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Journal Article

Citation

Chung EJ, Kim SJ, Lee WY, Bae JS, Kim EG, Pang SH. J. Mov. Disord. 2010; 3(2): 39-41.

Affiliation

Department of Neurosurgery, Inje University College of Medicine, Busan, Korea.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Korean Movement Disorders Society)

DOI

10.14802/jmd.10010

PMID

24868379

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Although peripheral trauma induced movement disorders have been rarely reported, diagnostic criteria for peripherally induced movement disorders (PIMD) have been established. Because preexisting subclinical movement disorders, or secondary gain for compensation and legal purposes are difficult to confirm, differential diagnosis for physicians still remains difficult. CASE REPORTS: We present four patients developed movement disorders after relatively various intervals after traffic accident. Three patients of them showed tremor and one patient presented propriospinal myoclonus. In this report, we investigate whether peripheral trauma can lead to movement disorders and describe the relationship between peripheral injury and movement disorders in four cases.

CONCLUSIONS: Injury was serious enough to develop involuntary abnormal movements with pain and the latency between injury and the onset of movements in all of cases was less than 1 year. Thus, our cases showed temporal and anatomical correlation between injury and the onset of movement disorder, strongly supporting the cause-and-effect relationship by previous diagnostic criteria for peripherally induced movement disorders.


Language: en

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