Paroxysmal movement disorders include two groups of intermittent neurologic disorders: paroxysmal dyskinesia, in which episodes of involuntary hyperkinetic movements (mainly chorea and/or dystonia) occur with preserved consciousness, and episodic ataxias, which are characterized by discrete attacks of cerebellar dysfunction, sometimes associated with progressive ataxia. Since episodic ataxias are individually discussed in Chapter 8 of this volume, we herein provide a deep overview of phenotypic, genetic, pathophysiologic, diagnostic, and treatment aspects of paroxysmal dyskinesia, following the trigger-based nomenclature which distinguishes paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia, paroxysmal nonkinesigenic dyskinesia, and paroxysmal exercise-induced dyskinesia. Emerging paroxysmal dyskinesia not fulfilling the criteria for the above-mentioned subtypes will also be discussed. Phenotypic and genotypic overlap among paroxysmal movement disorders, epilepsy, and migraine have progressively emerged, thus shedding light on a shared pathophysiologic framework. Advances in our understanding of the pathomechanisms underlying paroxysmal movement disorders, which involve dysfunctions of ion channels, proteins associated with the vesical synaptic cycle machinery, and proteins involved in neuronal energy metabolism, point toward a discrete number of converging pathophysiologic pathways and may lay foundations for developing target-specific therapies.
Keywords: Channelopathy; Chorea; Dystonia; Exercise-induced; Kinesigenic; Nonkinesigenic; Paroxysmal dyskinesia; Synaptopathy; Transportopathy; Trigger.
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