Writer's Cramp and Tremor Due to Brain Tumor
I Milanov and D Georgiev

Abstract:
Writer's cramp is frequently associated with hand tremor
and with other focal dystonias. Sometimes brain infarction,
haemorrhage, arterio-venous malformations or tumors are found
to cause symptomatic focal dystonias. A 44-year-old man came
to our attention due to writer's cramp of his right hand and
postural 6-8 Hz tremor. About three months after the onset of
the disease the tremor and dystonia disappeared, while a right
hemiparesis gradually appeared. Cranial computed tomography
showed a hypodense nonhomogeneous lesion in the left cerebral
hemisphere parietally, that was assumed to represent a cystic
tumor. The patient underwent craniotomy and the histological
diagnosis revealed an astrocytoma (Grade II-III). In conclusion
our findings confirm the common anatomical basis of symptomatic
focal dystonia and tremor. Both can appear after disruption
of the pathways within and adjacent to the basal ganglia.
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1995; 22: 59-61
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