| Literature DB >> 24757582 |
Corina Christie1, Sergio Alejandro Rodríguez-Quiroga1, Tomoko Arakaki1, Roberto Daniel Rey1, Nélida Susana Garretto1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hemimasticatory spasm is a very rare movement disorder characterized by unilateral, involuntary, paroxysmal contractions of the jaw-closing muscles, causing clinically brief twitches and/or spasms. CASE REPORT: A 62-year-old female consulted us with a 30-year history of unusual involuntary twitches in the preauricular region and spasms that hampered jaw opening. During these spasms, she could not open her mouth. On physical examination, we also observed hypertrophy of the masseter and temporalis muscles, which can be features of hemimasticatory spasm. She was treated with botulinum toxin type A, with excellent response. Here, we present her case and review the literature. DISCUSSION: Hemimasticatory spasm is a rare movement disorder. Given the excellent response to botulinum toxin type A treatment, it should be considered within the spectrum of facial spasms.Entities:
Keywords: Hemimasticatory spasm; botulinum toxin; jaw-closing spasm
Year: 2014 PMID: 24757582 PMCID: PMC3983676 DOI: 10.7916/D8QF8QWD
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tremor Other Hyperkinet Mov (N Y) ISSN: 2160-8288
Summary of Reported Cases of Hemimasticatory Spam in the Literature
| Authors | Age at Onset | Sex | Involved Muscles | Mechanism or Special Clinical Features | Response to Botulinum Toxin | Surgical Treatment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kaufman, 1980 | 25 | F | Left masseter | — | NA | — |
| 2 | Lapresle 1982 | 15 | F | Right masseter | Linear scleroderma with right FHA | NA | — |
| 3 | Thompson and Carroll 1983 | 57 | F | Left masseter and temporalis | Idiopathic | NA | Cryosurgical lesion |
| 4 | Thompson, et al. 1986 | 31 | F | Right masseter | Morphea with right FHA | NA | Myotomy |
| 5 | Parisi, et al. 1987 | 38 | F | Right masseter | Linear scleroderma with right FHA | NA | — |
| 6 | Yoshii and Alba 1989 | 44 | M | Left masseter and both (medial and lateral) pterygoids | Idiopathic | NA | — |
| 7 | Auger, et al. 1992 | 20 | F | Right masseter and temporalis | Idiopathic | Yes | Transient response to trigeminal rootlets section |
| 8 | 17 | F | Right medial pterygoid | Idiopathic | NA | — | |
| 9 | 20 | F | Right masseter and temporalis | Idiopathic | NA | — | |
| 10 | Cruccu, et al. 1994 | 18 | M | Left temporalis | Left FHA | NA | — |
| 11 | 44 | F | Right masseter and temporalis | Morphea | Yes | — | |
| 12 | Kim, et al. 1994 | 44 | M | Right masseter | FHA | Yes | — |
| 13 | Ebersbach, et al. 1995 | 26 | M | Left masseter and temporalis | Left FHA | Yes | — |
| 14 | 26 | F | Right masseter and temporalis | Local scleroderma with FHA | Yes | — | |
| 15 | Kim, et al. 2000 | 34 | F | Right masseter | Local scleroderma with FHA | Yes | — |
| 16 | Esteban, et al. 2002 | 47 | F | Left masseter | Idiopathic | Yes | — |
| 17 | Teive, et al. 2002 | 44 | F | Right masseter and temporalis | Idiopathic | Yes | — |
| 18 | Wang, et al. 2004 | 38 | F | Left masseter | NA | NA | — |
| 19 | 12 | M | Right masseter and temporalis | Right linear scleroderma | NA | — | |
| 20 | 33 | M | Right temporal | NA | NA | — | |
| 21 | 42 | F | Left masseter and temporalis | NA | NA | — | |
| 22 | Cersosimo, et al. 2003 | 29 | F | Right masseter and temporalis | Severe worsening during pregnancy | Yes | — |
| 23 | Mir, et al. 2006 | 26 | M | Left masseter and temporalis | Idiopathic | Yes | — |
| 24 | Gunduz, et al. 2007 | 62 | F | Right masseter and temporalis | Right pontine and cerebellar hemisphere infarction | Yes | — |
| 25 | Jiménez-Jiménez, et al. 2007 | 40 | M | Right masseter and temporalis | Biopercular infarct with previous Foix–Marie–Chavany syndrome | Yes | — |
| 26 | Kumar, et al. 2008 | 49 | F | Left masseter, temporalis and lateral pterygoid | Left morphea | Yes | — |
| 27 | Yaltho and Jankovic 2011 | 63 | F | Left masseter | Idiopathic | Yes | — |
| 28 | Gopalakrishnan, et al. 2011 | 56 | F | Left masseter and temporalis | Cerebellopontine angle hematoma | Spontaneous remission | — |
| 29 | Sinha, et al. 2011 | 38 | M | Right masseter and temporalis | Idiopathic | — | Debulking and stripping masseter muscle |
| 30 | Chon, et al. 2012 | 40 | M | Right masseter and temporalis | Idiopathic | Yes | MVD |
| 31 | Wang, et al. 2013 | 50 | F | Left masseter | NA | NA | MVD |
| 32 | 42 | F | Right masseter and temporalis | NA | NA | MVD | |
| 33 | 38 | M | Right masseter | NA | NA | MVD | |
| 34 | 48 | F | Right masseter | NA | NA | MVD | |
| 35 | 57 | F | Left masseter and temporalis | NA | NA | MVD | |
| 36 | 53 | F | Right masseter and temporalis | NA | NA | MVD | |
| 37 | This case Christie, et al. 2014 | 32 | F | Right masseter | Idiopathic | Yes | — |
FHA, Facial Hemiatrophy; F, Female; M, Male; MVD, Microvascular Decompression; NA, Not Available.
Video 1.Hemimasticatory Spasm in a 62-year-old Female.
The patient presents involuntary contraction of the right temporal and masseter muscles.
Figure 1Electromyographic recording.
Simultaneous electromyography recording (concentric needle electrodes) from right masseter and temporalis muscles shows continuous bursts of activity during the prolonged spasms.