Louis Elan D
Department of Neurology, University of Texas Southwestern, Dallas, TX, United States.
Front Neurol. 2021 Mar 26;12:650601. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2021.650601. eCollection 2021.
The past 10 years has seen a remarkable advance in our understanding of the disease traditionally referred to as "essential tremor" (ET). First, the clinical phenotype of ET has been expanded from that of a bland, unidimensional, and monosymptomatic entity to one with a host of heterogeneous features. These features include a broader and more nuanced collection of tremors, non-tremor motor features (e.g., gait abnormalities) and a range of non-motor features, including cognitive, psychiatric, sleep, and other abnormalities. The natural history of these features, as well as their relationships with one another and with disease duration and severity, are better appreciated than they were previously. Studies of disease etiology have identified a number of candidate genes as well as explored several environmental determinants of disease. In addition, the decade has seen the beginnings and expansion of rigorous postmortem studies that have identified and described the postmortem changes in the brains of patients with ET. This emerging science has given rise to a new notion that the disease, in many cases, is one of cerebellar system degeneration. Across all of these studies (clinical, etiological, and pathophysiological) is the observation that there is heterogeneity across patients and that "essential tremor" is likely not a single disease but, rather, a family of diseases. The time has come to use the more appropriate terminology, "the essential tremors," to fully describe and encapsulate what is now apparent. In this paper, the author will review the clinical, etiological, and pathophysiological findings, referred to above, and make the argument that the terminology should evolve to reflect advances in science and that "the essential tremors" is a more scientifically appropriate term.
在过去十年中,我们对传统上称为“特发性震颤”(ET)的疾病的认识取得了显著进展。首先,ET的临床表型已从一种单一、无明显特征且仅表现为单一症状的疾病扩展为具有一系列异质性特征的疾病。这些特征包括更广泛、更细微的震颤类型、非震颤性运动特征(如步态异常)以及一系列非运动特征,包括认知、精神、睡眠和其他异常。现在我们对这些特征的自然史,以及它们之间的相互关系、与疾病持续时间和严重程度的关系,比以前有了更深入的了解。疾病病因学研究已经确定了一些候选基因,并探索了多种疾病的环境决定因素。此外,在这十年中,严谨的尸检研究开始并不断扩展,这些研究已经确定并描述了ET患者大脑的尸检变化。这一新兴科学催生了一个新观念,即在许多情况下,该疾病是小脑系统退化性疾病之一。在所有这些研究(临床、病因学和病理生理学)中都观察到患者之间存在异质性,并且“特发性震颤”可能不是单一疾病,而是一类疾病。现在是时候使用更合适的术语“特发性震颤(复数形式)”来全面描述和概括目前已明确的情况了。在本文中,作者将回顾上述临床、病因学和病理生理学研究结果,并论证术语应随着科学进展而演变,“特发性震颤(复数形式)”是一个更科学恰当的术语。