Isolated truncal contrapulsion as a rare presentation of acute thalamic infarct

S Sheetal, SA Kumar, R ThomasJournal of Postgraduate Medicine 2020 66(4):212-214 Infarcts involving the thalamus can yield many deficits, including sensory syndromes, altered consciousness, and cognitive disturbances, depending on the thalamic vascular territory involved. Isolated truncal contrapulsion due to pure thalamic infarct has been rarely reported. Truncal lateropulsion is a compelling sensation of being pulled toward one side that cannot be explained by weakness or limb ataxia. It is commonly reported in lateral medullary infarcts. It may occur with lesions that involve the peripheral vestibular system, brainstem, cerebellum, basal ganglia, ponto-mesencephalic, and thalamic lesions. We hereby report a 64-year-old woman who presented with truncal contrapulsion as the sole manifestation of an acute right lateral thalamic infarct.
Source: Journal of Postgraduate Medicine - Category: Internal Medicine Authors: Source Type: research