Transient dystonic toe-walking: Differentiation from cerebral palsy and a rare explanation for some unexplained cases of idiopathic toe-walking

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Abstract

We report on seven children (five males, two females) who presented with marked, often asymmetrical, toe-walking from onset of independent walking, associated with abnormal foot postures and increased tone at the ankles with characteristics of dystonia. Most of the children had presented with unusual pre-walking locomotion and a mild delay in independent walking. They did not fit into the usual categories of 'habitual' toe-walking or congenital short tendo calcaneus but nor did they have the clinical signs of spastic diplegia or of a peripheral neuromuscular disease. Normalization occurred progressively in the second to fourth years of life. The children were re-examined several years later (1 to 11y) and were normal. We believe that their persistent toe-walking corresponded to a variant of 'transient focal dystonia of infancy'. Knowledge of its existence may justify a period of observation without special investigations, surgery, or casting.

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Newman, C. J., Ziegler, A. L., Jeannet, P. Y., Roulet-Perez, E., & Deonna, T. W. (2006). Transient dystonic toe-walking: Differentiation from cerebral palsy and a rare explanation for some unexplained cases of idiopathic toe-walking. Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology, 48(2), 96–102. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0012162206000223

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