Litcius/Paper detail

Bilateral Hypertrophic Olivary Degeneration Following Brainstem Insult: A Retrospective Review and Examination of Causative Pathology

Fardad Behzadi, Peter Fiester, Dinesh Rao

2021Neuroscience Insights16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Hypertrophic olivary degeneration is a rare condition caused by a lesion in the Guillain-Mollaret triangle which leads to trans-synaptic degeneration resulting in the degenerative hypertrophy of the inferior olivary nucleus. This condition presents clinically with palatal tremor but can also produce ocular myoclonus or cerebellar signs. While any lesion that occurs within the Guillian-Mollaret triangle and results in the deafferentation of the inferior olive can lead to hypertrophic olivary degeneration, the most common etiologies include ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke, vascular malformation, neoplasm, and iatrogenic injury related to surgery. We report a series of 7 patients who presented with this condition bilaterally on MRI imaging, including 1 case which represents the first report of toxoplasmosis leading to the development of bilateral hypertrophic olivary degeneration and only the third reported case, unilateral or bilateral, related to an infectious etiology.

Topics & Concepts

Inferior olivary nucleusMedicineBrainstemPathologyCerebellumCerebellar DegenerationLesionMyoclonusEtiologyDegeneration (medical)AnatomyAnesthesiaInternal medicineGlycogen Storage Diseases and MyoclonusLysosomal Storage Disorders ResearchSympathectomy and Hyperhidrosis Treatments