| Literature DB >> 28235422 |
R Bassani1,2, C Rosazza3, L Ghirardin1, V Caldiera3, E Banco2, C Casati2, L Tesio4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pathologic crying, devoid of any emotional counterpart, is known to occur as a consequence of various brain stem, cortical hemispheric and cerebellar lesions or, quite exceptionally, of "dacrystic" epilepsy. The case reported here suggests that thalamic lesions may also cause crying spells, under the special circumstances described below. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Case report; Cerebrovascular disease; Crying; Stroke; Thalamus
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28235422 PMCID: PMC5326498 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-017-2425-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Fig. 1Video-encehalography before (a) and during (b) thumb-index rubbing of the right hand, causing a crying spell. As soon as the patient starts crying (left arrow pointing to the electroencephalographic tracing) the ventilation pattern shows a gradual increment both in frequency and amplitude (right arrow pointing to the respiratory tracing)
Motor-sensory tasks aimed at investigating the modality of triggering crying spells under finger scrubbing
| Main tasks | Blocks | Task alternative modes | Crying-triggering tasks/modes | On-line video |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Light thumb-index rubbing | Eyes open | Left hand; right hand; both | Right hand; both | * |
| Eyes closed | Left hand; right hand; both | Right hand; both | ||
| Eyes closed, imagined movement | Left hand; right hand | Right hand | * | |
| Eyes open. The “rubbing” hand is covered and replaced by another one’s hand rubbing | Left hand; right hand | Right hand | ||
| Index and thumb flex but do not touch each other (finger tapping) | Left hand; right hand; both | None | * | |
| Arms straight and crossed, eyes open | Left hand; right hand; both | Right hand | ||
| Hand immersion in water, 24 °C | No motion; right hand | None | ||
| Hand fingertips stained with grease | Right hand | Right hand | ||
| Passive stimulation | Passive rubbing of index fingertip (toothbrush) | Right hand; right hallux | No | |
| Warming of hand fingertips (hair dryer) | Right hand | No | ||
| Cognition/speech (narration; reading aloud; month sequencing; counting backwards) | Hands still; right hand “counting money” | Right hand |
* Indicate the tests presented in the Additional file 2
Fig. 2T1 (upper row of panels) AND T2-weighted (lower left panel) magnetic resonance images evidencing a lacunar infarct in the ventral posterolateral portion of the left thalamus. The lesion is millimetric (6 mm longest diameter, 83 mm3 volume) and it appears characteristically hypointense in the T1-weighted sequence, and hyperintense in the T2-weighted sequence and in Flair (not shown). Diffusion-weighted MR image and apparent diffusion coefficient map (not shown) do not evidence any associated restriction of water molecules diffusivity, thus confirming that the lesion is a chronic lacunar stroke. In addition, the magnetic resonance imaging shows the presence of multiple gliotic subcortical and periventricular areas suggestive of a chronic microvascular ischemic disease, a common finding in elderly people. In the lower right corner the figure shows functional magnetic resonance images of a sensory-motor task consisting of rubbing the fingers of the affected (right) hand. The movement elicited a typical pattern of activation of both the controlateral motor and sensory hand area and the ipsilateral hand area (P < 0.001, uncorrected). Images are all shown in radiological convention (right is left)