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Review
. 2025 Jan 28;104(2):e210209.
doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000210209. Epub 2024 Dec 26.

Challenges in Describing Tremor and Dystonia

Affiliations
Review

Challenges in Describing Tremor and Dystonia

Aasef G Shaikh et al. Neurology. .

Abstract

Tremor is defined as an oscillatory and rhythmical movement. By contrast, dystonia is defined by sustained or intermittent abnormal postures, repetitive movements, or both. Tremor and dystonia often coexist in the same individual. Sometimes tremor and dystonia occur in the same body region, and sometimes they occur in separate body regions. In other cases, dystonic movements are rapid and repetitive, and they may mimic tremor. The varied clinical phenomenology of dystonia and tremor were recognized in the earliest descriptions of dystonia, and various terms have been used to describe the relationships between tremor and dystonia. The term dystonic tremor was first introduced to distinguish tremor-like movements in dystonia from more common tremors such as essential tremor. Subsequently, the same term was adopted to refer to any combination of dystonia and tremor in the same body region. Both applications of this term continue to be used in the modern literature. Other related terms have also been proposed such as tremor associated with dystonia, tremulous dystonia, dystonia-tremor syndrome, and dystonia with tremor. The proliferation of terms has become confusing, and expert opinion regarding application of these terms is divided, so a group of specialists was assembled to review the terminology and to develop recommendations for a more consistent approach. The group agreed that the term tremor should exclusively refer to rhythmic movements. The group also agreed that repetitive dystonic movements that are grossly arrhythmic should not be labeled with terms that imply they are a type of tremor. Moreover, when tremor and dystonia coexist, it may be clinically more useful to describe them separately, using descriptive terms rather than hybrid terms that imply suspected etiology. Easy-to-use clinical terms are essential, although bedside discrimination of movements may sometimes be challenging. In the future, motion analysis or physiologic measures may aid in the discrimination of movements that remain clinically uncertain.

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Conflict of interest statement

A.G. Shaikh was supported by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) CSR&D Merit Review (I01CX002086) VA RR&D Merit Review (I01RX003676), VA RR&D SPiRE (I21RX003878), Care Source Ohio Community Partnership Grant, and philanthropic funds to the Department of Neurology at University Hospitals (Penni and Stephen Weinberg Chair in Brain Health), and is chief editor of Dystonia. A. Fasano is partly funded by the University of Toronto and the University Health Network Chair in Neuromodulation, has stock ownership in Inbrain Pharma, has received payments as consultant and/or speaker from Abbvie, Abbott, Boston Scientific, Ceregate, Dompé Farmaceutici, Inbrain Neuroelectronics, Ipsen, Medtronic, Iota, Syneos Health, Merz, Sunovion, Paladin Labs, UCB, and Sunovion, has received research support from Abbvie, Boston Scientific, Medtronic, Praxis, and ES, and receives royalties from Springer. R.C. Helmich was supported by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO VIDI grant no. 09150172010044). A. Albanese received speaker's honoraria from IPsen Pharma, Merz Pharma, and Boston Scientific, is president of the International Association for Parkinsonism and Related Disorders, and is specialty chief editor of Frontiers in Neurology. R. Elble is funded by the Kiwanis Neuroscience Research Foundation and the Illinois-Eastern Iowa District, and is a paid consultant for Applied Therapeutics, Attune, Encora, Fasikl, Jazz, Neurocrine, Praxis Precision Medicines, and Sage Therapeutics. V.S.C. Fung receives a salary from NSW Health, has received unrestricted research grants from the Michael J. Fox Foundation, Abbvie and Merz, and receives royalties from Health Press Ltd. and Taylor and Francis Group LLC. M.A. Tijssen received grants from the Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development ZonMW Topsubsidie (91218013) and ZonMW Program Translational Research (40-44600-98-323), received a European Fund for Regional Development from the European Union (01492947) and a European Joint Programme on Rare Diseases (EJP RD) Networking Support Scheme, received the Stichting Wetenschapsfonds Dystonie from the province of Friesland, and received unrestricted grants from Ipsen and Merz. B.S. Jeon received funding from Peptron Korea, Gemvax and Kael, and Abbvie Korea. M. Hallett is supported by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Intramural Program, is an inventor of a patent held by NIH for the H-coil for magnetic stimulation for which he receives license fee payments from the NIH (from Brainsway), is on the medical advisory boards of Brainsway, QuantalX, and VoxNeuro, and has consulted for Janssen Pharmaceuticals. H.A. Jinnah is supported by the Dystonia Coalition through NIH grants NS116025, NS065701, and TR001456). All other authors report no relevant disclosures. Go to Neurology.org/N for full disclosures.

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References

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