Clinical Pearls - how my patients taught me: The fainting lark symptom

Compulsive movements, complex tics and stereotypies are frequent, especially among patients with autism or psychomotor retardation. These movements can be difficult to characterize and can mimic other conditions like epileptic seizures or paroxysmal dystonia, particularly when abnormal breathing and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Clinical Movement Disorders (Online) 2016-11, Vol.3 (1), p.16, Article 16
Hauptverfasser: Kuiper, A, van Egmond, M E, Harms, M P M, Oosterhoff, M D, van Harten, B, Sival, D A, de Koning, T J, Tijssen, M A J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Compulsive movements, complex tics and stereotypies are frequent, especially among patients with autism or psychomotor retardation. These movements can be difficult to characterize and can mimic other conditions like epileptic seizures or paroxysmal dystonia, particularly when abnormal breathing and cerebral hypoxia are induced. We describe an 18-year-old patient with Asperger syndrome who presented with attacks of tonic posturing of the trunk and neck. The attacks consisted of self-induced stereotypic stretching of the neck combined with a compulsive Valsalva-like maneuver. This induced cerebral hypoperfusion and subsequently dysautonomia and some involuntary movements of the arms. This patient suffered from a complex tic with compulsive respiratory stereotypies. His symptoms contain aspects of a phenomenon described in early literature as 'the fainting lark'.
ISSN:2054-7072
2054-7072
DOI:10.1186/s40734-016-0045-8