Annals of Movement Disorders (Jan 2021)

A reversible lentiform nucleus T1 hyperintensity in hypoglycemic chorea

  • Dinesh Chouksey,
  • Pankaj Rathi,
  • Nitisha Goyal,
  • Ajoy K Sodani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/AOMD.AOMD_40_20
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 39 – 41

Abstract

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Acute to subacute onset chorea is commonly due to stroke, metabolic, post-infectious, and autoimmune disorders. Chorea in diabetes (DM) patient is mostly due to hyperglycemia, and few cases were reported due to hypoglycemia. The mechanism at the cellular level is still evolving. The MRI changes in diabetic chorea patients are variably reported. It is important to discuss our patient with hypoglycemic hemichorea because of unique features like low BMI, recently diagnosed DM on sulphonylurea with a history of hypoglycemic episodes, and acute left hemichorea that was controlled with neuroleptics, and her MRI brain showed reversible lentiform nucleus T1 hyperintensity without diffusion restriction and blooming on SWI.

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