Objectives: Tremor in Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) can be disabling. Cerebellar abnormalities are thought to underpin neuropathic tremor. Here, we aim to clarify the potential role of the cerebellum in CMT tremor.
Methods: We assessed prevalence of tremor by questionnaire in 84 patients with CMT. Of those, 23 patients with CMT with and without arm tremor and healthy controls underwent a clinical assessment, classical eyeblink conditioning, electro-oculography, visuomotor adaptation test, tremor recording with surface EMG and accelerometry, and retrospective correlation with nerve conduction studies to investigate the possible mechanisms of tremor generation.
Results: The prevalence study revealed tremor in 21% of patients and in 42% of those it caused impairment of function. Tremor recordings revealed a mild-to-moderate amplitude tremor with a weight load-invariant 7.7 Hz frequency component. Performance on classical eyeblink conditioning, visuomotor adaptation and electro-oculography were no different between tremulous and non-tremulous patients and healthy controls.
Conclusions: These results argue against a prominent role for an abnormal cerebellum in tremor generation in the patients studied with CMT. Rather, our results suggest an enhancement of the central neurogenic component of physiological tremor as a possible mechanism for tremor in the patients studied.
Significance: This study is the first to propose differing pathogenic mechanisms for subtypes of neuropathic tremor.
Keywords: CMT; Hereditary; Motor; Neuropathy; Pathophysiology.
Copyright © 2015 International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.