2018
DOI: 10.1186/s40673-018-0080-3
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Inferior Olivary nucleus degeneration does not lessen tremor in essential tremor

Abstract: BackgroundIn traditional models of essential tremor, the inferior olivary nucleus was posited to play a central role as the pacemaker for the tremor. However, recent data call this disease model into question.Case presentationOur patient had progressive, long-standing, familial essential tremor. Upper limb tremor began at age 10 and worsened over time. It continued to worsen during the nine-year period he was enrolled in our brain donation program (age 85 – 94 years), during which time the tremor moved from th… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 61 publications
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“…In the majority of ET cases, other than a subset of ET cases with Lewy bodies [144,154], the postmortem changes that have been observed to date are exclusively in the cerebellum. Furthermore, the inferior olivary nucleus has appeared normal in postmortem studies, which echoes data from neuroimaging and clinical studies, which suggest that structural changes in this nucleus do not play a role in tremor generation in ET [55,57,125,139,140].…”
Section: Pathologicalsupporting
confidence: 64%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In the majority of ET cases, other than a subset of ET cases with Lewy bodies [144,154], the postmortem changes that have been observed to date are exclusively in the cerebellum. Furthermore, the inferior olivary nucleus has appeared normal in postmortem studies, which echoes data from neuroimaging and clinical studies, which suggest that structural changes in this nucleus do not play a role in tremor generation in ET [55,57,125,139,140].…”
Section: Pathologicalsupporting
confidence: 64%
“…In part, this was due to the lack of postmortem studies; indeed, during the 100-year period from 1903 to 2003, there were only 15 published postmortems [130], mainly comprising isolated case reports that lacked rigor as none used quantitative or immunohistochemical approaches nor compared ET to control brains [131][132][133][134][135][136][137]. A popular disease model, initially proposed in the 1970s [138], attempted to link ET to an abnormal inferior olivary nucleus; however, empiric support for that model is limited [57,139,140] and the model has recently fallen out of favor [55,56]. More recent research in the field has focused on the cerebellum, where there has been a reconceptualization of the disease as one of cerebellar degeneration, as will be discussed below [29,35,[37][38][39][40][41][42][43][44][45][46][47].…”
Section: Pathologicalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our model predicts that such currents can facilitate the after-hyperpolarization rebound of the deep cerebellar neurons, which robustly activates the olivary neurons at a preferred phase of their subthreshold oscillations, thus facilitating the synchronization along the olivocerebellar loop. Also, other ET-related pathologies such as the increased Purkinje cell axonal branching, recurrent collaterals, and terminal axonal sprouting may further amplify such synchronization and therefore exacerbate tremor symptoms, even with substantial losses of inferior olive neurons and Purkinje cells (70,71). Finally, our model shows that the range of tremor-related GABAergic currents to the dentate nucleus increases as the synaptic current from the nucleoolivary neurons to the inferior olivary nucleus (NO→ION) decreases.…”
Section: Slow-decaying Gabaergic Currents In the Dentate Nucleus Contmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…cates dysfunction within the central motor control (cortico-bulbo-cerebello-thalamocortical) network. [1][2][3] Cover. Approximate anatomic locations for the inferior olive nucleus (blue) in the medulla and ventral intermediate nucleus (red) in the thalamus are color-coded onto representative MRI.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is generally agreed that the action tremor characterizing ET indicates dysfunction within the motor control network (Figure 1 and Cover). [1][2][3] There is much debate regarding which component or components give rise to the oscillatory activity that drives tremor. 1,2,19 The initial proposal was the olivary hypothesis, based on harmalineinduced tremor in animal models, which resembles ET.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%