Journal of Aziz Fatimah Medical and Dental College (Dec 2023)

A Difficult Case to Diagnose: Machado-Joseph Disease/Spinocerebellar Ataxia Type III

  • Muhammad Sohail Ajmal Ghoauri ,
  • Nauman Ismat Butt,
  • Dur-e-Sabeeh,
  • Muhammad Bilal Rasheed,
  • Muhammad Umair Javed,
  • Fahmina Ashfaq

DOI
https://doi.org/10.55279/jafmdc.v5i2.260
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 2

Abstract

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Machado-Joseph Disease, also known as Spinocerebellar Ataxia Type III, was initially described in patients of Azorean heritage as a neurodegenerative disease but is now known to occur globally. The main clinical involvement is cerebellar and brainstem dysfunction causing progressive ataxia and usually disease onset is in young-adult to mid-adult years. A 20-year old female presented with a 3-year history of gradual onset, progressively worsening gait abnormality and tremor of the right hand. On examination, she had gargoyle-like facial features and pes cavus. On neurologic examination, she had dystonic tremor of right hand, cerebellar ataxia, dysdiadokokinesia, abnormal heel-shin coordination, hyperreflexia with downgoing plantar reflex bilaterally. Her MRI scan brain revealed communicating hydrocephalus with cerebellar atrophy. She was diagnosed with Machado-Joseph Disease/Spinocerebellar Ataxia type III.

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