Background: Idiopathic focal dystonia is a motor syndrome associated with dysfunction of basal ganglia circuits. Observations have suggested that many other non-motor symptoms may also be part of the clinical picture. The aim was to assess the prevalence and correlation of non-motor symptoms in patients with common idiopathic focal or segmental dystonia. Methods: In a single-center cross-sectional case-control study, we evaluated the presence of pain, neuropsychiatric symptoms, and sleep alterations in 28 patients with blepharospasm, 28 patients with cervical dystonia, 24 patients with writer's cramp, and 80 control subjects matched for sex, age, and schooling. We obtained clinical and demographic data, and evaluated patients using the Fahn-Marsden Dystonia Rating Scale and other specific scales for dystonia. All subjects completed the following questionnaires:
Dystonia is a relatively common movement disorder but some of its epidemiological and clinical aspects have not been well characterized in Brazilian patients. Also, a new clinical classification for the disorder has been proposed and its impact on clinical practice is unclear. We aimed to describe the clinical and demographic characteristics of a Brazilian series of patients with primary dystonia, to estimate its local prevalence, and to explore the impact of using a new classification for dystonia. We identified 289 patients with primary dystonia over a 12-month period, of whom235 underwent a detailed evaluation. Patients with primary dystoniamade up one-sixth of all patients evaluated at the service where the study was conducted, with an estimated local prevalence of 19.8/100,000 inhabitants. The clinical and demographic characteristics of the patients were similar to those described elsewhere, with blepharospasm as the most common focal dystonia and most patients using sensory tricks that they judged useful on a day-to-day basis. The application of the new classification was easy and simple, and the systematic approach allowed for a better clinical characterization of our patients. We recognized two dystonic syndromes that were not described in the original article that proposed the classification, and suspected that the arbitrary distinction between generalized and multifocal dystonia seems not to be useful for patients with primary dystonia. In conclusion, the prevalence and clinical characteristics of our patients were not distinct from other studies and the new classification was shown to be practical and useful to characterize patients with dystonia.
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has emerged in Wuhan, China, in December 2019,1 and the World Health Organization has declared it a pandemic in March 2020. Since then, severe neurological complications associated with COVID-19 have been described, including encephalitis and stroke.2,3 Recently, it has been recognized that acute neuropathies may also occur.4,5 Herein, we report a COVID-19 patient presenting an acute refractory painful polyradiculoneuritis.
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