| Literature DB >> 33354397 |
Elena Antelmi1, Enrico Conti1, Myriam Carecchio2, Michele Tinazzi1.
Abstract
Background: Cervical dystonia (CD) often occurs in the same family. Case report: A 40-year-old woman presented with a longstanding history of CD and signs of inconsistency at history taking and neurological examination; her 65-year-old mother was diagnosed instead with idiopathic CD, which had begun 7 years after the onset of CD in her daughter. Discussion: Idiopathic and functional CD share common clinical and endophenotypic traits, making the differential diagnosis particularly challenging. A complete examination is warranted. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: cervical dystonia; endophenotypic trait; familial dystonia; functional movement disorder
Year: 2020 PMID: 33354397 PMCID: PMC7731715 DOI: 10.5334/tohm.558
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tremor Other Hyperkinet Mov (N Y) ISSN: 2160-8288
Video 1The daughter. Segment 1 shows the 40-year-old daughter with her neck turned to the right and very mild posturing of the hands (mainly the right hand) while keeping her arms outstretched. The neck turning fluctuated in severity, worsening with attention and movement and while walking. The posture disappeared with distraction maneuvers and at times faded completely during the examination and/or when attention was distracted. Segment 2 at 2-months follow-up assessment and Segment 3 at 4-months follow-up assessment show the disappearance of symptoms and signs; although mild hypertrophy of the left SCM and slight right shoulder elevation can still be seen.
Video 2The mother. Segment 1 shows the patient’s 65-year-old mother, with her head turned to the right. The sensory trick improved the neck turning. CD did not change with distractive maneuvers. Mild dystonic posturing of the arms (mainly the hands and fingers) can observed while she keeps her arms outstretched. Neck turning while walking was also evident.