Background: Specific phenomenology and pattern of involvement in movement disorders point toward a probable clinical diagnosis. For example, forehead chorea usually suggests Huntington's disease; feeding dystonia suggests neuroacanthocytosis and risus sardonicus is commonly seen in Wilson's disease. Dystonic opisthotonus has been described as a characteristic feature of neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA) related to PANK2 and PLA2G6 mutations. Case report: We describe two additional patients in their 30s with severe extensor truncal dystonia causing opisthotonic posturing in whom evaluation revealed the diagnosis of NBIA confirmed by genetic testing. Discussion: Dystonic opisthotonus may be more common in NBIA than it is reported and its presence especially in a young patient should alert the neurologists to a possibility of probable NBIA.
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CITATION STYLE
Mehta, S., & Lal, V. (2019). Neurodegeneration with Brain Iron Accumulation: Two Additional Cases with Dystonic Opisthotonus. Tremor and Other Hyperkinetic Movements (New York, N.Y.), 9. https://doi.org/10.5334/tohm.482