Hirayama's disease (HD) is frequently found in Asia, and is rarely referred among westerners. It affects young people with higher incidence in males. It is a focal distal amyotrophy with unilateral or asymmetric bilateral involvement of C7, C8 and T1 innervated muscles. HD appears sporadically and has a benign evolution with clinical stabilization in around one year. We report four young male patients with clinical and electrophysiological alterations described in HD, which were followed-up during 5 years. Electromyographic findings were indicative of lower motor neuron involvement. We analyzed cervical MRI aiming at understanding if a questionable spinal cord compression could be implicated in the pathogenesis, but no abnormality was verified. In view of its clinical, and EMG characteristics, HD is no more than a benign monomelic amyotrophy (BMA) clinical variant, and not a specific disease. This eponym could be considered only for the distal upper limb variant (Hirayama's variant) of the BMA.
CITATION STYLE
Nascimento, O. J. M., & De Freitas, M. R. G. (2000). Non-progressive juvenile spinal muscular atrophy of the distal upper limb: (Hirayama’s disease): A clinical variant of the benign monomelic amyotrophy. Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria, 58(3 B), 814–819. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0004-282X2000000500004
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