Dystonia is the third leading movement disorder arising mainly from the damage of basal ganglia or other parts of the brain that control movements. The objective of this review is to represent the detailed profile of dystonia. A computerized literature review was conducted in authentic scientific databases including PubMed, Google Scholar, Scopus, Science Direct and National Institutes of Health (NIH) etc. Terms searched included dystonia, risk factors, etiologies, clinical features, classification, pathology, guidelines, treatment strategies, primary and secondary dystonia. Initially, 97 articles and 9 books were extracted but finally, 64 articles and 7 books were used. After analysis, we found that causes of dystonia could be acquired or ...
Background: Acquired dystonia is caused by an acquired or exogenous event. Although the therapeutic ...
A broad range of rare inherited metabolic disorders can present with dystonia. For clinicians, it is...
Dystonia is defined as a syndrome of sustained muscle contractions that frequently cause twisting an...
Dystonia is a hyperkinetic movement disorder, characterized by sustained or intermittent muscle cont...
Dystonia is a hyperkinetic movement disorder, characterized by sustained or intermittent muscle cont...
Clinical practice in dystonia has greatly evolved in recent years; a synthetic review on patient man...
Dystonia is by far the most intrusive and invalidating extrapyramidal side effect of potent classica...
Dystonia is by far the most intrusive and invalidating extrapyramidal side effect of potent classica...
Dystonia is by far the most intrusive and invalidating extrapyramidal side effect of potent classica...
Phd ThesisDystonia is a little known neurological disease of the central nervous system and consist...
Background: Acquired dystonia is caused by an acquired or exogenous event. Although the therapeutic ...
Background: Acquired dystonia is caused by an acquired or exogenous event. Although the therapeutic ...
Background: Acquired dystonia is caused by an acquired or exogenous event. Although the therapeutic ...
Tardive dystonia due to D2 antagonists or other agents is a potentially severe extrapyramidal side e...
Background: Acquired dystonia is caused by an acquired or exogenous event. Although the therapeutic ...
Background: Acquired dystonia is caused by an acquired or exogenous event. Although the therapeutic ...
A broad range of rare inherited metabolic disorders can present with dystonia. For clinicians, it is...
Dystonia is defined as a syndrome of sustained muscle contractions that frequently cause twisting an...
Dystonia is a hyperkinetic movement disorder, characterized by sustained or intermittent muscle cont...
Dystonia is a hyperkinetic movement disorder, characterized by sustained or intermittent muscle cont...
Clinical practice in dystonia has greatly evolved in recent years; a synthetic review on patient man...
Dystonia is by far the most intrusive and invalidating extrapyramidal side effect of potent classica...
Dystonia is by far the most intrusive and invalidating extrapyramidal side effect of potent classica...
Dystonia is by far the most intrusive and invalidating extrapyramidal side effect of potent classica...
Phd ThesisDystonia is a little known neurological disease of the central nervous system and consist...
Background: Acquired dystonia is caused by an acquired or exogenous event. Although the therapeutic ...
Background: Acquired dystonia is caused by an acquired or exogenous event. Although the therapeutic ...
Background: Acquired dystonia is caused by an acquired or exogenous event. Although the therapeutic ...
Tardive dystonia due to D2 antagonists or other agents is a potentially severe extrapyramidal side e...
Background: Acquired dystonia is caused by an acquired or exogenous event. Although the therapeutic ...
Background: Acquired dystonia is caused by an acquired or exogenous event. Although the therapeutic ...
A broad range of rare inherited metabolic disorders can present with dystonia. For clinicians, it is...
Dystonia is defined as a syndrome of sustained muscle contractions that frequently cause twisting an...