## Abstract We performed a therapeutic trial with the glycine precursor, milacemide, on 10 patients with intractable movement disorders. Six had myoclonus of various etiologies and one each had progressive supranuclear palsy, Filipino Xβlinked dystonia with parkinsonism, painful legs and moving toe
Therapeutic trial with glycine in myoclonus
β Scribed by Dr. Daniel Dung Truong; Stanley Fahn
- Book ID
- 102947142
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1988
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 610 KB
- Volume
- 3
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-3185
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
We investigated the therapeutic effects of glycine in seven patients with various forms of myoclonus. The initial phase was an open label trial. If benefit was seen in any patient, a double-blind substitution of placebo was carried out to determine if the benefit was due, in fact, to glycine. The dosage of glycine was initiated at 600 mg/day and was increased gradually until a maximum dosage of 6,000 mg/day was reached. This dosage was maintained for at least 6 weeks before lack of efficacy was declared. No improvement was seen in four patients. One patient reported improvement, but he discontinued the drug because of adverse effects encountered with the use of a concomitant medication and before he could be tested in a double-blind crossover phase. Two other patients also noticed improvement, but these improvements were not validated in the crossover phase. There were no adverse effects associated with glycine. Plasma glycine levels peaked at 30 min and returned to normal 1.5-h after 1 g of glycine.p.o. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) glycine levels did not change during treatment, suggesting inadequate penetration into the central nervous system of glycine at the dosage used.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The DDT syndrome in rats consists of tremor. myoclonus, running seizures, hyperthermia, episodic boxing, and excessive grooming. DDT did not change whole-brain glycine levels when the rats had stimulus-sensitive myoclonus, spontaneous myoclonus, or seizures. However, regional analysis showed a decre
We investigated the therapeutic effects of milacemide in seven patients with myoclonus and three patients with the stiff-person syndrome in an open-label trial. Milacemide was initiated at 800 mg/day and was gradually increased to a maximum dosage of 2,400 mg/day. No significant improvement occurred