sodium-oxybate has been researched along with Voice-Disorders* in 2 studies
1 review(s) available for sodium-oxybate and Voice-Disorders
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Alcohol-Responsive Hyperkinetic Movement Disorders-a Mechanistic Hypothesis.
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 |
1 trial(s) available for sodium-oxybate and Voice-Disorders
Article | Year |
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An open-label study of sodium oxybate in Spasmodic dysphonia.
Spasmodic dysphonia (SD) is a task-specific laryngeal dystonia that affects speech production. Co-occurring voice tremor (VT) often complicates the diagnosis and clinical management of SD. Treatment of SD and VT is largely limited to botulinum toxin injections into laryngeal musculature; other pharmacological options are not sufficiently developed.. Open-label study.. We conducted an open-label study in 23 SD and 22 SD/VT patients to examine the effects of sodium oxybate (Xyrem), an oral agent with therapeutic effects similar to those of alcohol in these patients. Blinded randomized analysis of voice and speech samples assessed symptom improvement before and after drug administration.. Sodium oxybate significantly improved voice symptoms (P = .001) primarily by reducing the number of SD-characteristic voice breaks and severity of VT. Sodium oxybate further showed a trend for improving VT symptoms (P = .03) in a subset of patients who received successful botulinum toxin injections for the management of their SD symptoms. The drug's effects were observed approximately 30 to 40 minutes after its intake and lasted about 3.5 to 4 hours.. Our study demonstrated that sodium oxybate reduced voice symptoms in 82.2% of alcohol-responsive SD patients both with and without co-occurring VT. Our findings suggest that the therapeutic mechanism of sodium oxybate in SD and SD/VT may be linked to that of alcohol, and as such, sodium oxybate might be beneficial for alcohol-responsive SD and SD/VT patients.. 4 Laryngoscope, 127:1402-1407, 2017. Topics: Adult; Aged; Dysphonia; Ethanol; Female; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Neurotransmitter Agents; Single-Blind Method; Sodium Oxybate; Speech; Treatment Outcome; Voice; Voice Disorders | 2017 |