| Literature DB >> 28461905 |
Pichet Termsarasab1, Steven J Frucht1.
Abstract
Dystonic storm is a frightening hyperkinetic movement disorder emergency. Marked, rapid exacerbation of dystonia requires prompt intervention and admission to the intensive care unit. Clinical features of dystonic storm include fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, hypertension, sweating and autonomic instability, often progressing to bulbar dysfunction with dysarthria, dysphagia and respiratory failure. It is critical to recognize early and differentiate dystonic storm from other hyperkinetic movement disorder emergencies. Dystonic storm usually occurs in patients with known dystonia, such as DYT1 dystonia, Wilson's disease and dystonic cerebral palsy. Triggers such as infection or medication adjustment are present in about one-third of all events. Due to the significant morbidity and mortality of this disorder, we propose a management algorithm that divides decision making into two periods: the first 24 h, and the next 2-4 weeks. During the first 24 h, supportive therapy should be initiated, and appropriate patients should be identified early as candidates for pallidal deep brain stimulation or intrathecal baclofen. Management in the next 2-4 weeks aims at symptomatic dystonia control and supportive therapies.Entities:
Keywords: Deep brain stimulation; Dystonia; Dystonic storm; Early recognition; Status dystonicus; Treatment
Year: 2017 PMID: 28461905 PMCID: PMC5410090 DOI: 10.1186/s40734-017-0057-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Mov Disord ISSN: 2054-7072
Differential diagnosis of dystonic storm
| Entity | Age | Trigger | Time course | Movement disorder phenomenology | Other neuro signs | Altered mental status | Autonomic instability |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dystonic storm | P | +/− | Hours-Days | Dystonia +/− chorea | − | − | + |
| Choreic storm | P-YA | +/− | Hours-Days | Chorea | − | − | − |
| Oculogyric crisis | All | +++ | Acute | Dystonia | Oculogyria | − | +/− |
| Neuroleptic malignant syndrome | A | +++ | Days-Weeks | Parkinsonism | − | + | + |
| Serotonin syndrome | All | +++ | Hours-Days | Myoclonus | − | + | + |
| Lethal catatonia | All | +/− | Hours-Days | Parkinsonism | − | + | + |
| Malignant hyperthermia | All | +++ | Acute | − | − | − | − |
| Drug intoxication | All | +++ | Acute | − | Psychosis | + | +/− |
| Intrathecal baclofen withdrawal | P-YA | +++ | Acute-Hours | − | − | + | + |
| Delirium tremens | A | +++ | Acute | Myoclonus | Psychosis | + | + |
| Autoimmune encephalitis (e.g. anti-NMDA) | P-YA | − | Days-Weeks | Chorea | Psychosis | + | + |
This table provides the list of differential diagnosis of dystonic storm. Useful distinguishing features include age group (pediatric, young adult, adult and all), presence or absence of triggering factors (number of “+” sign correlates with stronger relationship; “+/−” represents inconsistent correlation; “−” represents no correlation), time course, movement disorder phenomenology, associated neurological signs, altered mental status and autonomic instability
Abbreviations: P pediatric, YA young adults, A adults, All all age groups
Fig. 1Pathophysiology of movement disorder emergencies (“storms”) including dystonic storm. This figure demonstrates proposed the pathophysiology of several movement disorder emergencies including dystonic storm (green), serotonin syndrome (increased serotonin leading to brainstem-mediated process; turquoise), malignant hyperthermia (purple) from peripheral muscle disorders such as secondary to ryanodine receptor (RYR1) mutations, neuroleptic malignant syndrome (from dopaminergic blockade leading to hypothalamic storm; blue), and others which lead to increased spinal-mediated rigidity (such as intrathecal baclofen withdrawal, autoimmune disesase e.g. stiff person syndrome or progressive encephalomyelitis with rigidity and myoclonus, and toxin-mediated disorders e.g. tetanus; yellow). These disorders lead to the final common pathway characterized by increased spinal-mediated muscle tone, fever, rigidity, elevated creatine kinase and leukocytosis. Abbreviations: BBGD, biotin-thiamine-responsive basal ganglia disease; CK, creatine kinase; ITB, intrathecal baclofen; ODS, osmotic demyelinating syndrome; WBC, white blood cells; WD, Wilson’s disease
Fig. 2Typical clinical course of dystonic storm. This figure demonstrates the typical clinical course of dystonic storm. Dystonic storm typically occurs in patients with known underlying dystonia seen on the left. Two-thirds of events are provoked by triggers such as infection or medication changes. Dystonia then worsens slightly from baseline, called the “dystonic storm prodrome”. If not detected or treated properly, dystonia rapidly escalates to “dystonic storm”, which usually lasts days to 2–4 weeks. With appropriate dystonia-specific and supportive therapies, most patients will gradually recover back to baseline (full recovery) or with residual deficits (partial recovery). Relapses are not uncommon
List of scenarios for dystonic storm
| Primary dystonia | |
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| Structural brain injury | |
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| Metabolic disorders affecting subcortical areas | |
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| Progressive heredodegenerative dystonia | |
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| Miscellaneous | |
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This table demonstrates scenarios where dystonic storm emerges from. Of note, the scenarios represent dystonic disorders at baseline, rather than triggering factors (e.g. withdrawal from medications such as baclofen or deep brain stimulation battery failure) which are not included here
Metabolic and genetic disorders that can present with acute dystonia
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This table demonstrates a list of metabolic and genetic disorders that can present with acute dystonia
Fig. 3Thought process in the first 24 h. a demonstrates an algorithm for management in the first 24 h. After excluding other movement disorders emergencies outlined in Table 1, dystonic or mixed dystonic/choreic storms should be distinguished from pure choreic storm. b demonstrates a flow chart of the subsequent thought process in the first 24 h. The goals are to 1) identify triggers such as infection and medication changes, and treat accordingly, and 2) address if the patient is a candidate for GPi DBS or ITB pump. Abbreviations: D2, D2 dopamine receptor; GPi DBS, globus pallidus interna deep brain stimulation; hrs, hours; ITB, intrathecal baclofen; Rx, treatment
Dystonia-specific and supportive therapies: thought process for the next 2–4 weeks
| DYSTONIA SPECIFIC Rxa | SUPPORTIVE Rx |
|---|---|
| Anticholinergics | 1st line: IV midazolam |
| DA receptor blockersb | 2nd line: Propofol |
| TBZ | 3rd line: Non-depolarizing neuromuscular blockers or Barbiturates |
| Clonidine | |
| Baclofen + Assorted drugs |
aCombination is typically required
bShould be avoided when dystonic storm developing from underlying tardive dystonia
This table demonstrates the list of dystonia-specific and supportive therapies. Dystonia-specific medications alone are often ineffective in isolation to control dystonic storm. Combinations of drugs are generally required. Intravenous midazolam is typically employed as a first-line agent, whereas propofol is second-line. In refractory cases, third-line agents include non-depolarizing neuromuscular blocking agents (such as pancuronium) or barbiturates
Abbreviations: DA dopamine, IV intravenous, Rx treatment, TBZ tetrabenazine