151. A very slowly progressive neurogenic ‘man-in-the-barrel’ syndrome
- Author
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Alice Todeschini, Alessandro Padovani, Massimiliano Filosto, Elisa Pari, Fabrizio Rinaldi, and Silvia Rota
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Weakness ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Diplegia ,Electromyography ,Anatomy ,Motor neuron ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Cerebral palsy ,Fasciculation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,medicine ,Cervical spondylosis ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,business - Abstract
sporadic motor neuron disorder that differs from the spinal ALS because it remains largely restricted to the upper limbs over time. Only a few cases are described in the literature with a follow-up ranging between two and 11 years (3,4). We report on a 69-years-old patient having a 35-year history of progressive bilateral weakness of the proximal segments of upper limbs and shoulders, which started insidiously on the left side and involved the right side 15 years later. No lower limb involve-ment was reported. No injury of rotator cuff muscles and tendons was noted. Neuromuscular family history was unremarkable. Clinical evaluation showed severe weakness and atrophy of muscles of the upper limb girdle (Figure 1). Distal segments of upper limbs as well as lower limbs were normal. Fasciculations were not present. Deep tendon refl exes were absent at the upper limbs and normal at the lower ones. Dear Sir, Man-in-the-barrel syndrome (MIBS) is characterized by brachial diplegia with motor function preserved in the legs and facial musculature, giving to a patient the clinical appearance of seeming constrained in a barrel (1). MIBS was early observed in patients with bilat-eral ischaemia in the border zones of the anterior and medial cerebral arteries, pontine lesion, multiple sclerosis lesions, cerebral metastases and head trauma. A less recognized variant of MIBS is the neurogenic form that can result from different causes, i.e. amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and myelopathies with purely motor presentation including cervical spinal cord infarction, cervical spondylosis and post radiation (1,2). The term ‘ brachial amyotrophic diplegia ’ has been used to identify a MIBS related to a primary
- Published
- 2015