“…Chorea secondary to polycythemia, hepatic failure, azotemia, hyperglycemia, or other electrolyte imbalances were also ruled out after his baseline diagnostics came out [5,6]. Hyponatremia as the cause of chorea was deemed less likely because neurologic manifestations, including choreoathetoid movements, typically manifest in severe hyponatremia when serum sodium levels are <120 mmol/L [7]. Sydenham chorea, the most common type of acute to subacute autoimmune chorea in childhood, was also considered.…”