Suri Ritika, Rodriguez-Porcel Federico, Donohue Kelly, Jesse Erin, Lovera Lilia, Dwivedi Alok Kumar, Espay Alberto J
James J. and Joan A. Gardner Center for Parkinson Disease and Movement Disorders, Department of Neurology and Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Department of Neurology, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina.
J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis. 2018 Sep;27(9):2388-2397. doi: 10.1016/j.jstrokecerebrovasdis.2018.04.028. Epub 2018 May 21.
Abnormal movements are a relatively uncommon complication of strokes. Besides the known correlation between stroke location and certain movement disorders, there remain uncertainties about the collective effects of age and stroke mechanism on phenomenology, onset latency, and outcome of abnormal movements.
We systematically reviewed all published cases and case series with adequate clinical-imaging correlations. A total of 284 cases were analyzed to evaluate the distribution of different movement disorders and their association with important cofactors.
Posterolateral thalamus was the most common region affected (22.5%) and dystonia the most commonly reported movement disorder (23.2%). The most common disorders were parkinsonism (17.4%) and chorea (17.4%) after ischemic strokes and dystonia (45.5%) and tremor (19.7%) after hemorrhagic strokes. Strokes in the caudate and putamen were complicated by dystonia in one third of the cases; strokes in the globus pallidus were followed by parkinsonism in nearly 40%. Chorea was the earliest poststroke movement disorder, appearing within hours, whereas dystonia and tremor manifested several months after stroke. Hemorrhagic strokes were responsible for most delayed-onset movement disorders (>6 months) and were particularly overrepresented among younger individuals affected by dystonia.
This evidence-mapping portrait of poststroke movement disorders will require validation or correction based on a prospective epidemiologic study. We hypothesize that selective network vulnerability and resilience may explain the differences observed in movement phenomenology and outcomes after stroke.
异常运动是中风相对少见的并发症。除了已知的中风部位与某些运动障碍之间的关联外,年龄和中风机制对异常运动的现象学、发病潜伏期及结局的综合影响仍存在不确定性。
我们系统回顾了所有已发表的、具有充分临床影像学关联的病例及病例系列。共分析了284例病例,以评估不同运动障碍的分布及其与重要辅助因素的关联。
丘脑后外侧是最常受累的区域(22.5%),肌张力障碍是最常报告的运动障碍(23.2%)。最常见的障碍是缺血性中风后的帕金森综合征(17.4%)和舞蹈症(17.4%),以及出血性中风后的肌张力障碍(45.5%)和震颤(19.7%)。三分之一的尾状核和壳核中风病例并发肌张力障碍;苍白球中风后近40%出现帕金森综合征。舞蹈症是中风后最早出现的运动障碍,在数小时内出现,而肌张力障碍和震颤在中风后数月出现。出血性中风是大多数延迟性运动障碍(>6个月)的原因,在受肌张力障碍影响的年轻个体中尤为多见。
这一中风后运动障碍的循证图谱需要基于前瞻性流行病学研究进行验证或修正。我们假设选择性网络易损性和恢复力可能解释中风后运动现象学和结局中观察到的差异。