Tardive Dyskinesia. Tardive Dystonia . Dyskinesia, Tardive . Dyskinesias, Tardive . Dystonia, Tardive . Dystonias, Tardive . Tardive Dyskinesias . Tardive Dystonias . Drug-related movement disorder characterized by uncontrollable movements in certain muscles. It is associated with a long-term exposure to certain neuroleptic medications (e.g., METOCLOPRAMIDE). . 1.00
Dystonia. Dystonia, Diurnal . Dystonia, Limb . Dystonia, Paroxysmal . Diurnal Dystonia . Dystonia, Muscle . Limb Dystonia . Paroxysmal Dystonia . Muscle Dystonia . An attitude or posture due to the co-contraction of agonists and antagonist muscles in one region of the body. It most often affects the large axial muscles of the trunk and limb girdles. Conditions which feature persistent or recurrent episodes of dystonia as a primary manifestation of disease are referred to as DYSTONIC DISORDERS. (Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, p77) . 0.69
Dystonin. 230 kDa Bullous Pemphigoid Antigen . 230-240 kDa Bullous Pemphigoid Antigen . Bullous Pemphigoid Antigen 1 . Hemidesmosomal Plaque Protein . 230 240 kDa Bullous Pemphigoid Antigen . A plakin characterized by repeat sequences homologous to SPECTRIN and PLECTIN and C-terminal EF HAND MOTIFS. It functions as an integrator of INTERMEDIATE FILAMENTS, ACTIN and MICROTUBULES in cytoskeleton networks. It is required for anchoring intermediate filaments to the actin cytoskeleton in neural and muscle cells as well as anchoring KERATIN-containing intermediate filaments to HEMIDESMOSOMES in EPITHELIAL CELLS. . 0.62