Objective: The aim of the study was to characterize subtle motor signs in children with moderate-severe traumatic brain injury in the chronic phase of injury.Design: Fourteen children with moderate (n = 6) or severe (n = 8) traumatic brain injury, ages 11-18 yrs, who had sustained their injury at least 1-yr before study participation (range 1-14 yrs since injury), and 14 matched typically developing controls were examined using the Physical and Neurological Examination of Subtle Signs (PANESS). To examine the neural correlates of subtle motor signs, measures of total cerebral volume and motor/premotor volume were derived from magnetic resonance imaging.Results: Children with traumatic brain injury had significantly poorer PANESS performance than controls on the total timed subscore, proximal overflow, and the PANESS total score. Participants with severe traumatic brain injury had greater proximal overflow than those with moderate injury, after controlling for age at injury. Across all participants, greater proximal overflow correlated with reduced total cerebral volume, whereas within the traumatic brain injury group, reduced motor/premotor volume correlated with lower PANESS total score. Conclusions:The study highlights the importance of examining subtle motor signs including overflow during clinical evaluation of chronic pediatric traumatic brain injury and establishes the clinical utility of the PANESS as a measure sensitive to chronic subtle motor signs in this population.
Chronic nonunion cervical fracture leading to cervical dystonia (CD) is very rare. This study reports a 72-year-old man who presented with 9-month history of progressively worsening neck tilting, neck tightness, neck pain, headache, and difficulty with swallowing. The patient was referred to speech therapy and confirmed to have dysphagia on modified barium swallow study. A cervical spine radiograph showed a chronic C2 nonunion fracture. Subsequent cervical spine magnetic resonance imaging confirmed chronic C2 nonunion fracture with kyphotic deformity of the cervical canal with associated cord compression at C1-C2 and severe central canal stenosis. Needle electromyography revealed dystonic or spasmodic neck muscles, consistent with diagnosis of CD. Botulinum toxin injection resulted in marked clinical improvement. The patient finally underwent occipital to C4 posterior segmental fusion. No recurrence of CD had occurred 12 months after botulinum toxin injection and surgery, which supports the conclusion that chronic C2 nonunion fracture is most likely responsible for CD in this case. The authors suggest that all patients with CD receive dysphagia evaluation and more importantly cervical spine imaging to rule out chronic C2 nonunion fracture.
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