Rinshō shinkeigaku = Clinical neurology
-
We report a patient who manifested cheiro-oral syndrome following a cortical brain infarction without involvement of postcentral gyrus. A 67-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of sudden paresthesia in his right face and right thumb and index finger. ⋯ His sensory symptom was attributed to the lesion of the Brodmann's area 3a, which is located at the base of the central sulcus. We postulate that the lesions responsible for cortical cheiro-oral syndrome are dispersed more widely than those for thalamic or pontine ones, since the somatotopy of face and hand in the cortex is distributed more extensively than that in the thalamus or pons.
-
A 64-year-old woman with diabetes mellitus was admitted to our hospital with left hemiparesis of sudden onset. A brain MRI demonstrated a cerebral infarction in the ventral part of the right lower pons. When left hemiparesis worsened, she had dislocation of the temporo-mandibular joints repeatedly. ⋯ Thus, it is possible that deviation of the lower jaw was the cause of this dislocation. We suspect that dislocation of the temporo-mandibular joints may occur as a complication of unilateral trigeminal motor paralysis. This has not been reported to our knowledge.
-
Case Reports
[A case of supranuclear hypoglossal nerve palsy with Avellis' syndrome due to a medullary infarction].
We reported a 72-year-old man with left supranuclear hypoglossal nerve palsy and right Avellis' syndrome due to a medullary small infarction. On admission, he showed slight disturbance of consciousness, ocular lateropulsion to the right side, rotatory nystagmus, dysarthria, absent right gag reflex, curtain sign, absent right palatal reflex, deviation of the uvula toward the left side, raise of only the left palate when the patient attempted to utter, paralysis of the right vocal cord and deviation of the tongue toward the left side. ⋯ MRI showed a small lesion in the medulla, so lateral area of the medulla and a part of the reticular formation medial to the nucleus ambiguous presumed to be involved. These findings suggest that supranuclear pathway to the hypoglossal nucleus of the opposite side exists in the reticular formation near nucleus ambiguous.
-
Bilateral vocal cord abductor paralysis (VCAP) is frequently associated with multiple system atrophy (MSA) and the early clinical manifestation of VCAP is nocturnal inspiratory stridor simulating heavy snoring observed in patients with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome. We examined six MSA patients with nocturnal stridor and four disease controls including sleep apnea syndrome. Vocal cord movements were analyzed by laryngofiberscopy during both wakefulness and sleep induced by intravenous administration of diazepam. ⋯ Second, in the MSA patients, while awake-laryngofiberscopy showed abduction restriction suggestive of VCAP in only one of the six patients, sleep-laryngofiberscopy showed obvious paradoxical movement of the vocal cord in all the rests, where the vocal cords abducted in expiration and adducted in inspiration. In addition, there were two patterns in the inspiratory vocal cord position during sleep: one pattern where vocal glottis was still opening at the posterior one-third area and the other pattern where vocal glottis was almost completely closed through total length of the cords. Tracheostomy should be considered in the latter stage of VCAP.
-
We investigated 100 consecutive patients with trigeminal neuralgia (TN) and 53 patients with hemifacial spasm (HFS) concerning the anatomical relationship between the root entry (exit) zone (REZ) of cranial nerve and the offending artery, using spoiled GRASS MRI (SPGR-MRI) and three dimensional-time of fly-MRA (MRA). In 67 of 100 (67%) patiets with TN, this new radiological method, SPGR-MRI and MRA demonstrated the relationship between the fifth cranial nerve root and offending artery causing neurovascular compression (NVC), and in 46 of 53 (87%) with HFS, demonstrated the similar relationship between seventh and eighth nerve complex and offending artery. Microvascular decompression (MVD) was performed in 10 with HFS, and NVC of the REZ of the facial nerve caused by the offending artery was exactly predicted by SPGR-MRI and MRA in 9 (90%). ⋯ The contact of REZ of cranial nerve with surrounding artery is demonstrated in 31.6% of trigeminal nerves and in 22.5% of facial nerves. These results indicate that the contact of REZ of cranial nerve with surrounding artery is not rare in healthy subjects, though causing TN and HFS in particular patients. In this context, we discussed the difference between the contact which is asymptomatic and the compression which is symptomatic.