ABSTRACT
Multifocal acquired demyelinating sensory and motor neuropathy (MADSAM) is a peripheral neuropathy characterized by multifocal weakness and associated sensory impairment. MADSAM is associated with multifocal persistent conduction block and other signs of demyelination. The incidence of cranial nerve involvement in MADSAM was recently reported to be approximately 15%. However, reports of hypoglossal neuropathy occurring in MADSAM are rare. Unilateral hypoglossal neuropathy in MADSAM is usually misdiagnosed as motor neuron disease. We report a patient with MADSAM presenting with tongue hemiatrophy.
Subject(s)
Humans , Cranial Nerves , Demyelinating Diseases , Diagnosis, Differential , Hypoglossal Nerve Diseases , Incidence , Motor Neuron Disease , Motor Neurons , Peripheral Nervous System Diseases , TongueABSTRACT
Neurological manifestations of internal carotid aretry (ICA) dissection include amaurosis fugax, cerebral ischemia, oculosympathetic paresis, and various cranial nerve palsies. Isolated hypoglossal nerve palsy is a rare manifestation of ICA dissection. A 55-year-old man developed dysarthria following sudden pain in the left retroauricular area. His tongue was paralysed on the left side. Magnetic resonance image and carotid angiogram showed characteristic features of left ICA dissection, which may be the most plausible cause of hypoglossal nerve palsy in this patient. Expanding hematoma of dissecting aneurysm of ICA seems to have compressed the nutrient artery of the hypoglossal nerve, although the possibility of direct compression of the hypoglossal nerve itself is not completely ruled out.