Internal Medicine
Online ISSN : 1349-7235
Print ISSN : 0918-2918
ISSN-L : 0918-2918
Slowly Progressive Dystonia Following Central Pontine and Extrapontine Myelinolysis
Yukie YOSHIDAJun AKANUMASanae TOCHIKUBOAkihiko HOSHIYutaka MATSUURAMari HOMMATeiji YAMAMOTO
Author information
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2000 Volume 39 Issue 11 Pages 956-960

Details
Abstract

A 28-year-old woman was hospitalized with dysarthria and oro-mandibular and upper limb dystonia. Approximately 8 years prior to the current admission, the woman became severely hyponatremic due to traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage-related SIADH. Brain MRIs showed a signal increase in the central pons, thalamus and striatum on T2 weighted images compatible with central pontine and extrapontine myelinolysis. From a few months after that event, dystonia progressed slowly over the subsequent 8 years. We speculate that the particular damage chiefly to the myelin structures by myelinolytic process may have caused an extremely slow plastic reorganization of the neural structures, giving rise to progressive dystonia.
(Internal Medicine 39: 956-960, 2000)

Content from these authors
© The Japanese Society of Internal Medicine
Previous article Next article
feedback
Top