sodium-oxybate and Torticollis

sodium-oxybate has been researched along with Torticollis* in 1 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for sodium-oxybate and Torticollis

ArticleYear
Alcohol-Responsive Hyperkinetic Movement Disorders-a Mechanistic Hypothesis.
    Tremor and other hyperkinetic movements (New York, N.Y.), 2020, 10-21, Volume: 10

    Patients with essential tremor, vocal tremor, torticollis, myoclonus-dystonia and posthypoxic myoclonus often benefit in a surprisingly rapid and robust manner from ingestion of a modest amount of alcohol (ethanol). Despite considerable investigation, the mechanism of ethanol's ability to produce this effect remains a mystery. In this paper, we review the pharmacology of ethanol and its analogue GHB (or sodium oxybate), summarize the published literature of alcohol-responsive hyperkinetic movement disorders, and demonstrate videos of patients we have treated over the last fifteen years with either an ethanol challenge or with chronic sodium oxybate therapy. We then propose a novel explanation for this phenomenon-namely, that ingestion of

    Topics: Adjuvants, Anesthesia; Alcoholic Beverages; Animals; Behavior, Animal; Central Nervous System Depressants; Cerebellar Nuclei; Dystonic Disorders; Essential Tremor; Ethanol; Humans; Hypoxia, Brain; Movement Disorders; Myoclonus; Neural Pathways; Purkinje Cells; Sodium Oxybate; Torticollis; Voice Disorders

2020