Clinical spectrum of Dyke-Davidoff-Masson syndrome in the adult: an atypical presentation and review of literature.
Jose Danilo Bengzon DiestroMaria Kristina Casanova DorotanAlvin Carlos CamachoKaterina Tanya Perez-GosiengfiaoLeonor Isip Cabral-LimPublished in: BMJ case reports (2018)
Dyke-Davidoff-Masson Syndrome (DDMS) is a rare condition usually diagnosed in paediatric patients with clinical features of hemiparesis, seizures, mental retardation and contralateral cerebral hemiatrophy on neuroimaging. This report follows the case of a 22-year-old man presenting with seizures and hemiatrophy and hemiparesis. On review of cases the most common neuroimaging findings were cerebral hemiatrophy (100%) followed by hemicalvarial thickening (71.4%) and hyperpneumatisation of sinuses (71.4%). Apart from our patient, all nine cases with data on epilepsy control had drug-resistant epilepsy. The onset of seizures in adulthood, block vertebra, short stature, absence of mental retardation and well-controlled epilepsy on monotherapy makes our case exceptional-even bringing to mind the possibility of a DDMS variant. This report exhaustively reviews the wide range of clinical and radiological manifestations of DDMS in the adult, thereby adding to the literature on an unusual syndrome that causes significant neurological morbidity.
Keyphrases
- drug resistant
- case report
- temporal lobe epilepsy
- multidrug resistant
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- systematic review
- acinetobacter baumannii
- intensive care unit
- cerebral ischemia
- upper limb
- depressive symptoms
- big data
- clinical trial
- machine learning
- artificial intelligence
- cerebral blood flow
- growth hormone
- data analysis