Hemiparkinsonism as a late complication of hemiatrophy: a new syndrome
- PMID: 7194980
- DOI: 10.1212/wnl.31.5.625
Hemiparkinsonism as a late complication of hemiatrophy: a new syndrome
Abstract
Four men with evidence of hemiatrophy resulting from early-life hemispheral injury developed unilateral hemiparkinsonism on the side of the hemiatrophy. The parkinsonism began in the fourth decade and has remained unilateral for 5 to 35 years. In all four patients, the parkinsonism was slowly progressive, but the clinical response to levodopa was minimal, suggesting that the parkinsonism might have a postsynaptic striatal component. The clinical similarities of these four patients suggest that this is a distinct syndrome in which hemiparkinsonism is a late sequela of hemiatrophy. Identification of this syndrome has prognostic significance, because it seems to have a stereotyped course, remaining unilateral and only slowly progressive.
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