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Brain, Vol. 116, No. 4, 843-851, 1993
© 1993 Guarantors of Brain


research-article

The causalgia—dystonia syndrome

K. P. Bhatia, M. H. Bhatt and C. D. Marsden

University Department of Clinical Neurology, Institute of Neurology and National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery Queen Square, London, UK

Correspondence to: Correspondence to: Professor C D Marsden, Institute of Neurology, Queen Square, London WCIN 3BG, UK.

We report 18 patients (16 women and two men) with causalgia and dystonia, triggered by peripheral injuries in 15 cases and occurring spontaneously in three. The injury was often trivial, and did not cause overt peripheral nerve lesions. The mean age at presentation was 28. 5 years. None had a family history of dystonia. The leg was affected initially in 12 patients, the arm in the remaining six cases. All had burning pain, allodynia and hyperpathia, along with vasomotor, sudomotor and trophic changes. All developed dystonic muscle spasms in the affected part. Dystonia always appeared at the same time or after the causalgia. The spasms were typically sustained, producing a ‘fixed’ dystonic posture, in contrast to the mobile spasms characteristic of idiopathic torsion dystonia. There was spread of the causalgia and of the dystonia from its initial site both in the affected limb and to other extremities, the latter in hemiplegic, transverse and triplegic distribution. All investigations were normal. All modes of conventional treatment failed to relieve either the pain or the dystonia, but two patients recovered spontaneously. At present it is impossible to decide whether this distressing syndrome is a true functional disorder of the central nervous system, or is of psychogenic origin.

Received August 18, 1992. Revised January 11, 1993. Accepted February 16, 1993.


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