| Literature DB >> 23033125 |
Alfonso Fasano1, Anabela Valadas, Kailash P Bhatia, L K Prashanth, Anthony E Lang, Renato P Munhoz, Francesca Morgante, Daniel Tarsy, Andrew P Duker, Paolo Girlanda, Anna Rita Bentivoglio, Alberto J Espay.
Abstract
The facial phenotype of psychogenic movement disorders has not been fully characterized. Seven tertiary-referral movement disorders centers using a standardized data collection on a computerized database performed a retrospective chart review of psychogenic movement disorders involving the face. Patients with organic forms of facial dystonia or any medical or neurological disorder known to affect facial muscles were excluded. Sixty-one patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria for psychogenic facial movement disorders (91.8% females; age: 37.0 ± 11.3 years). Phasic or tonic muscular spasms resembling dystonia were documented in all patients most commonly involving the lips (60.7%), followed by eyelids (50.8%), perinasal region (16.4%), and forehead (9.8%). The most common pattern consisted of tonic, sustained, lateral, and/or downward protrusion of one side of the lower lip with ipsilateral jaw deviation (84.3%). Ipsi- or contralateral blepharospasm and excessive platysma contraction occurred in isolation or combined with fixed lip dystonia (60.7%). Spasms were reported as painful in 24.6% of cases. Symptom onset was abrupt in most cases (80.3%), with at least 1 precipitating psychological stress or trauma identified in 57.4%. Associated body regions involved included upper limbs (29.5%), neck (16.4%), lower limbs (16.4%), and trunk (4.9%). There were fluctuations in severity and spontaneous exacerbations and remissions (60%). Prevalent comorbidities included depression (38.0%) and tension headache (26.4%). Fixed jaw and/or lip deviation is a characteristic pattern of psychogenic facial movement disorders, occurring in isolation or in combination with other psychogenic movement disorders or other psychogenic features.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23033125 PMCID: PMC3633239 DOI: 10.1002/mds.25190
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mov Disord ISSN: 0885-3185 Impact factor: 10.338
Demographic and clinical features, categories of diagnostic certainty, and instrumental investigations undergone by the patients fulfilling the inclusion criteria for PFMDs
| N | 61 |
|---|---|
| Females (%) | 56 (91.8%) |
| Educational level (y) | 11.3 ± 3.7 (7–17) |
| Marital status | |
| Married | 38 (62.3%) |
| Single | 15 (24.6%) |
| Divorced | 6 (9.8%) |
| Unmarried partner | 1 (1.6%) |
| Widowed | 1 (1.6%) |
| Disease duration (y) | 6.7 ± 6.9 (0–30) |
| Age (y) | 43.7 ± 11.5 (19–66) |
| Follow-up duration (mo) | 40.8 ± 46.6 (0–228) |
| Number of visits | 4.0 ± 4.1 (1–29) |
| Family history of neurological disorders | 2 (3.3%) |
| Exposure to neuroleptics | 1 (1.6%) |
| Treatment with antidepressant prior to PFMD onset | 14 (22.9%) |
| Treatment with benzodiazepines prior to PFMD onset | 6 (9.8%) |
| Precipitating events | |
| Psychological stress | 22 |
| Physical trauma | 9 |
| Peripheral facial injury | 8 |
| Pain | 3 |
| Another disease | 5 |
| Site of symptom onset | |
| Face (n = 56) | |
| Lips: | 37 (60.7%) |
| Eyelids | 23 (37.7%; concurrently with lips in 7) |
| Forehead | 2 (concurrently with lips in 1) |
| Platysma muscle | 2 |
| Outside face (n = 5) | 3 |
| Cervical muscles | |
| Abdominal muscles | 1 |
| Foot | 1 |
| Onset | |
| Abrupt | 49 (80.3%) |
| Subacute | 10 (16.4%) |
| Gradual | 2 (3.3%) |
| Diagnostic certainty (Fahn and Williams criteria | |
| Documented | 13 (21.3%) |
| Clinically established | 43 (70.5%) |
| Probable | 5 (8.2%) |
| Diagnostic certainty (Gupta and Lang criteria | |
| Documented | 13 (21.3%) |
| Clinically established plus other features | 39 (63.9%) |
| Clinically established minus other features | 9 (14.8%) |
| Disclosure of diagnosis of psychogenicity to patient | 41 (67.2%) |
| Neuroimaging | Normal in all but 3 patients (mild cortical atrophic changes or nonspecific white matter abnormalities) |
| MRI angiography (n = 7) | Vascular loop compressing the root of facial nerve in 1 patient |
| VEP (n = 5) | Normal |
| BAEP (n = 5) | Normal |
| SEP (n = 5) | Normal |
| MEP (n = 5) | Normal |
| EEG (n = 9) | Normal |
| EMG (n = 21) | Normal |
| Blink reflex (n = 10) | Normal |
| CSF analysis (n = 10) | Normal |
Values are mean ± SD (range).
One patient with normal neuroimaging had a family history of Fahr's disease and other a daughter with unspecified ataxia.
Taken for few weeks and several years before PFMD onset.
Subacute onset for cases reaching the greatest severity in 1 month.
MRI in all but 3, who underwent computed tomography. PFMD, psychogenic facial movement disorder; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; VEP, visual evoked evoked potentials; BAEP, brainstem auditory evoked potentials; SEP, somatosensory evoked potentials; MEP, motor evoked potentials; EEG, electroencephalogram; EMG, electromyogram; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid.
FIG. 1The clinical presentation of PFMDs. The most common phenotype, isolated lower lip dystonia (A), in a patient with spontaneous remissions and intermittent ipsilateral jaw deviation (see also Video 1); eyelid spasm may be ipsilateral (B) or contralateral to the lip pulling (C) (see also Video 2). Note that the contraction of frontalis muscle involves the eyebrow contralateral to the spasm of the orbicularis oculi (arrows indicates a false “other Babinski sign”); platysma involvement is always associated with ipsilateral lip involvement (D), which can rapidly fluctuate in severity and appearance (E, F, same case); Some patients demonstrated severe bilateral spasms of most facial musculature (G), which may remit after placebo (vibrating tuning fork application, H) and relapse with different phenomenology shortly thereafter (I).
The clinical features of patients with PFMDs with lip involvement
| N | 51 |
|---|---|
| Involvement of | |
| Any other facial muscle | 24 (47.1%) |
| Platysma | 37 (72.5%) |
| Neck, trunk, or limbs | 22 (43.1%) |
| Onset outside face | 5 (9.0%) |
| Facial/head pain | 19 (37.2%) |
| Paroxysmal or action-induced only at onset | 9 (17.6%) |
| Action-induced | 3 (5.9%) |
| Paroxysmal symptoms | 29 (56.9%) |
| Dystonic fixed posture | 14 (27.5%) |
| Dystonic movement | 40 (78.4%) |
| Consistency of laterality | 40 (78.4%) |
| Asymmetry | 43 (84.3%) |
| Side | |
| Right | 16 (31.4%) |
| Left | 20 (39.2%) |
| Both asynchronous | 7 (13.7%) |
| Both synchronous | 8 (15.7%) |
| Direction of lip pulling | |
| Upward | 13 (25.5%) |
| Downward | 32 (62.7%) |
| Both directions | 3 (5.9%) |
| Sideways | 3 (5.9%) |
| Type of speech | |
| Normal | 26/46 (56.5%) |
| Slurred | 11/46 (23.9%) |
| Burst of verbal gibberish | 7/46 (15.2%) |
| Stuttering | 2/46 (4.3%) |
| Geste antagoniste (eg, placing in mouth a cigarette or a pencil) | 3/49 (6.1%) |
| Effect of speech | |
| No effect | 28 (54.9%) |
| Improvement | 8 (15.7%) |
| Worsening | 15 (29.4%) |
| Effect of eating | |
| No effect | 33/41 (80.5%) |
| Improvement | 6/41 (14.6%) |
| Worsening | 2/41 (4.9%) |
| Effect of mouth movements (eg, kissing, whistling) | |
| No effect | 7/20 (35.0%) |
| Improvement | 8/20 (40.0%) |
| Worsening | 5/20 (25.0%) |
| Resolution during sleep | 17/21 (80.9%) |
PFMD, psychogenic facial movement disorder.
Features distinguishing organic versus psychogenic oromandibular and facial dystonia
| Organic | Psychogenic | |
|---|---|---|
| Onset and progression | Gradual, slow progression | Sudden-onset, static course |
| Sensory tricks | May be present | Rarely present |
| Most common distribution | Lips | Jaw, eyelids |
| Most common sidedness | Bilateral | Unilateral |
| Platysma involvement | Very rare, bilateral | Common, ipsilateral |
| Orbicularis oculi and frontalis muscle involvement (if present) | Orbicularis and frontalis, ipsilateral | Orbicularis and frontalis, contralateral |
| Dystonic pattern | Phasic | Tonic |
| Dystonic exacerbation | Action-induced | Paroxysmal, maximum at rest |
| Dystonic spread | Segmental to cervical region | Segmental or multifocal |
| Evolution | Slowly progressive, no spontaneous exacerbations or remissions | Fluctuations in severity, spontaneous exacerbation and remissions |
| Pain | Usually absent | Present (25%) |
If orbicularis present in isolation, it most often occurred contralateral to the affected lip/jaw.
Patients with unilateral movements of lip/jaw previously reported
| Reference (cases) | Age/ sex | Onset/accompanied symptoms/precipitating events | Neurological examination | Natural history/response to treatment | Authors' comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 14/F | Pain and tingling in the left mandible; chewing and talking difficulties | Tonic, sustained deviation of jaw to the left | No spreading; improvement with benzhexol | Focal dystonia of the jaw confirmed by: (A) presence of dystonia in other body parts (cases 2, 3, and 4); (B) continuous EMG activity of lateral pterygoid muscle at rest (case 1); (C) abnormalities in the recovery cycle of the blink reflex (case 3); (D) paroxysmal attacks of dystonia similar to those described in MS (case 5: normal imaging studies); and (E) improvement with anticholinergics | |
| 30/F | Numbness on left side of face; tongue biting during the facial spasms | Torticollis and chin deviation to the left together after two years of forced and painful opening of the mouth | Spreading; partial benefit with benzhexol | ||
| 35/F | Dental extraction; chewing difficulties and tongue biting during the facial spasms | Sustained deviation of jaw to the right associated with intermittent ipsilateral torticollis | Transitory improvement with benzhexol and with amitriptyline thereafter | ||
| 22/F | No precipitating events reported | Intermittent left blepharoclonus and sustained deviation of jaw and lip to the left associated with ipsilateral torticollis and arm dystonia in the outstretched position | No relief with anticholinergics, carbamazepine, clonazepam, tetrabenazine | ||
| 28/F | No precipitating events reported | Right eye closure followed by upward deviation of the right corner of mouth; left eye adduction and spasms of orbicularis oris, mentalis, and left frontalis muscles; flexion and inversion of right foot while walking | |||
| 52/F | Phantom canine teeth and chronic facial pain after resection of hypertrophic gums | Tonic, sustained upward retraction of right corner of the mouth | No spreading; Improvement with doxepin and oxycodone | Peripheral injury induced dystonia | |
| 40/F | Abrupt; associated with head and neck pain | Tonic, sustained, lateral and outward protrusion of the right lower lip | No spreading; No response to treatment; spontaneous improvement over time | Though unusual for primary dystonia (worsening at rest and improvement with labial movements) the stereotyped lip movements could not be entirely explained by a psychogenic cause | |
| 41/F | Abrupt; accompanied by headache and left sided weakness | Tonic, sustained, lateral outward protrusion of the left lower lip | |||
| 25/F | Abrupt; associated with headache and right sided weakness | Spreading to ipsilateral eyelid; spontaneous improvement over time | |||
| 42/F | Abrupt; accompanied with headache and left sided weakness | Lost to follow-up | |||
| 27/F | Abrupt; numbness in right cheek and right half of tongue | Tonic, sustained, lateral and outward protrusion of the right lower lip and right jaw deviation; present during sleep | Improvement with BoNT | Habit spasms superimposed on an abnormal faciotrigeminal motor function after a Bell's palsy | |
| 39/F | Headache and numbness in right side of face | ||||
| 27/F | Acute onset after facial and trigeminal lesion secondary to a spider bite | Tonic, sustained downward deviation of left lower lip | Long-term improvement with a maxillary splint | Alteration of trigeminal input with secondary unbalanced inhibitory-excitatory activities within basal ganglia circuits |
F, female; EMG, electromyogram; MS, multiple sclerosis; BoNT, botulinum neurotoxin.