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July 25, 2006; 67 (2) Clinical/Scientific Notes

Disappearance of writing tremor after striatal infarction

Dae-Hyun Kim, Jei Kim, Jae-Moon Kim, Ae Young Lee
First published July 24, 2006, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/01.wnl.0000225073.48743.9e
Dae-Hyun Kim
MD
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Jei Kim
MD, PhD
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Jae-Moon Kim
MD, PhD
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Ae Young Lee
MD, PhD
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Citation
Disappearance of writing tremor after striatal infarction
Dae-Hyun Kim, Jei Kim, Jae-Moon Kim, Ae Young Lee
Neurology Jul 2006, 67 (2) 362-363; DOI: 10.1212/01.wnl.0000225073.48743.9e

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Primary writing tremor (PWT) is a task-specific tremor caused by writing or similar motor activities. It has been characterized as a type of focal dystonia related to writer's cramp as well as a form of essential tremor.1 Disappearance of an essential tremor after stroke has been rarely reported.2 However, cessation of a writing tremor following a stroke has not yet been documented. We describe a patient who had complete resolution of PWT after a discrete contralateral striatal infarction. Increased thalamic inhibition, to the over-activated motor cortex, could be the underlying mechanism for cessation of PWT in such cases.

Case report.

A 70-year-old hypertensive right-handed man was admitted to our hospital with mild right hemiparesis. Prior to admission, the patient reported recurrent right hemiparesis over the prior 2 days with a duration of 5 to 30 minutes. At admission the examination revealed an alert man with a mild right hemiparesis (Medical Research Council Score = 5– out of 5) and no other remarkable neurologic …

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  • All Cerebrovascular disease/Stroke
  • Infarction
  • Tremor

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