0521779407-09 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:12
Helicobacter Pylori Hemiballismus 669
■80% of untreated peptic ulcer patients infected withH. pyloriwill
relapse
■20% of peptic ulcer patients treated for and cured ofH. pyloriwill
still relapse
Hemiballismus......................................
CHAD CHRISTINE, MD
history & physical
■Unilateral chorea of acute to subacute onset
■Continuous movement that pt may attempt to restrain
■Proximal muscle involvement causes particularly violent movements
■May involve face, arm, leg or both extremities on one side of body
■Cognitive, motor, sensory deficits may be present
tests
■Diagnosis made clinically
■Lab tests: CBC, sed rate, HIV test, toxicology screen
■Imaging may demonstrate lesion of contralateral subthalamic
nucleus
differential diagnosis
■Stroke & mass lesion (eg, tumor, abscess, AVM) excluded by brain
MRI
■Inflammatory disorders (SLE, antiphospholipid antibody syndrome)
& metabolic disorders (hyper-/hypoglycemia) excluded by serum
studies
■Infections excluded by blood & CSF studies
management
■What to do first: evaluate for stroke or mass lesion
■General measures: comfortable setting, restrain limb, pad bedside
specific therapy
■Depends on underlying disorder
■Indications: intractable violent movements
■Treatment options
➣Medical treatment
Haloperidol
Chlorpromazine
➣Surgical treatment