History of the ‘geste antagoniste’ sign in cervical dystonia
The geste antagoniste is a voluntary maneuver that temporarily reduces the severity of dystonic posture or movements. It is a classical feature of focal and particularly cervical dystonia. However, the precise historical aspects of geste antagoniste still remain obscure. The goals of this review wer...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurology 2012-08, Vol.259 (8), p.1580-1584 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The
geste antagoniste
is a voluntary maneuver that temporarily reduces the severity of dystonic posture or movements. It is a classical feature of focal and particularly cervical dystonia. However, the precise historical aspects of
geste antagoniste
still remain obscure. The goals of this review were (1) to clarify the origin of the
geste antagoniste
sign; (2) to identify the factors that led to its diffusion in the international literature; (3) to follow the evolution of that term across the twentieth century. We used medical and neurological French, German and English literature of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and the PubMed database by entering the terms
geste antagoniste
,
antagonistic gesture
and
sensory trick
. The
geste antagoniste
sign is a legacy of the Paris Neurological School of the end of the nineteenth century. The term was introduced by Meige and Feindel in their 1902 book on tics, written in the vein of their master, Brissaud, who first described this sign in 1893. The almost immediate translations of this book by Giese into German and Kinnier Wilson into English contributed to the rapid spreading of the term
geste antagoniste
, which is still in use worldwide today. The term
antagonistic gesture
is the translation proposed by Kinnier Wilson, which also led to the use of the term
geste antagonistique
. The
geste antagoniste
sign has long been considered a solid argument for the psychogenic origins of dystonia until the 1980s when Marsden made strong arguments for its organic nature. |
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ISSN: | 0340-5354 1432-1459 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00415-011-6380-7 |