Ataxia

The form of cerebral palsy in which features of ataxia are present is better known as ataxic cerebral palsy.

Ataxia (from Greek α- [used as a negative prefix] + -τάξις [order], meaning "lack of order") is a neurological sign and symptom that consists of gross lack of coordination of muscle movements. Ataxia is a non-specific clinical manifestation implying dysfunction of the parts of the nervous system that coordinate movement, such as the cerebellum. Several possible causes exist for these patterns of neurological dysfunction. The term "dystaxia" is a rarely-used synonym.

The International Ataxia Awareness Day is observed on September 25 each year.[1]

Contents

Types

Cerebellar

The term cerebellar ataxia is used to indicate ataxia that is due to dysfunction of the cerebellum. This causes a variety of elementary neurological deficits, such as antagonist hypotonia, asynergy, dysmetria, dyschronometria, and dysdiadochokinesia. How and where these abnormalities manifest themselves depends on which cerebellar structures have been damaged, and whether the lesion is bilateral or unilateral.

Sensory

The term sensory ataxia is employed to indicate ataxia due to loss of proprioception, the loss of sensitivity to the positions of joint and body parts. This is generally caused by dysfunction of the dorsal columns of the spinal cord, because they carry proprioceptive information up to the brain. In some cases, the cause of sensory ataxia may instead be dysfunction of the various parts of the brain which receive positional information, including the cerebellum, thalamus, and parietal lobes.

Sensory ataxia presents itself with an unsteady "stomping" gait with heavy heel strikes, as well as a postural instability that is usually worsened when the lack of proprioceptive input cannot be compensated for by visual input, such as in poorly lit environments.

Physicians can find evidence of sensory ataxia during physical examination by having the patient stand with his/her feet together and eyes shut. In affected patients, this will cause the instability to worsen markedly, producing wide oscillations and possibly a fall. This is called a positive Romberg's test. Worsening of the finger-pointing test with the eyes closed is another feature of sensory ataxia. Also, when the patient is standing with arms and hands extended toward the physician, if the eyes are closed, the patient's finger will tend to "fall down" and then be restored to the horizontal extended position by sudden muscular contractions (the "ataxic hand").

Vestibular

The term vestibular ataxia is employed to indicate ataxia due to dysfunction of the vestibular system, which in acute and unilateral cases is associated with prominent vertigo, nausea and vomiting. In slow-onset, chronic bilateral cases of vestibular dysfunction, these characteristic manifestations may be absent, and dysequilibrium may be the sole presentation.

Causes

The three types of ataxia have overlapping causes, and therefore can either coexist or occur in isolation.

Focal lesions

Any type of focal lesion of the central nervous system (such as stroke, brain tumour, multiple sclerosis) will cause the type of ataxia corresponding to the site of the lesion: cerebellar if in the cerebellum, sensory if in the dorsal spinal cord (and rarely in the thalamus or parietal lobe), vestibular if in the vestibular system (including the vestibular areas of the cerebral cortex).

Exogenous substances

Exogenous substances that cause ataxia mainly do so because they have a depressant effect on central nervous system function. The most common example is ethanol, which is capable of causing reversible cerebellar and vestibular ataxia. Other examples include various prescription drugs (e.g. most antiepileptic drugs have cerebellar ataxia as a possible adverse effect), Lithium level over 1.5mEq/L, cannabis ingestion[4] and various other recreational drugs (e.g. ketamine, PCP or dextromethorphan, all of which are NMDA receptor antagonists that produce a dissociative state at high doses). Exposure to high levels of methylmercury, through consumption of fish with high mercury concentrations, is also a known cause of ataxia and other neurological disorders[5]

Radiation poisoning

Ataxia can be induced as a result of severe acute radiation poisoning with an absorbed dose of more than 30 Grays.

Vitamin B12 deficiency

Vitamin B12 deficiency may cause, among several neurological abnormalities, overlapping cerebellar and sensory ataxia.

Causes of isolated sensory ataxia

Peripheral neuropathies may cause generalised or localised sensory ataxia (e.g. a limb only) depending on the extent of the neuropathic involvement. Spinal disorders of various types may cause sensory ataxia from the lesioned level below, when they involve the dorsal columns.

Non-hereditary cerebellar degeneration

Non-hereditary causes of cerebellar degeneration include chronic ethanol abuse, paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration, high altitude cerebral oedema, coeliac disease, normal pressure hydrocephalus and cerebellitis.

Hereditary ataxias

Ataxia may depend on hereditary disorders consisting of degeneration of the cerebellum and/or of the spine; most cases feature both to some extent, and therefore present with overlapping cerebellar and sensory ataxia, even though one is often more evident than the other. Hereditary disorders causing ataxia include autosomal dominant ones such as spinocerebellar ataxia, episodic ataxia, and dentatorubropallidoluysian atrophy, as well as autosomal recessive disorders such as Friedreich's ataxia (sensory and cerebellar, with the former predominating) and Niemann Pick disease, ataxia-telangiectasia (sensory and cerebellar, with the latter predominating), and abetalipoproteinaemia. An example of X-linked ataxic condition is the rare fragile X-associated tremor/ataxia syndrome.

Arnold-Chiari malformation

Arnold-Chiari malformation is a malformation of the brain. It consists of a downward displacement of the cerebellar tonsils and the medulla through the foramen magnum, sometimes causing hydrocephalus as a result of obstruction of cerebrospinal fluid outflow.

Wilson's Disease

Wilson's Disease is an autosomal-recessive gene disorder whereby an alteration of the ATP7B gene results in an inability to properly excrete copper from the body.[6] Copper accumulates in the nervous system and liver and can cause ataxia as well as other neurological and organ impairments.[7]

Treatment

The treatment of ataxia and its effectiveness depend on the underlying cause. Treatment may limit or reduce the effects of ataxia, but it is unlikely to eliminate them entirely. Recovery tends to be better in individuals with a single focal injury (such as stroke or a benign tumour), compared to those who have a neurological degenerative condition.[8] A review of the management of degenerative ataxia was published in 2009.[9]

The movement disorders associated with ataxia can be managed by pharmacological treatments and through physical therapy and occupational therapy to reduce disability.[10] Some drug treatments that have been used to control ataxia include: 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP), idebenone, amantadine, physostigmine, L-carnitine or derivatives, trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole, vigabatrin, phosphatidylcholine, acetazolamide, 4-aminopyridine, buspirone, and a combination of coenzyme Q10 and vitamin E.[9] Physical therapy requires a focus on adapting activity and facilitating motor learning for retraining specific functional motor patterns.[11] Gait, coordination, and balance training are large components of therapy. Training will likely need to be intense and focused -- as indicated by one study performed with stroke patients experiencing limb ataxia who underwent intensive upper limb retraining.[12] Their therapy consisted of constraint-induced movement therapy which resulted in improvements of their arm function.[12] Treatment will likely include strategies to manage difficulties with everyday activities such as walking. Gait aids (such as a cane or walker) can be provided to decrease the risk of falls associated with impairment of balance or poor coordination. Severe ataxia may eventually lead to the need for a wheelchair.

In order to obtain better results, possible coexisting motor deficits need to be addressed in addition to those induced by ataxia. For example, muscle weakness and decreased endurance could lead to increasing fatigue and poorer movement patterns.

Other uses of the term

The term "ataxia" is sometimes used in a broader sense to indicate lack of coordination in some physiological process. Examples include optic ataxia (lack of coordination between visual inputs and hand movements, resulting in inability to reach and grab objects. Optic ataxia may be caused by lesions to the posterior parietal cortex. The posterior parietal cortex is responsible for combining and expressing positional information and relating it to movement. Outputs of the posterior parietal cortex include the spinal cord, brain stem motor pathways, pre-motor and pre-frontal cortex, basal ganglia and the cerebellum. Some neurons in the posterior parietal cortex are modulated by intention. Optic ataxia is usually part of Balint's syndrome, but can be seen in isolation with injuries to the superior parietal lobule, as it represents a disconnection between visual-association cortex and the frontal premotor and motor cortex[13]), and ataxic respiration (lack of coordination in respiratory movements, usually due to dysfunction of the respiratory centres in the medulla oblongata).

References

  1. ^ "National Ataxia Foundation - International Ataxia Awareness Day". http://www.ataxia.org/events/international-ataxia-awareness-day.aspx. Retrieved 2008-03-25. 
  2. ^ a b Blumenfeld, H (2002). Neuroanatomy through Clinical Cases. Sinauer Associates. pp. 670–671. 
  3. ^ a b c Schmitz, T.J. (2007). Examination of Coordination. In O'Sullivan, S. B., & Schmitz, T. J. (2007). Physical rehabilitation (pp. 193-225). Philadelphia: F.A. Davis.
  4. ^ "Inadvertent Ingestion of Marijuana --- Los Angeles, California, 2009". http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5834a2.htm?s_cid=mm5834a2. Retrieved 2009-09-03. 
  5. ^ Díez, Sergei (2009). Human Health Effects of Methylmercury Exposure, p. 111-132 in Reviews of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology Volume 198. Springer Publishers, New York. http://www.springerlink.com/content/wxl42tn2n27715p3/
  6. ^ Walshe, J.M. (2010). "Wilson’s Disease". In C. E. Clarke, & D. J. Nicholl (Eds.), Birmingham Movement Disorders Coursebook.
  7. ^ Haldeman-Englert, C. (2010). "Wilson’s Disease". PubMed Health. Retrieved 29 April 2011/
  8. ^ Morton, S.M.; Bastian A.J. (2009). "Can rehabilitation help ataxia?". Neurology 73 (22): 1818–1819. doi:10.1212/WNL.0b013e3181c33b21. PMID 19864635. 
  9. ^ a b Trujillo-Martin, MM.; Serrano-Aguilar P., Monton-Alvarez F., Carrillo-Fumero R. (2009). "Effectiveness and safety of treatments for degenerative ataxias: a systematic review". Movement Disorders 24 (8): 1111–1124. doi:10.1002/mds.22564. PMID 19412936. 
  10. ^ Perlman, S.L. (2006). "Ataxias". Clinics in Geriatric Medicine 22 (4). http://www.cinahl.com/cgi-bin/refsvc?jid=701&accno=2009312274. 
  11. ^ Ilg, G.; Synofzik M, Bro¨tz D, Burkard S, Giese MA, Scho¨ls L. (2009). "Intensive coordinative training improves motor performance in degenerative cerebellar disease". Neurology 73 (22): 1823–1830. doi:10.1212/WNL.0b013e3181c33adf. PMID 19864636. 
  12. ^ a b Richards, L.; Senesac C., McGuirk T., Woodbury M., Howland D., Davis S., Patterson T. (2008). "Response to intensive upper extremity therapy by individuals with ataxia from stroke". Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation 15 (3): 262–271. doi:10.1310/tsr1503-262. PMID 18647730. 
  13. ^ Giuseppe Vallar, MD, Spatial Neglect, Balint-Holmes’ and Gerstmann’s Syndromes, and Other Spatial Disorders CNS Spectr. 2007;12(7):527-536

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