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Metabolic Causes of Chorea Part 2

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I have a FLAIR image up of our patient

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with Huntington's Chorea.

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A little bit of quick anatomy.

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The inner and outer aspect of the globus pallidus,

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known as GPI and GPE.

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Then the putamen divided up into two.

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We'll see it a little bit later on.

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There's an inner and outer aspect of the putamen.

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Then the external capsule, then the gray matter,

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claustrom, then the extreme capsule,

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this white stripe,

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and then the centrosylvian cortex.

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I want to briefly take a moment and talk about

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some other metabolic causes of Chorea.

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One of these is hyperthyroidism.

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Now, there's a common theme here.

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Hyperthyroidism drives the mitochondria to produce

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more energy, produce, produce, produce.

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It's basically using its thyroid hormone

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whip against the mitochondria.

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So it's not a coincidence that people with

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Huntington's Chorea develop toxicity at the

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mitochondrial level.

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This is also true for people that have ballism,

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which is a subset of Chorea.

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So this can happen as a manifestation

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of thyrotoxicosis.

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This can also happen as a manifestation

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of hyperglycemia,

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as we discussed in an earlier vignette,

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when you correct the thyrotoxicosis or correct

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the hyperglycemia, the patients get better,

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unless they have prior risk factors for Chorea.

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So, it's very important to know what the patient's

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past medical history consists of.

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There's one other entity that may be associated

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with chorea and also dystonia,

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and that's Wilson's disease.

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It is not a coincidence that this

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is an abnormality of copper.

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And where do you need copper?

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For the oxidative phosphorylative pathway.

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And where is that utilized?

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In the mitochondria.

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So there is a common theme here.

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Mitochondrial toxicity, mitochondrial destruction,

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mitochondrial poisoning in these

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metabolic syndromes.

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Not unlike what occurs in the

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CAG, cytosine adenine guanine repeats

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that produce Huntington's Chorea.

Report

Description

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Neuroradiology

Metabolic

MRI

Iatrogenic

Drug related

Brain

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