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Journal ArticleDOI

Etiological musculo-skeletal factor in focal dystonia in a musician's hand: A case study of the right hand of a guitarist

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TLDR
The case would demonstrate that task‐specific hand dystonias can arise as overcompensations for (peripheral) neuro‐musculoskeletal defects.
Abstract
A case study is presented in which a focal hand dystonia seems to have developed in the right hand of a classical guitarist as a result of a neuromuscular peripheral defect caused by trauma. The trauma was a near total perforation of the first web space by a splinter. Healing was uneventful without apparent functional complications. Two years later the patient noticed difficulties in extending the index in playing, for which he received various unsuccessful treatments during seven years. However, we found more severe dystonic symptoms (cocontractions) in the thumb than in the index during playing, which correlated with an undiagnosed insufficiency in the flexor pollicis brevis (FPB). This defect allowed proposing a biomechanical analysis of compensations for diminished thumb control in playing, which would explain the dysfunction in the index in playing as overcompensation for the thumb problem. If this analysis is correct, the etiology of the case can be traced back to underlying multiarticular control problems in the thumb caused by an insufficient FPB. This defect was considered irrepairable. It was concluded that even with knowledge of the underlying cause, a potentially successful treatment of the dystonia might not exist in this case. The case would demonstrate that task-specific hand dystonias can arise as overcompensations for (peripheral) neuro-musculoskeletal defects. The case is illustrated by videos of playing and functional thumb tests.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Focal Dystonias: Current Views and Challenges for Future Research

TL;DR: A brief review of the clinical manifestations of the adult‐onset focal dystonias is provided, focusing attention on less well understood clinical manifestations that need further study.
Journal ArticleDOI

The pathophysiology of focal hand dystonia

Peter Lin, +1 more
TL;DR: Focal hand dystonia is a disabling movement disorder, often task specific, that leads to impaired hand use that may be linked to a genetic predisposition, environmental risk factors including repetitive use and musculoskeletal constraints.
Journal ArticleDOI

Focal hand dystonia: effectiveness of a home program of fitness and learning-based sensorimotor and memory training.

TL;DR: Progressive task practice plus learning based memory and sensorimotor training can improve TSP in patients with FHD(TSP).
Journal ArticleDOI

Acquisition and reacquisition of motor coordination in musicians

TL;DR: Novel evidence of effects of noninvasive neurorehabilitation that combined transcranial direct‐current stimulation and motor rehabilitation over multiple days on musician's dystonia, which offers a promising therapeutic means are reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

The quadriga phenomenon: a review and clinical relevance.

TL;DR: The anatomy and biomechanics of this quadriga phenomenon are reviewed to help explain why certain conditions occur, and to improve the diagnosis and treatment of some conditions in rehabilitation medicine.
References
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Clinical evaluation of idiopathic paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed the following diagnostic criteria for idiopathic paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia (PKD): identified trigger for the attacks (sudden movements), short duration of attacks (<1 minute), lack of loss of consciousness or pain during attacks, antiepileptic drug responsiveness, exclusion of other organic diseases, and age at onset between 1 and 20 years if there is no family history.
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Journal ArticleDOI

Distinct physiological mechanisms underlie altered glycinergic synaptic transmission in the murine mutants spastic, spasmodic, and oscillator.

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