Computerized tomography in hereditary nonprogressive chorea
E. Rice and C. Terrence
A 56-year-old woman had a 50-year history of childhood-onset chorea without
progressive neurologic deficit. The patient's father had a lifelong
extrapyramidal disorder characterized by a head-nodding tremor and
involuntary movements especially evident with anxiety. The computerized
tomographic scan was normal, without evidence of cortical or caudate
atrophy. The computerized tomographic scan supports the notion of a
functional rather than a structural lesion, and may aid in the
discrimination of hereditary nonprogressive chorea from more devastating
forms of hereditary chorea.