Haemiballism/haemichorea: an atypical presentation of ischaemic stroke.
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2021-06
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A 76-year-old man was admitted to the hospital with acute onset of involuntary movements of the left side of his body. His neurological examination revealed he was oriented only to himself, and aforementioned movements of his left arm and leg. CT head demonstrated old infarcts in his right aspect of his pons and basal ganglia. Cerebrospinal fluid analysis was unremarkable. He initially had a normal blood glucose with an elevated anion gap and elevated creatine kinase. Brain MRI showed a small lacunar-type ischaemic infarct within the anteromedial aspect of the right cerebral peduncle, which localised to his haemiballism. To prevent worsening rhabdomyolysis associated with his haemiballism, the primary team initiated both tetrabenazine and diazepam. His movements improved after 1 week of medication therapy. This report discusses a thorough workup for this movement disorder and when to intervene for this distressing condition.
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Nohria, Raman, Stacey Bennett and Yasmin Ali O'Keefe (2021). Haemiballism/haemichorea: an atypical presentation of ischaemic stroke. BMJ case reports, 14(6). p. e240439. 10.1136/bcr-2020-240439 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/30002.
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Raman Nohria
Raman Nohria, MD received his MD from the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University. He completed his residency training with the Lawrence Family Medicine Residency Program and hospital fellowship with the Duke Department of Family Medicine and Community Health. He currently serves as a teaching hospitalist on the Family Medicine Inpatient Service at Duke Regional Hospital as well as a core faculty member for the Duke Department of Family Medicine and Community Health. His expertise and scholarly interests include the social drivers of health, community-healthcare partnerships, and multi-stakeholder collaborations for health promotion and behavioral change.
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