Stereotypic movement disorder is a motor disorder that develops in childhood, typically before grade school, and involves repetitive, purposeless movement. Examples of stereotypic movements include ...
Functional movement disorders (FMD), previously referred to as “psychogenic” movement disorders, are characterized by abnormal movements, postures or spasms, such as shaking (irregular tremor) or ...
The Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders Center at University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center offers clinical fellowship training in movement disorders. The fellowship can be either 12 months ...
While you may not notice it every day, because movement comes naturally to many, there are people whose lives are disrupted by movement disorders, a diverse group of neurological conditions that make ...
For decades, neurology treated the brain like a black box, nudging it with drugs and hoping symptoms would ease. Now ...
It's a core symptom of Parkinson's disease that can affect your voluntary and automatic or repetitive movements. Your movements get slower, and you may find it harder to do everyday tasks, or tasks ...
Single-cell gene expression patterns in the brain motor and frontal cortex, and evidence from follow-up experiments, reveal many shared cellular and molecular similarities that could be targeted for ...
Stereotypic movement disorder is a motor disorder that develops in childhood, typically before grade school, and involves repetitive, purposeless movement. Examples of stereotypic movements include ...
The Movement Disorders Fellowship Training Program at the Department of Neurology, founded by Dr. Joseph Jankovic in 1977, is an integral part of the Parkinson’s Disease Center and Movement Disorders ...