Ipsilateral blepharospasm and contralateral hemidystonia and parkinsonism in a patient with a unilateral rostral brainstem-thalamic lesion: structural and functional abnormalities studied with CT, MRI, and PET scanning
- PMID: 2973558
- DOI: 10.1002/mds.870010107
Ipsilateral blepharospasm and contralateral hemidystonia and parkinsonism in a patient with a unilateral rostral brainstem-thalamic lesion: structural and functional abnormalities studied with CT, MRI, and PET scanning
Abstract
A patient developed progressive right hemidystonia in childhood. Subsequently, left-sided blepharospasm, slurred and stuttering speech, and right-sided rigidity and bradykinesia, responsive to dopamine agonists, appeared. Investigation with computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at age 43 years revealed a left-sided calcified rostral brainstem-thalamic lesion of uncertain aetiology. Although no structural lesion was seen in the striatal regions, L-[18F]-fluorodopa uptake was severely diminished in the left striatum but normal on the right. Dopamine receptor binding identified by [11C]-methylspiperone was in the normal range on both sides.
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