Focal limb dystonia in a patient with a cerebellar mass.
BACKGROUND: Focal dystonia of acute onset is indicative of a structural lesion in the nervous system. Cerebellar lesions have rarely been associated with dystonia. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 42-year-old woman was admitted to the neurology ward because of fever, confusion, and gait unsteadiness. She was diagnosed as having tuberculous meningitis, and, after a few days of antituberculous treatment, she developed prominent dystonia of the left upper limb. Cranial nuclear magnetic resonance imaging showed an isolated lesion compatible with a tuberculoma in the left cerebellar hemisphere. Both the limb dystonia and the tuberculoma resolved with maintained antituberculous treatment. CONCLUSIONS: In the patient described, the presence of upper-limb dystonia ipsilateral to a focal cerebellar lesion and the resolution of the dystonia and the mass lesion following treatment suggest that the cerebellum or its connections to the thalamus and/or basal ganglia could be involved in the pathophysiology of the dystonia.[1]References
- Focal limb dystonia in a patient with a cerebellar mass. Alarcón, F., Tolosa, E., Muñoz, E. Arch. Neurol. (2001) [Pubmed]
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