| Literature DB >> 31413898 |
Ana L Sousa1, Paula Salgado1, José E Alves2, Sara Silva3, Sofia Ferreira4, Marina Magalhães1.
Abstract
Background: Chronic hepatic disease can present with extrapyramidal symptoms. We describe two cases that presented with highly unusual movement disorders: ballism and gait freezing. Case report: Patient 1 is a 42-year-old man with previous episodes of hepatic encephalopathy (HE) who presented with upper limb dystonia and generalized chorea that progressed to ballism. Patient 2 is a 55-year-old woman who presented with pronounced gait freezing. In both patients, features of HE and acquired hepatocerebral degeneration coexisted. They improved markedly, though transiently, with rifaximin. Discussion: Ammonia-reducing treatments should be considered in patients presenting with movement disorders due to chronic liver disease.Entities:
Keywords: Hepatic disease; ballism; freezing; rifaximin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31413898 PMCID: PMC6691909 DOI: 10.7916/tohm.v0.649
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tremor Other Hyperkinet Mov (N Y) ISSN: 2160-8288
Video 1(case 1). Neurological examination of patient 1. Segment 1: Patient at age 42 showing slight dysarthria, generalized chorea (worse on the left) with oromandibular involvement, bilateral hand dystonia and ataxic gait. Segment 2: worsening of involuntary movements, with bilateral ballistic movements of limbs. Segment 3: after rifaximin treatment, chorea and ballism disappeared. A mild hand dystonia and a slightly ataxic gait is evident. Segment 4: clinical worsening with mental slowness, hypomimia, positive upper limb myoclonus with axial and appendicular hypotonia, without chorea. This segment is part of a fluctuating disease course, despite treatment.
Figure 1Brain MRI. Case 1: Axial T1-weighted images showing hyperintensities in GP(A) and mesencephalon(B); Axial T2-weighted image showing mild bilateral hyperintensities in striatum and global CSF space enlargement(C). Case 2: Axial T1-weighted images revealing symmetric hyperintensities in the GP(D) and substantia nigra(E); Axial T2-FLAIR image showing slight increase in the striatum signal(E).
Video 2(case 2). Neurological examination of patient 2. Segment 1: Patient at age 53 presenting abnormal gait with start and turn hesitation. Segment 2: gait improvement after rifaximin treatment, with remaining mild hesitation when turning. Segment 3: Severe gait disorder with marked freezing and magnetism in forward gait, which improves when walking backwards or side to side.
Clinical and Imaging Findings Suggestive of HE or AHD in Each Patient
| Patient 1 | Patient 2 | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Suggest hepatic encephalopathy | Fluctuating course | + | + |
| Transient consciousness and attention impairment | + | + | |
| Hyperammonemia | + | + | |
| T2 hyperintensities of basal ganglia | + | + | |
| Improvement with rifaximin | + | + | |
| Suggest AHD | Persistent gait alteration | + (ataxia) | + |
| Dystonia | + | − | |
| Orobucolingual dyskinesia | + | − | |
| Chorea | + | − | |
| Cerebellar dysarthria and ataxia | + | − | |
| Hypermanganesemia | − | NA | |
| T1 hyperintensity of globus pallidus | + | + |
HE: hepatic encephalopathy; AHD: acquired hepatocerebraldegeneration; NA: non applicable; “+”: present; “−”: absent.