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KMID : 1197720230160030231
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2023 Volume.16 No. 3 p.231 ~ p.247
Nine Hereditary Movement Disorders First Described in Asia: Their History and Evolution
Priya Jagota

Yoshikazu Ugawa
Zakiyah Aldaajani
Norlinah Mohamed Ibrahim
Hiroyuki Ishiura
Yoshiko Nomura
Shoji Tsuji
Cid Diesta
Nobutaka Hattori
Osamu Onodera
Saeed Bohlega
Shine Htet Aung
Shen-Yang Lim
Lee Jee-Young
Jeon Beom-Seok
Pramod Kumar Pal
Huifang Shang
Shinsuke Fujioka
Prashanth Lingappa Kukkle
Onanong Phokaewvarangkul
Chin-Hsien Lin
Cholpon Shambetova
Roongroj Bhidayasiri
Abstract
Clinical case studies and reporting are important to the discovery of new disorders and the advancement of medical sciences. Both clinicians and basic scientists play equally important roles leading to treatment discoveries for both cures and symptoms. In the field of movement disorders, exceptional observation of patients from clinicians is imperative, not just for phenomenology but also for the variable occurrences of these disorders, along with other signs and symptoms, throughout the day and the disease course. The Movement Disorders in Asia Task Force (TF) was formed to help enhance and promote collaboration and research on movement disorders within the region. As a start, the TF has reviewed the original studies of the movement disorders that were preliminarily described in the region. These include nine disorders that were first described in Asia: Segawa disease, PARK-Parkin, X-linked dystonia-parkinsonism, dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy, Woodhouse-Sakati syndrome, benign adult familial myoclonic epilepsy, Kufor-Rakeb disease, tremulous dystonia associated with mutation of the calmodulin-binding transcription activator 2 gene, and paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia. We hope that the information provided will honor the original researchers and help us learn and understand how earlier neurologists and basic scientists together discovered new disorders and made advances in the field, which impact us all to this day.
KEYWORD
Asia, Gene, Genetics, Hereditary, History, Movement disorders
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