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Hypertrophic Olivary Degeneration and Holmes’ Tremor Secondary to Bleeding of Cavernous Malformation in the Midbrain Cover

Hypertrophic Olivary Degeneration and Holmes’ Tremor Secondary to Bleeding of Cavernous Malformation in the Midbrain

Open Access
|Oct 2014

Abstract

Background: Hypertrophic olivary degeneration (HOD) is a rare phenomenon, probably related to transsynaptic degeneration of the inferior olivary nucleus. It usually occurs as a response to primary injury of dento-rubro-olivary pathways.

Case report: A young man developed Holmes’ tremor 7 months after a cavernous malformation bleed in the midbrain. Typical findings of HOD were observed in the magnetic resonance images: bilateral and asymmetric hypertrophy of the olivary nucleus with slight hypersignal in T2-weighted images. Because of the striking disability related to drug-resistant tremor, the patient underwent stereotactic thalamotomy (nucleus ventralis intermedius of the thalamus/zona incerta) with pronounced functional improvement over time.

Discussion: Disruption of circuits in the Guillain–Mollaret triangle classically results in palatal myoclonus, however midbrain (Holmes’) tremor can also occur, as we now describe.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/tohm.210 | Journal eISSN: 2160-8288
Language: English
Submitted on: Jul 11, 2014
Accepted on: Aug 18, 2014
Published on: Oct 8, 2014
Published by: Columbia University Libraries/Information Services
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2014 Djalma F. S. Menéndez, Rubens G. Cury, Egberto R. Barbosa, Manoel J. Teixeira, Erich T. Fonoff, published by Columbia University Libraries/Information Services
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons License.