“…Within this, hemiballismus-hemichorea is the most common cause [1] . The most frequent neuroanatomical localisation of this is to the contralateral basal ganglia, and in particular the subthalamic nucleus [2] . An important differential to consider is a limb shaking transient ischemic attack, which is a rare hypoperfusion syndrome secondary to high grade contralateral internal carotid artery stenosis [3] .…”