Author:
King Robert B.,Fuller Christine,Collins George H.
Abstract
✓ The authors report the case of a young man who suffered multiple injuries in a motor vehicle accident, the most significant of which arose in the brain, creating an unusual clinical syndrome. After experiencing an initial coma for several days, the patient was found to have a right-sided homonymous hemianopsia and a right hemiparesis, which was more marked at the shoulder and was accompanied by preservation of finger movement. Dystonic movements appeared 2 months later and progressed, along with increased spasticity on volition, to severe uncontrolled arm movements at 2 years postinjury. This motor disorder continued to worsen during the following 6 years prior to the patient's death. At autopsy, the left side of the brain was observed to have marked atrophy of the optic tract, a partial lesion of the posterior portion of the medial segment of the globus pallidus (GP), and a reduction in the size of the internal capsule at the level of the GP, suggesting impaired circulation to these areas at the time of injury. The isolated lesion of the internal segment of the GP was the presumed cause of the dystonia, acting through an alteration in thalamic inhibition. The atrophic subthalamic nucleus was the probable cause of the hemiballismus. The authors speculate that this and other delayed and progressive features of this case were the result of an active, but disordered, adaptive process that failed to compensate and, instead, caused even greater problems than the original injury.
Publisher
Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)
Cited by
19 articles.
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1. Posttraumatic Tremor and Other Posttraumatic Movement Disorders;Contemporary Clinical Neuroscience;2023
2. Disorders of Movement due to Acquired and Traumatic Brain Injury;Current Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Reports;2022-09-22
3. Functional Neurosurgery for Sequelae of Traumatic Brain Injury;Controversies in Severe Traumatic Brain Injury Management;2018
4. Extrapyramidal Syndromes After Traumatic Brain Injury;Topics in Cognitive Rehabilitation in the TBI Post-Hospital Phase;2018
5. Posttraumatic dystonia;Journal of the Neurological Sciences;2017-08