Hirayama Disease: Report of a Successful Clinical Case
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.25759/spmfr.501Keywords:
Adolescent, Muscle Weakness, Spinal Muscular Atrophies of Childhood/rehabilitationAbstract
The authors present a case of Hirayama’s disease in a 17- year-old boy who had been complaining, for a year and a half, of pain and unilateral motor deficits in the 4th and 5th fingers of the right hand with progressive functional impairment. On examination, atrophy of the ulnar anterior aspect of the forearm, and right thenar and hypothenar regions was evident, associated with a deficit of muscle strength in the distal segments of the right upper limb. Contrast-enhanced cervical magnetic resonance was performed in the neck flexion position, which showed dynamic changes suggestive of Hirayama’s disease. Electromyography showed extensive bilateral segmental neurogenic damage, with a right predominance, between C6 and T1. Motor nerve conduction studies showed a decrease in the amplitude of the C8-T1 myotomes. The patient started daily use of a soft cervical collar to prevent cervical flexion and a multimodal rehabilitation program with physiotherapy and occupational therapy with significant clinical and functional improvement over 10 years of evolution. A brief and contextualized review of the literature is made, framing it with the patient’s clinical evolution.Downloads
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