use.

  • @feruzabdullayev640
    @feruzabdullayev640 Рік тому

    Hello. Do you have other colleagues who explain radiology like you?

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  Рік тому +1

      Sure. A few of us. We can't really measure up to Dr. Gaillard of radiopaedia.org, but we aspire.

    • @feruzabdullayev640
      @feruzabdullayev640 Рік тому

      @@theneurophile thank you. Do you have friends who explain the same as you, but only the chest? On UA-cam or on radiopedia?

  • @pritamshil5765
    @pritamshil5765 Рік тому +1

    Sir there are Adults who find it difficult to concentrate,focus. Can these problems be totally cured in Adulthood?

    • @theneurophile
      @theneurophile  Рік тому

      This is a very difficult question to answer since there are many causes for concentration difficulties.

  • @jakallebron
    @jakallebron Рік тому +1

    You guys are the best. Big fan of your every video. Greetings from Germany.

  • @ms.pwintphyusoesoe2745
    @ms.pwintphyusoesoe2745 Рік тому +1

    thank you :)

  • @Vexasmite
    @Vexasmite 3 дні тому +2

    30:45 I laughed so hard