The effect of ethanol on alcohol‐responsive essential tremor: a positron emission tomography study

H Boecker, AJ Wills… - Annals of Neurology …, 1996 - Wiley Online Library
H Boecker, AJ Wills, A Ceballos‐Baumann, M Samuel, PD Thompson, LJ Findley, DJ Brooks
Annals of Neurology: Official Journal of the American Neurological …, 1996Wiley Online Library
We used H215O positron emission tomography (PET) to investigate the effect of ethyl
alcohol on regional cerebral blood flow in 6 patients with alcohol‐responsive essential
tremor and 6 age‐matched control subjects. The patients were scanned while at rest and
during involuntary postural tremor of the extended right arm. Normal control subjects were
scanned at rest and during passive wrist oscillation of the right arm at tremor frequency.
Regional cerebral blood flow associated with these conditions was measured before and …
Abstract
We used H215O positron emission tomography (PET) to investigate the effect of ethyl alcohol on regional cerebral blood flow in 6 patients with alcohol‐responsive essential tremor and 6 age‐matched control subjects. The patients were scanned while at rest and during involuntary postural tremor of the extended right arm. Normal control subjects were scanned at rest and during passive wrist oscillation of the right arm at tremor frequency. Regional cerebral blood flow associated with these conditions was measured before and after oral administration of 2 to 3 units of alcohol. The mean blood alcohol level was 35.3 ± 20.0 mg/dl in the patient group and caused marked suppression of tremor; it was 33.9 ± 12.9 mg/dl in the control group. Similar to previous PET studies on essential tremor patients, tremor compared with rest was associated with bilateral cerebellar activation including the cerebellar vermis. This pattern of activation differed from passive wrist oscillation where ipsilateral cerebellar activation was observed. Ethanol ingestion led to bilateral decreases of cerebellar blood flow in both tremor patients and normal subjects, and this was associated with suppression of tremor in the patients. Alcohol‐associated increases of regional cerebral blood flow were observed in the inferior olivary nuclei in the patients but not in the control subjects. We conclude that alcohol‐induced suppression of essential tremor is mediated via a reduction of cerebellar synaptic overactivity resulting in increased afferent input to the inferior olivary nuclei.
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