Secondary dystonia and pseudodystonia

Secondary Dystonia

C12c344 (Video 12.344): Secondary Dystonia Due to Mitochondrial Disease
Blepharospasm, eyelid-opening apraxia, jaw-opening dystonia, risor sardonicus, and upper-limb dystonia associated with mitochondrial dysfunction.

C12c345 (Video 12.345): Severe Generalized Secondary Dystonia
Generalized dystonia with intermittent dystonic spasms, spasticity, and bilateral pallidal and nigral lesions on MRI.

C12c346 (Video 12.346): Leigh Syndrome with Dystonia
Upper-limb dystonia and spastic gait associated with bilateral putaminal injury.

C12c347 (Video 12.347): Mitochondrial Encephalopathy with Hemidystonia
Blepharospasm, postural limb dystonia, and dystonic gait associated with bilateral striatal injury.

C12c348 (Video 12.348): Glutaric Aciduria Type I
Severe generalized dystonia with macrocephaly, torticollis, jaw-opening dystonia, and painful dystonic spasms.

C12c349 (Video 12.349): L-2-Hydroxyglutaric Aciduria
Writer's cramp and upper-limb dystonia associated with metabolic disease.

C12c350 (Video 12.350): Rasmussen Encephalitis with Hemidystonia
Persistent right-sided dystonia affecting arm posture and gait.

C12c351 (Video 12.351): Rasmussen Encephalitis with EPC and Hemidystonia
Progressive left hemidystonia associated with epilepsia partialis continua.

C12c352 (Video 12.352): Advanced Rasmussen Encephalitis
Severe fixed hemidystonia involving the arm and foot.

C12c353 (Video 12.353): Post-Thalamic Stroke Dystonia
The "dystonic-jerky hand" syndrome characterized by complex dystonic and cerebellar movements.

C12c354 (Video 12.354): Post-Thalamic Stroke Dystonia with Cerebellar Tremor
Mild dystonic hand posturing accompanied by cerebellar outflow tremor.

C12c355 (Video 12.355): Delayed-Onset Post-Stroke Dystonia
Painful thalamic syndrome accompanied by fixed upper-limb dystonia and mild cerebellar tremor.

C12c356 (Video 12.356): Pulvinar Stroke Presenting as Writer's Cramp
Apparent focal dystonia later recognized as secondary dystonia due to pulvinar infarction.

C12c357 (Video 12.357): Post-Traumatic Epilepsy with Foot Dystonia
Task-specific foot dystonia dramatically improved after temporal lobectomy.

C12c358 (Video 12.358): Delayed-Onset Childhood Stroke Hemidystonia
Fixed left hand dystonia developing years after childhood cerebrovascular injury.

C12c359 (Video 12.359): Childhood Stroke with Generalized Hemidystonia
Severe right hemidystonia involving both upper and lower extremities.

C12c360 (Video 12.360): Post-Stroke Cervical Dystonia
Cervical dystonia with adductor spasmodic dysphonia and upper-limb involvement.

C12c361 (Video 12.361): Dystonic Cerebral Palsy
Combined generalized dystonia and spasticity due to perinatal hypoxic injury.

Pseudodystonia

C12c362 (Video 12.362): Juvenile Cervical Inflammatory Arthropathy
Painful restriction of neck movement due to inflammatory C1-C2 disease mimicking cervical dystonia.

C12c363 (Video 12.363): Pseudotorticollis Due to Sternocleidomastoid Lymphoma
Neoplastic invasion of the sternocleidomastoid muscle producing apparent torticollis.

C12c364 (Video 12.364): Myasthenia Gravis Mimicking Cervical Dystonia
Head turning resulting from focal neck weakness rather than dystonic activation.

C12c365 (Video 12.365): Radiation-Induced Neck Fibrosis
Fixed neck posturing caused by radiation myopathy.

C12c366 (Video 12.366): Congenital Muscular Torticollis
Lifelong abnormal neck posture due to fibrotic sternocleidomastoid shortening.

C12c367 (Video 12.367): Congenital Torticollis Mimicking Dystonia
Persistent head tilt caused by structural neck abnormality rather than dystonia.

C12c368 (Video 12.368): Dropped Head Syndrome Misdiagnosed as Dystonia
Severe neck extensor weakness producing anterocollis-like posture.

C12c369 (Video 12.369): Atlantoaxial Rotatory Subluxation in a Child
Acute "cock-robin" posture resulting from C1-C2 subluxation.

C12c370 (Video 12.370): Chronic Atlantoaxial Rotatory Subluxation
Persistent torticollis caused by structural cervical instability.

C12c371 (Video 12.371): Fixed Head Tilt Pseudodystonia
Mechanical cervical deformity without evidence of dystonic muscle activation.

C12c372 (Video 12.372): Head Drop Due to Neck Extensor Myopathy
Marked neck extensor weakness producing severe dropped-head posture.

C12c373 (Video 12.373): Neck Extensor Myopathy
Progressive head drop resulting from isolated extensor muscle weakness.

Foot and Truncal Dystonia

Foot Dystonia

C12c314 (Video 12.314): Isolated Foot Dystonia
Walking-induced ankle flexion producing a “sticky foot” gait, absent during backward walking.

C12c315 (Video 12.315): Inversion Foot Dystonia
Walking-induced inversion and plantarflexion improving with running and imagined backward walking.

C12c316 (Video 12.316): Right Foot Inversion Dystonia
Marked inversion appearing only during walking and relieved by running.

C12c317 (Video 12.317): Foot Abduction Dystonia
Walking-triggered abduction of the foot with partial improvement during backward gait.

C12c318 (Video 12.318): Ankle Flexion Dystonia
Activation during stance phase causing apparent sticking of the foot to the floor.

C12c319 (Video 12.319): Subtle Distal Leg Dystonia
Mild stance-phase ankle flexion relieved by jogging and backward walking.

C12c320 (Video 12.320): Adduction-Inversion Foot Dystonia
Task-specific gait dystonia improved by imagined and actual backward walking.

C12c321 (Video 12.321): Stair-Descent Dystonia
Triple-flexion dystonia occurring only while descending stairs.

C12c322 (Video 12.322): Exercise-Induced Dystonia
Treadmill walking triggers external rotation and foot flexion.

C12c323 (Video 12.323): Severe Walking-Induced Foot Dystonia
Internal rotation, inversion, and toe flexion that disappear during running.

C12c324 (Video 12.324): Heel Adduction Dystonia
Heel adduction and toe abduction occurring with each step.

C12c325 (Video 12.325): Left Leg Task-Specific Dystonia
Marked ankle flexion relieved by backward and sideways walking.

C12c326 (Video 12.326): Painful Inversion Dystonia
Severe inversion and plantarflexion eliminated during backward gait.

C12c327 (Video 12.327): Complex Proximal Leg Dystonia
Hip abduction and knee flexion dystonia improved after botulinum toxin treatment.

C12c328 (Video 12.328): Severe Multi-Joint Leg Dystonia
Hip, knee, and ankle dystonia producing profound gait impairment.

C12c329 (Video 12.329): Proximal Lower Limb Dystonia
Hip and knee extension dystonia interfering with ambulation.

C12c330 (Video 12.330): Mild Foot Dystonia
Subtle inversion and ankle flexion during walking.

C12c331 (Video 12.331): Foot Dystonia Before and After Treatment
Marked improvement following ultrasound-guided botulinum toxin injections.

Truncal Dystonia

C12c332 (Video 12.332): Paradoxical Truncal Dystonia
Opisthotonic posturing present at rest and disappearing during walking.

C12c333 (Video 12.333): Camptocormia with Sensory Trick
Forward truncal flexion relieved by wall contact and abolished during running.

C12c334 (Video 12.334): Pisa Syndrome-Type Truncal Dystonia
Lateral trunk flexion improved by sensory gestures and backward walking.

C12c335 (Video 12.335): Isolated Truncal Tilt Dystonia
Walking-induced leftward torso deviation.

C12c336 (Video 12.336): Severe Flexion Truncal Dystonia
Marked camptocormia relieved by backward walking and jogging.

C12c337 (Video 12.337): Advanced Camptocormia
Severe truncal flexion persisting during rest and gait.

C12c338 (Video 12.338): Walking-Induced Truncal Flexion
Forward flexion improving with running and sideways walking.

C12c339 (Video 12.339): Truncal Dystonia with Back-Pocket Geste
Flexion dystonia alleviated by hooking the hands behind the back.

C12c340 (Video 12.340): Abdominal Dystonia
Forward truncal flexion improved by direct manual pressure.

C12c341 (Video 12.341): Running-Responsive Camptocormia
Flexion dystonia disappearing during running.

C12c342 (Video 12.342): Dynamic Truncal Dystonia
Complex standing dystonia abolished by walking, running, or marching in place.

C12c343 (Video 12.343): Focal Abdominal Wall Dystonia
Exercise-induced focal contraction of the abdominal wall producing visible bulging.

Plectrum, Woodwind Hand, Drummers' Dystonia

Plectrum Dystonia

C12c279 (Video 12.279): Banjo Dystonia with Writer's Cramp
Task-specific flexion dystonia of the thumb and index finger during banjo playing associated with writer's cramp and mirror dystonia.

C12c280 (Video 12.280): Banjo Picking Dystonia
Index-finger flexion dystonia disrupting rapid picking patterns, improved by abandoning use of the affected finger.

C12c281 (Video 12.281): Banjo Index Finger Dystonia
Task-specific index finger flexion causing rhythmic irregularity during performance.

C12c282 (Video 12.282): Third-Finger Banjo Dystonia
Dystonia affecting the third finger during rapid banjo passages, partially compensated by altered fingering strategies.

C12c283 (Video 12.283): Hybrid String Instrument Dystonia
Thumb extension and index finger flexion dystonia impairing performance on a custom string instrument.

C12c284 (Video 12.284): Jazz Guitar Dystonia Before and After Botulinum Toxin
Thumb extension and index finger flexion dystonia markedly improved following targeted treatment.

C12c285 (Video 12.285): Classical Guitar Tremolo Dystonia
Index extension and middle finger flexion disrupting tremolo technique, partially relieved by tactile stimulation.

C12c286 (Video 12.286): Third-Finger Classical Guitar Dystonia
Task-specific third-finger flexion impairing ascending scales.

C12c287 (Video 12.287): Guitar Dystonia with Ulnar Finger Involvement
Flexion dystonia of the fourth and fifth fingers during performance.

C12c288 (Video 12.288): Guitar Dystonia with Sensory Trick Pick
Finger flexion dystonia dramatically reduced by a modified thumb pick acting as a sensory trick.

C12c289 (Video 12.289): Koto Player's Dystonia
Finger and wrist flexion dystonia affecting traditional Japanese string instrument performance.

C12c290 (Video 12.290): Jazz Guitarist with Glove Effect
Complex middle-finger dystonia substantially improved by wearing a glove.

C12c291 (Video 12.291): Left-Hand Guitar Dystonia
Pinky flexion dystonia impairing fretboard control, improved after botulinum toxin treatment.

Woodwind Hand Dystonia

C12c292 (Video 12.292): Saxophonist's Third-Finger Extension Dystonia
Third-finger extension dystonia impairing scales and technical passages.

C12c293 (Video 12.293): Left-Hand Saxophone Dystonia
Task-specific flexion dystonia improved by mechanically opposing lumbrical activity.

C12c294 (Video 12.294): Flute and Saxophone Dystonia
Different dystonic patterns on flute and saxophone involving third and fourth fingers.

C12c295 (Video 12.295): Clarinet Fourth-Finger Dystonia
Subtle fourth-finger extension and release abnormalities producing professional disability.

C12c296 (Video 12.296): Flute MCP Extension Dystonia
Third- and fourth-finger extension at the metacarpophalangeal joints disrupting fingering.

C12c297 (Video 12.297): Fourth-Finger Flute Dystonia
Extension at the MCP joint with PIP flexion affecting key control.

C12c298 (Video 12.298): Flute Pinky Dystonia with Abduction
Abnormal extension and abduction of the fifth finger causing loss of key contact.

C12c299 (Video 12.299): Flute Pinky Flexion Dystonia
Fifth-finger flexion pulling the digit away from the key.

C12c300 (Video 12.300): Flutist with Instrument Modification
Mechanical changes to the flute compensate for persistent fourth-finger dystonia.

C12c301 (Video 12.301): Bilateral Flute Dystonia
Complex dystonic finger movements affecting both hands during performance.

C12c302 (Video 12.302): Bagpipe Dystonia
Fourth- and fifth-finger flexion dystonia impairing chanter control.

C12c303 (Video 12.303): Trumpeter with Hand Dystonia
Severe left-hand finger flexion dystonia triggered while operating trumpet valves.

C12c304 (Video 12.304): Clarinetist with Exquisitely Subtle Dystonia
Failure of the index finger to fully seal an open tone hole during rapid orchestral passages.

Drummers' Dystonia

C12c305 (Video 12.305): Tabla Player's Index Finger Dystonia
Task-specific flexion dystonia of the index finger dramatically improved by botulinum toxin.

C12c306 (Video 12.306): African Drum Dystonia with Spread to Rest
Fourth- and fifth-finger flexion dystonia present at rest but disappearing during drum strike.

C12c307 (Video 12.307): Percussionist's Hand Dystonia
Pinky extension, finger flexion, and wrist deviation affecting mallet control.

C12c308 (Video 12.308): Drumstick-Induced Wrist Dystonia
Wrist flexion, radial deviation, and finger flexion triggered during drumming.

C12c309 (Video 12.309): Timpanist's Wrist Extension Dystonia
Task-specific clonic wrist extension occurring with stick strikes.

C12c310 (Video 12.310): Position-Specific Drum Dystonia
Wrist dystonia activated only in a specific drumming posture.

C12c311 (Video 12.311): Drummer's FCU-Predominant Dystonia
Flexion and ulnar deviation improved following ultrasound-guided botulinum toxin injections.

C12c312 (Video 12.312): Severe Rock Drummer's Dystonia
Progressive widespread task-specific dystonia evolving to occur even at rest.

C12c313 (Video 12.313): Bass Drum Pedal Dystonia
Task-specific foot dystonia causing impaired rhythm and pedal control.

Pianists and Violinists Dystonia - Phenomenology Atlas

Pianists' Dystonia

C12c240 (Video 12.240): Pianist's Index Finger Flexion Dystonia
Task-specific index finger flexion during piano playing and writing, improved with botulinum toxin.

C12c241 (Video 12.241): Pianist's Index Finger Extension Dystonia
Left index finger extension disrupting scales, improved by a thumb sensory trick.

C12c242 (Video 12.242): Severe Index Finger Flexion Dystonia
Marked dystonic flexion during performance substantially improved after targeted injections.

C12c243 (Video 12.243): Concert Pianist's Index Finger Dystonia
Ascending scales trigger index finger flexion improved following botulinum toxin treatment.

C12c244 (Video 12.244): Mixed Index-Middle Finger Dystonia
Index finger extension and middle finger flexion disrupting scalar passages.

C12c245 (Video 12.245): Third-Finger Flexion Dystonia
Persistent third-finger flexion relieved by a positive sensory trick.

C12c246 (Video 12.246): Index Finger MCP Flexion Dystonia
Mechanical opposition identifies the primary dystonic movement pattern.

C12c247 (Video 12.247): Thumb and Index Finger Dystonia
Orthotic splints improve fluidity and reduce dystonic activation.

C12c248 (Video 12.248): Isolated Index Finger Dystonia
Selective dystonia of the right index finger during piano performance.

C12c249 (Video 12.249): Index Finger Extension Dystonia
Extension dystonia affecting passage work while octaves remain preserved.

C12c250 (Video 12.250): Multi-Finger Pianist's Dystonia
Complex finger flexion and extension abnormalities affecting scales.

C12c251 (Video 12.251): Index Finger Flexion with Compensatory Extension
Mechanical testing identifies primary flexion dystonia.

C12c252 (Video 12.252): Mirror Dystonia in Pianist
Mirror movements identify primary dystonic extension of the second and third digits.

C12c253 (Video 12.253): Accordion Dystonia
Middle-finger extension during rapid passages improved by finger splinting.

C12c254 (Video 12.254): Keyboard Contact-Induced Dystonia
Flexion dystonia triggered specifically by keyboard contact.

C12c255 (Video 12.255): Severe Left-Hand Dystonia
Flexion of multiple fingers with compensatory wrist rotation.

C12c256 (Video 12.256): Advanced Concert Pianist's Dystonia
Severe right-hand dystonia forcing transition to left-hand repertoire.

C12c257 (Video 12.257): Fourth and Fifth Finger Dystonia
Scale passages trigger finger flexion while arpeggios remain relatively preserved.

C12c258 (Video 12.258): Thumb and Index Finger Velocity-Dependent Dystonia
Subtle dystonia apparent only during rapid ascending scales.

C12c259 (Video 12.259): Complex Five-Finger Dystonia
Index finger acts as a principal trigger for multi-digit dystonia.

C12c260 (Video 12.260): Complex Concert Pianist's Dystonia
Multiple primary dystonic movements identified through biomechanical testing.

C12c261 (Video 12.261): Bilateral Pianist's Dystonia
Bilateral finger dystonia with mirror movements during writing.

C12c262 (Video 12.262): Complex Right-Hand Dystonia
Dystonic flexion of multiple fingers with postural activation.

C12c263 (Video 12.263): Fourth and Fifth Finger Predominant Dystonia
Flexion dystonia impairing hand balance during performance.

C12c264 (Video 12.264): Severe Left-Hand Flexion Dystonia
Keyboard contact provokes marked finger flexion.

C12c265 (Video 12.265): Wrist Extension Pianist's Dystonia
Severe wrist extension improved substantially after botulinum toxin treatment.

Violinists' Dystonia

C12c266 (Video 12.266): Bow Arm Dystonia
Loss of control during bow changes, especially transitioning into up-bows.

C12c267 (Video 12.267): Severe Bow-Hand Dystonia
Wrist and index finger dystonia relieved by sensory stabilization of the bow hand.

C12c268 (Video 12.268): Cellist's Bowing Dystonia
Task-specific wrist and hand tightening impairing bow reversals.

C12c269 (Video 12.269): Violin Bow Arm Adduction Dystonia
Upper-arm dystonia occurring during up-bow initiation.

C12c270 (Video 12.270): Fast-Bowing Dystonia
Task-specific tightening triggered only at concert tempo.

C12c271 (Video 12.271): Velocity-Dependent Bow Arm Dystonia
Upper-arm co-contraction impairing rapid bow strokes.

C12c272 (Video 12.272): Severe Bow Arm Task-Specific Dystonia
Professionally disabling bow-arm dystonia improved by targeted botulinum toxin treatment.

C12c273 (Video 12.273): Left-Hand Fingering Dystonia
Second-finger dystonia affecting scale performance.

C12c274 (Video 12.274): Third-Finger Violin Dystonia
Flexion and abduction of the third finger in higher positions.

C12c275 (Video 12.275): Multi-Finger Flexion Dystonia
Slow playing provokes dystonia more than fast playing.

C12c276 (Video 12.276): Pattern-Specific Violin Dystonia
Dystonia triggered only by specific fingering combinations.

C12c277 (Video 12.277): Fourth-Finger Adduction Dystonia
Biomechanical testing identifies adduction as the primary dystonic movement.

C12c278 (Video 12.278): Vibrato Dystonia
Impaired vibrato control causing professional disability despite otherwise preserved playing.

Writer's Cramp, Other Arm, and Sports Dystonias - Phenomenology Atlas

Writer's Cramp - Phenomenology Atlas

C12c204 (Video 12.204): Writer's Cramp with Abnormal Pen Grip
Thumb, index, and middle finger dystonia triggered specifically during writing.

C12c205 (Video 12.205): Writer's Cramp with Alternative Grip Strategy
Thumb-base dystonia improved by holding the pen between different fingers.

C12c206 (Video 12.206): Writer's Cramp with Proximal Arm Involvement
Writing induces dystonia extending into the forearm and shoulder.

C12c207 (Video 12.207): Writer's Cramp with Finger Extension
Writing triggers dystonic extension of digits three through five.

C12c208 (Video 12.208): Wrist Extension Writer's Cramp
Writing activates wrist extension with thumb and index finger flexion.

C12c209 (Video 12.209): Proximal Writer's Cramp
Internal shoulder rotation and proximal arm dystonia interfere with writing.

C12c210 (Video 12.210): Task-Specific Writer's Cramp
Clear loss of writing fluency attributable to dystonic activation.

C12c211 (Video 12.211): Thumb-Index Writer's Cramp
Task-specific flexion dystonia affecting thumb and index finger.

C12c212 (Video 12.212): Multi-Finger Writer's Cramp
Flexion dystonia involving thumb, index, and middle fingers.

C12c213 (Video 12.213): Writer's Cramp with Typing Dystonia
Writing and keyboard use trigger prominent finger flexion.

C12c214 (Video 12.214): Writer's Cramp Involving Thumb and Index Finger
Classic task-specific hand dystonia extending to typing tasks.

C12c215 (Video 12.215): Writer's Cramp with Mirror Dystonia
Writing-induced dystonia accompanied by dystonic movements in the opposite hand.

C12c216 (Video 12.216): Grip-Responsive Writer's Cramp
Alternative pen positioning partially relieves dystonic posturing.

C12c217 (Video 12.217): Extensor Writer's Cramp
Thumb extension dystonia disrupts pen control during writing.

C12c218 (Video 12.218): Writer's Cramp with Adaptive Techniques
Use of multiple compensatory pen grips to improve handwriting.

C12c219 (Video 12.219): Flexor Writer's Cramp
Thumb, index finger, and wrist flexion relieved by changing pen position.

C12c220 (Video 12.220): Mirror Dystonia Demonstration
Writing with the unaffected hand triggers dystonic movements of the affected limb.

C12c221 (Video 12.221): Writer's Cramp with Contralateral Overflow
Mirror flexion dystonia elicited by writing with the opposite hand.

C12c222 (Video 12.222): Writer's Cramp Clarified by Mirror Dystonia
Mirror overflow identifies the primary dystonic movement pattern.

C12c223 (Video 12.223): Severe Writer's Cramp with Glove Sensory Trick
Marked writing dystonia improved by wearing a glove.

C12c224 (Video 12.224): Mixed Flexion-Extension Writer's Cramp
Complex finger dystonia partially responsive to sensory tricks.

C12c225 (Video 12.225): Severe Writer's Cramp with Mirror Overflow
Pronounced mirror dystonia accompanying task-specific writing impairment.

C12c226 (Video 12.226): Severe Writer's Cramp with Temporary Improvement
Brief improvement after strenuous hand exercise.

C12c227 (Video 12.227): Writer's Cramp with Counter-Pressure Maneuver
Mechanical opposition of dystonic movement modestly improves handwriting.

C12c228 (Video 12.228): Writer's Cramp Before and After Botulinum Toxin
Ultrasound-guided treatment significantly improves writing and mirror dystonia.

C12c229 (Video 12.229): Complex Writer's Cramp Responding to Botulinum Toxin
Enhanced writing speed, fluidity, and reduction of dystonic posturing after treatment.

C12c230 (Video 12.230): Extension-Type Writer's Cramp
Improved writing performance following targeted botulinum toxin injections.

Other Arm and Sports Dystonias

C12c231 (Video 12.231): Texting and Typing Dystonia
Task-specific flexion of the index finger during texting and typing, improved by removing the index finger from the motor task ("fingerectomy maneuver").

C12c232 (Video 12.232): Archery Dystonia
Task-specific scapular dystonia impairing stabilization of the bow during archery.

C12c233 (Video 12.233): Table Tennis Dystonia
Complex dystonia involving elbow adduction, flexion, and forearm supination disrupting paddle control.

C12c234 (Video 12.234): Baseball Throwing Dystonia
Task-specific throwing dystonia causing loss of control during baseball throws from shortstop to first base.

C12c235 (Video 12.235): Finger Dystonia with Typing Impairment
Index finger extension dystonia improved after targeted lumbrical botulinum toxin injections.

C12c236 (Video 12.236): Upper Limb Dystonia with Mirror Overflow
Right hand dystonia affecting writing and typing, associated with mirror movements.

C12c237 (Video 12.237): Tennis Dystonia
Task-specific dystonia triggered while gripping and using a tennis racquet.

C12c238 (Video 12.238): Rest and Postural Hand Dystonia
Dystonic finger and wrist flexion most apparent during supination.

C12c239 (Video 12.239): Proximal Shoulder Girdle Dystonia
Complex dystonic movements involving the scapula and shoulder at rest.

Cervical Dystonia - Phenomenology Atlas

Cervical Dystonia - Phenomenology Atlas

C12c165 (Video 12.165): Cervical Dystonia, Predominantly Torticollis
Right torticollis activated by speaking, improved by touching the chin and demonstrating the "closing-the-loop" sensory trick phenomenon.

C12c166 (Video 12.166): Left Rotational Cervical Dystonia
Jerky left torticollis relieved by speech and by touching the forehead or cheek.

C12c167 (Video 12.167): Cervical Dystonia with State Function Behavior
Rightward torticollis improved by chin sensory geste and partially normalized while running.

C12c168 (Video 12.168): Severe Rotational Torticollis
Marked rightward torticollis improved by sensory tricks and significantly ameliorated during running.

C12c169 (Video 12.169): Torticollis with Laterocollis
Rightward torticollis and leftward tilt relieved by leaning the head against a wall or touching the chin.

C12c170 (Video 12.170): Cervical Dystonia with Sternocleidomastoid Hypertrophy
Left torticollis and right tilt accompanied by prominent hypertrophy of the right sternocleidomastoid muscle.

C12c171 (Video 12.171): Cervical Dystonia with Imagined Geste
Left turn and right tilt improved by both actual and imagined sensory tricks.

C12c172 (Video 12.172): Cervical Dystonia with Dystonic Tremor
Jerky head tremor with left torticollis and right tilt relieved by touching the posterior neck.

C12c173 (Video 12.173): Mixed Torticollis and Laterocollis
Leftward turn and right tilt improved by facial sensory tricks and support against a wall.

C12c174 (Video 12.174): Cervical Dystonia with Mild Dystonic Tremor
Combined torticollis, laterocollis, and head tremor responding to sensory gestes.

C12c175 (Video 12.175): Task-Activated Cervical Dystonia
Right torticollis and left tilt markedly worsened by texting and writing.

C12c176 (Video 12.176): Cervical Dystonia with Ponytail Geste
Left turn and right tilt relieved by touching the face or pulling a ponytail.

C12c177 (Video 12.177): Cervical Dystonia with Nasal Sensory Trick
Leftward turn and right tilt partially improved by pinching the nose.

C12c178 (Video 12.178): Fixed Cervical Dystonia
Right torticollis and left tilt with restricted range of motion and diminished response to prior sensory tricks.

C12c179 (Video 12.179): Cervical Dystonia with Marked Muscle Hypertrophy
Left torticollis and tilt associated with striking sternocleidomastoid enlargement.

C12c180 (Video 12.180): Severe Cervical Dystonia
Forceful leftward turn, right tilt, and shoulder elevation with marked improvement after botulinum toxin treatment.

C12c181 (Video 12.181): Evolving Cervical Dystonia Pattern
Initially left-sided torticollis evolving over time into right torticollis with dystonic tremor.

C12c182 (Video 12.182): Cervical Dystonia with Lateral Shift
Leftward torticollis associated with lateral head shift and mild retrocollis.

C12c183 (Video 12.183): Shift-Predominant Cervical Dystonia
Marked torticollis and lateral shift dramatically relieved by sensory tricks and running.

C12c184 (Video 12.184): Predominant Anterocollis
Forward neck flexion producing significant disability during standing and walking.

C12c185 (Video 12.185): Anterocollis with Sensory Gestes
Forward neck flexion improved by touching the forehead or chin.

C12c186 (Video 12.186): Progressive Anterocollis
Anterocollis associated with rotational and tilt components activated during gait.

C12c187 (Video 12.187): Complex Anterocollis
Anterocollis with torticollis and laterocollis demonstrating sensory tricks and improvement while running.

C12c188 (Video 12.188): Severe Retrocollis
Marked neck extension relieved by manually supporting the forehead.

C12c189 (Video 12.189): Walking-Induced Retrocollis
Jerky retrocollic movements becoming most apparent during ambulation.

C12c190 (Video 12.190): Retrocollis with Sensory Tricks
Retrocollis improved by chin touch, wall contact, and closing-the-loop maneuver.

C12c191 (Video 12.191): Mild Retrocollis with Torticollis
Retrocollis accompanied by leftward turn and left shoulder elevation.

C12c192 (Video 12.192): Retrocollis Activated by Writing
Retrocollis and torticollis worsened by writing and improved during walking.

C12c193 (Video 12.193): Retrocollis with Imagined Sensory Trick
Significant improvement using both real and imagined gestes.

C12c194 (Video 12.194): Retrocollis Controlled by External Supports
Retrocollis relieved by facial sensory tricks and a customized “sensory trick hat.”

C12c195 (Video 12.195): Shift-and-Turn Cervical Dystonia
Rightward torticollis associated with anterior head shift.

C12c196 (Video 12.196): Cervical Dystonia with Dystonic Tremor and Shift
Right torticollis and anterior shift normalized during running.

C12c197 (Video 12.197): Severe Shift Dystonia
Marked left torticollis and lateral shift improved by a mechanical support device.

C12c198 (Video 12.198): Anterior Head Shift Syndrome
Anterior translation with retrocollis demonstrating both positive and negative sensory tricks.

C12c199 (Video 12.199): Dystonic Head Tremor
Irregular multidirectional head tremor relieved by sensory gestures and null-point positioning.

C12c200 (Video 12.200): Dystonic Tremor with Torticollis
Jerky horizontal head tremor accompanying right torticollis.

C12c201 (Video 12.201): Severe Dystonic Head Tremor
Prominent head tremor partially controlled by manual stabilization.

C12c202 (Video 12.202): Complex Cervical Dystonic Tremor
Multidirectional jerky head oscillations markedly improved by sensory tricks.

C12c203 (Video 12.203): Closing-the-Loop Phenomenon
Demonstration of cervical dystonia sensory tricks requiring active patient-generated sensory feedback.

Spasmodic Dysphonia - Phenomenology Atlas

Spasmodic Dysphonia - Phenomenology Atlas

Abductor Spasmodic Dysphonia

C12c118 (Video 12.118): Mild Abductor Spasmodic Dysphonia
Breathy vocal breaks triggered by vowels and soft consonants.

C12c119 (Video 12.119): Sodium Oxybate-Responsive ABSD
Abductor vocal breaks significantly improved after sodium oxybate administration.

C12c120 (Video 12.120): Moderate Abductor Spasmodic Dysphonia
Breathy strained voice with partial response to sodium oxybate.

C12c121 (Video 12.121): ABSD with Sensory Feedback Maneuver
Improvement of vocal breaks by cupping hands behind the ears.

C12c122 (Video 12.122): ABSD with Writer's Cramp
Concurrent laryngeal and hand dystonia.

C12c123 (Video 12.123): Moderate ABSD
Frequent breathy vocal interruptions affecting connected speech.

C12c124 (Video 12.124): Classic ABSD
Task-specific breathy breaks reproduced by trigger sentences.

C12c125 (Video 12.125): Moderate-Severe ABSD
Telephone conversations markedly impaired while singing remains easier.

C12c126 (Video 12.126): Severe Abductor Dysphonia
Frequent vocal interruptions affecting nearly all speech.

C12c127 (Video 12.127): Near-Mute ABSD
Almost complete inability to generate fluent speech.

C12c128 (Video 12.128): Severe ABSD with Compensatory Strain
Abductor breaks partially compensated by excessive vocal effort.

C12c129 (Video 12.129): Advanced ABSD
Continuous vocal breaks significantly impairing communication.

C12c130 (Video 12.130): Severe Young-Onset ABSD
Frequent abductor vocal interruptions involving virtually every sentence.

C12c131 (Video 12.131): ABSD with Vocal Tremor
Breathy voice following botulinum toxin injections and superimposed vocal tremor.

C12c132 (Video 12.132): ABSD with Mild Vocal Tremor
Prominent abductor breaks with subtle oscillatory voice tremor.

C12c133 (Video 12.133): Abductor Dysphonia and Tremor
Speech improved by whispering or speaking in higher pitch.

C12c134 (Video 12.134): Vocal Tremor During Singing
ABSD associated with regular oscillatory tremor during singing.

C12c135 (Video 12.135): Severe ABSD with Tremor
Difficulty sustaining vowels due to combined tremor and vocal breaks.

C12c136 (Video 12.136): ABSD Improved with Sodium Oxybate
Modest improvement in both vocal tremor and vocal breaks.

C12c137 (Video 12.137): Singer with ABSD and Vocal Tremor
Task-specific dysphonia combined with prominent tremor during singing.

Adductor Spasmodic Dysphonia

C12c138 (Video 12.138): Mild Adductor Spasmodic Dysphonia
Subtle strangled vocal quality with intermittent adductor breaks.

C12c139 (Video 12.139): Sodium Oxybate-Responsive ADSD
Near-complete disappearance of adductor breaks after treatment.

C12c140 (Video 12.140): Moderate ADSD
Strangled voice quality and multiple adductor interruptions during phonation.

C12c141 (Video 12.141): Mild-Moderate ADSD
Relatively fluent speech interrupted by dystonic vocal strain.

C12c142 (Video 12.142): Raspy Adductor Dysphonia
Prominent vocal strain with relatively few overt breaks.

C12c143 (Video 12.143): Classic ADSD
Strained voice improving during whispering and singing.

C12c144 (Video 12.144): Moderate ADSD with Frequent Breaks
Speech disrupted by recurrent adductor interruptions.

C12c145 (Video 12.145): ADSD with Preserved Whispering
Characteristic vowel-triggered breaks with normal whispering.

C12c146 (Video 12.146): Moderate Adductor Dysphonia
Constricted, strained voice with significant vowel-induced spasms.

C12c147 (Video 12.147): ADSD with Compensatory Speech Strategies
Patient adapts to persistent vocal strain and voice interruptions.

C12c148 (Video 12.148): Moderate-Severe ADSD
Frequent adductor breaks and markedly strained speech.

C12c149 (Video 12.149): Severe Adductor Dysphonia
Near-continuous constricted phonation affecting all vocal output.

C12c150 (Video 12.150): Severe ADSD with Voice Dropout
Sustained adductor spasms causing periodic inability to phonate.

C12c151 (Video 12.151): Advanced Adductor Dysphonia
Voice perceived as trapped in the throat because of persistent spasms.

C12c152 (Video 12.152): Young Adult with Severe ADSD
Marked impact of dystonic voice disorder on everyday life.

C12c153 (Video 12.153): Singing-Induced Adductor Dysphonia
Task-specific dystonia triggered predominantly during singing.

C12c154 (Video 12.154): Singer's Dystonia
Adductor breaks occurring exclusively during sustained singing.

C12c155 (Video 12.155): Register-Specific Singer's Dystonia
Breaks occurring in middle register while high register remains preserved.

C12c156 (Video 12.156): Singing Dystonia with Compensation
Professional singer adapts technique to overcome dystonic interruptions.

C12c157 (Video 12.157): ADSD with Vocal Tremor
Combined adductor vocal breaks and oscillatory phonatory tremor.

C12c158 (Video 12.158): Severe ADSD with Tremor
Strangled speech accompanied by prominent vocal oscillations.

C12c159 (Video 12.159): ADSD with Reading-Induced Tremor
Vocal tremor emerging during connected speech.

C12c160 (Video 12.160): Adductor Dysphonia with Oscillatory Tremor
Regular phonatory oscillations combined with mild adductor spasms.

C12c161 (Video 12.161): ADSD with Fast Vocal Tremor
Fine rapid tremor superimposed on adductor voice breaks.

C12c162 (Video 12.162): Moderate-Severe ADSD and Vocal Tremor
Strangled voice accompanied by audible rhythmic oscillation.

C12c163 (Video 12.163): Mixed Tremor and Adductor Dysphonia
Vocal tremor interrupted intermittently by adductor spasms.

C12c164 (Video 12.164): Advanced ADSD with Vocal Tremor
Continuous vocal tremor and persistent dystonic voice breaks.

Embouchure Dystonia (Brass and Woodwind) - Phenomenology Atlas

Embouchure Dystonia (Brass and Woodwind)

C12c78 (Video 12.78): Trumpet Embouchure Tremor
Middle-register embouchure tremor consistent with tremor-variant embouchure dystonia.

C12c79 (Video 12.79): Trumpet Embouchure Tremor with Mentalis Activation
Visible and audible lip tremor involving lower facial musculature.

C12c80 (Video 12.80): Trumpet Lip-Pulling Embouchure Dystonia
Downward pulling of lip corners causing air leakage during performance.

C12c81 (Video 12.81): Severe Trumpet Lip-Pulling Dystonia
Loss of embouchure control affecting multiple playing registers.

C12c82 (Video 12.82): Task-Specific Meige Syndrome in a Trumpeter
Lower facial dystonia triggered simply by assuming playing position.

C12c83 (Video 12.83): Task-Specific Meige with Sensory Trick
Blepharospasm and facial dystonia abolished by self-generated facial touch.

C12c84 (Video 12.84): French Horn Embouchure Tremor
Task-specific embouchure tremor confined to a narrow register range.

C12c85 (Video 12.85): French Horn Embouchure Tremor
High-register tremor worsened after botulinum toxin treatment.

C12c86 (Video 12.86): French Horn Tremor Variant
Rapid visible embouchure tremor during performance.

C12c87 (Video 12.87): French Horn Task-Specific Tremor
Register-specific embouchure oscillations.

C12c88 (Video 12.88): French Horn Tremor Affecting Articulation
Greater impairment during separated attacks than slurred notes.

C12c89 (Video 12.89): Mouthpiece-Induced Embouchure Tremor
Visible tremor present both with mouthpiece and instrument.

C12c90 (Video 12.90): Essential Tremor Presenting as Embouchure Tremor
Jaw, facial, and vocal tremor affecting brass performance.

C12c91 (Video 12.91): French Horn Lip-Pulling Dystonia
Difficulty producing connected slurred notes.

C12c92 (Video 12.92): Articulation Failure Embouchure Dystonia
Loss of clarity at attack initiation in exposed orchestral passages.

C12c93 (Video 12.93): Advanced Horn Embouchure Dystonia
Difficulty initiating and sustaining tones in upper register.

C12c94 (Video 12.94): Jaw and Tongue Embouchure Dystonia
Jaw retraction and lingual tightening disrupting performance.

C12c95 (Video 12.95): Trombone Embouchure Tremor
Middle-register embouchure tremor causing difficulty sustaining pitch and tone production.

C12c96 (Video 12.96): Trombone Tremor Variant of Embouchure Dystonia
Visible and audible embouchure tremor most prominent in middle and low registers.

C12c97 (Video 12.97): Trombone Lip-Pulling Dystonia
Loss of articulation clarity during note initiation improved by mechanically pulling the lip corners laterally.

C12c98 (Video 12.98): Severe Trombone Lip-Pulling Dystonia
Lateral separation of the lips producing air leakage and impaired tone control.

C12c99 (Video 12.99): Trombone Embouchure Dystonia with Sensory Trick
Lip-pulling dystonia relieved by touching the cheek, improving note attacks.

C12c100 (Video 12.100): Trombone Lip-Lock Dystonia
Involuntary lip clamping causing delayed articulation and impaired note initiation.

C12c101 (Video 12.101): Lip-Lock Embouchure Dystonia
Failure of lip release during articulation resulting in delayed sound production.

C12c102 (Video 12.102): Sensory-Responsive Lip-Lock Dystonia
Improved articulation through facial sensory trick application.

C12c103 (Video 12.103): Lip-Lock Dystonia with Multiple Sensory Tricks
Improvement in attacks by touching the chin or jaw.

C12c104 (Video 12.104): Tuba Embouchure Tremor
Fine low-register embouchure tremor affecting sustained tone.

C12c105 (Video 12.105): Subtle Tuba Embouchure Dystonia
Selective impairment of highly exposed solo note attacks.

C12c106 (Video 12.106): Velocity-Dependent Lip-Lock Dystonia
Articulation failure occurring only during very slow note attacks.

C12c107 (Video 12.107): Didgeridoo Task-Induced Tremor
Jaw and facial tremor during didgeridoo performance, likely representing task-induced essential tremor.

C12c108 (Video 12.108): Alphorn Embouchure Tremor
Visible and audible tremor of embouchure control during performance.

Woodwind Embouchure Dystonia

C12c109 (Video 12.109): Flute Lip-Pulling Dystonia
Upper-lip protrusion misdirecting airflow, markedly improved by sensory tricks.

C12c110 (Video 12.110): Flute Embouchure Dystonia with Bilateral Sensory Gestes
Upper-lip dystonia improved by internal and external tactile cues.

C12c111 (Video 12.111): Instrument-Specific Jaw Dystonia
Normal flute playing but complete inability to control the saxophone embouchure.

C12c112 (Video 12.112): Jaw Embouchure Dystonia with Writer's Cramp
Combined flute, clarinet, and writing dystonia sharing a common dystonic mechanism.

C12c113 (Video 12.113): Flute Embouchure Dystonia with Mirror Writer's Cramp
Jaw dystonia during flute performance with coexisting hand dystonia.

C12c114 (Video 12.114): Laryngeal and Pharyngeal Embouchure Dystonia
Task-specific laryngeal and pharyngeal dystonia affecting saxophone tone production.

C12c115 (Video 12.115): Embouchure Dystonia with Spread to Rest
Jaw dystonia progressing beyond instrument playing to occur spontaneously.

C12c116 (Video 12.116): Tongue Embouchure Dystonia with Speech Spread
Tongue dystonia initially limited to flute playing, later affecting speech.

C12c117 (Video 12.117): Tongue Embouchure Dystonia
Persistent speech impairment after spread from task-specific flute dystonia.

Blepharospasm, Meige Syndrome, Oromandibular Dystonia - Phenomenology Atlas

Blepharospasm

C12c36 (Video 12.36): Mild Blepharospasm
Increased spontaneous blink rate representing early orbicularis oculi dystonia.

C12c37 (Video 12.37): Moderate Blepharospasm
Excess blinking and forced eyelid closure exacerbated during speech.

C12c38 (Video 12.38): Severe Blepharospasm with Eyelid Opening Apraxia
Functionally disabling blepharospasm partially improved by sensory tricks.

C12c39 (Video 12.39): Blepharospasm with State Function Behavior
Severe eye closure abolished during reading aloud and improved by sensory gestes.

C12c40 (Video 12.40): Blepharospasm Improved by Activity Change
Eye closure improving with speech, counting aloud, and backward walking.

C12c41 (Video 12.41): Severe Blepharospasm with Forceful Geste
Persistent tonic eye closure relieved by manual eye opening.

C12c42 (Video 12.42): Blepharospasm with Eyelid Opening Apraxia
Marked inability to reopen the eyes after blink or voluntary eye closure.

C12c43 (Video 12.43): Functionally Blinding Blepharospasm
Severe blepharospasm and eyelid opening apraxia producing profound disability.

Meige Syndrome

C12c44 (Video 12.44): Meige Syndrome with Cervical Dystonia
Severe craniosegmental dystonia featuring blepharospasm, jaw-opening dystonia, lower facial dystonia, and cervical dystonia with forceful sensory geste.

C12c45 (Video 12.45): Meige Syndrome with Torticollis
Blepharospasm and cervical dystonia improving transiently during quiet sitting.

C12c46 (Video 12.46): Classic Meige Syndrome
Blepharospasm and jaw-opening dystonia alleviated by oral sensory tricks.

C12c47 (Video 12.47): Severe Jaw-Opening Meige Syndrome
Prominent jaw-opening dystonia impairing speech and eating, improved by syringe and facial sensory gestes.

C12c48 (Video 12.48): Oromandibular Dystonia with Oral Appliance Response
Speech and eating markedly improved using customized dental devices.

C12c49 (Video 12.49): Meige Syndrome with Respiratory Dystonia
Blepharospasm, lower facial dystonia, anterocollis, and dystonic respiratory interruptions during speech.

C12c50 (Video 12.50): Meige Syndrome with Adductor Spasmodic Dysphonia
Prominent lower facial dystonia accompanied by strangulated dystonic speech.

C12c51 (Video 12.51): Craniosegmental Dystonia with State Function Phenomena
Blepharospasm, torticollis, and facial dystonia improving with backward walking and sensory tricks.

C12c52 (Video 12.52): Severe Meige Syndrome
Tonic blepharospasm and platysma dystonia demonstrating classic state-function behavior.

C12c53 (Video 12.53): Advanced Craniosegmental Dystonia
Blepharospasm, jaw-closing dystonia, and torticollis partially relieved by sensory gestes.

Oromandibular Dystonia

C12c54 (Video 12.54): Jaw-Deviation Dystonia
Leftward jaw deviation at rest and during speech relieved by facial and dental sensory tricks.

C12c55 (Video 12.55): Lateral Jaw Dystonia
Rightward involuntary jaw deviation improved by placing an object between the teeth.

C12c56 (Video 12.56): Isolated Jaw Dystonia
Leftward jaw deviation improving with low-dose trihexyphenidyl.

C12c57 (Video 12.57): Jaw-Opening and Lingual Dystonia
Tongue and jaw dystonia significantly impairing chewing and swallowing.

C12c58 (Video 12.58): Severe Jaw-Opening Dystonia
Marked speech impairment improved by oral and facial sensory tricks.

C12c59 (Video 12.59): Severe Oromandibular Dystonia
Jaw-opening dystonia interfering with speech and eating, responsive to sensory tricks and diazepam.

C12c60 (Video 12.60): Jaw-Closing Dystonia
Task-induced jaw clenching relieved by dental sensory geste.

C12c61 (Video 12.61): Complex Oromandibular Dystonia
Jaw-opening and lateral jaw movements attenuated by oral sensory tricks.

C12c62 (Video 12.62): Oromandibular Dystonia with Reduced Awareness
Jaw-opening and lower facial dystonia perceived by the patient as abnormal gum sensations.

C12c63 (Video 12.63): Speech- and Eating-Induced Oromandibular Dystonia
Jaw-opening and tongue dystonia markedly impairing mastication.

C12c64 (Video 12.64): Jaw Malalignment Dystonia
Task-induced jaw misalignment relieved by dental prosthesis.

C12c65 (Video 12.65): Paradoxical Oromandibular Dystonia
Facial and jaw movements worse at rest but improved during speaking.

C12c66 (Video 12.66): Jaw-Opening Dystonia with Lingual Involvement
Speech and chewing trigger complex jaw and tongue dystonia.

C12c67 (Video 12.67): Eating-Induced Oromandibular Dystonia
Meal-triggered dystonia producing severe swallowing dysfunction.

C12c68 (Video 12.68): Lower Facial and Lingual Dystonia
Speech-induced tongue movements and eating-triggered facial dystonia improved by sensory tricks.

C12c69 (Video 12.69): Severe Craniosegmental Dystonia During Eating
Eating markedly exacerbates facial, neck, and jaw dystonic movements.

C12c70 (Video 12.70): Velopharyngeal Dystonia
Hypophonic, nasal speech with improvement on trihexyphenidyl.

C12c71 (Video 12.71): Professional Broadcaster with Velopharyngeal Dystonia
Progressive speech deterioration with preserved whispering and singing.

C12c72 (Video 12.72): Complex Velopharyngeal Dystonia
Forced pseudospastic speech with preservation of whispering.

C12c73 (Video 12.73): Speech-Specific Oromandibular Dystonia
Selective dystonic slurring of specific words and phonemes with preserved singing.

C12c74 (Video 12.74): Speech-Induced Meige Syndrome
Lower facial, jaw, and cervical dystonia triggered exclusively by speaking.

C12c75 (Video 12.75): Talking-Induced Jaw-Opening Dystonia
Severe speech impairment despite preserved eating and swallowing.

C12c76 (Video 12.76): Actor with Speech-Induced Meige Syndrome
Task-specific speaking dystonia abolished by sensory tricks, accent changes, and singing.

C12c77 (Video 12.77): Prayer-Induced Oromandibular Dystonia
Task-specific facial dystonia triggered only during Arabic prayer recitation.

DYT1, DYT3, DYT5, DYT6, DYT12, DYT28 - Phenomneology Atlas

DYT1, DYT3, DYT5, DYT6, DYT12, DYT28 - Phenomneology Atlas

DYT1 Dystonia

C12c1 (Video 12.1): DYT1 Writer's Cramp and Postural Arm Dystonia
Young boy with right upper limb dystonia characterized by ulnar deviation of the hand, dystonic posturing during wingbeat position, task-specific writer's cramp, and dystonic activation during pouring tasks.

C12c2 (Video 12.2): DYT1 Writer's Cramp with Mirror Dystonia
Right wrist dystonia and severe writer's cramp accompanied by mirror dystonia triggered by writing or even imagining writing with the opposite hand.

C12c3 (Video 12.3): Mild Upper-Limb DYT1 Dystonia
Subtle postural dystonia of the right hand with thumb-index finger writer's cramp and associated mirror dystonic movements.

C12c4 (Video 12.4): DYT1 Foot Dystonia
Severe dystonic plantarflexion and toe flexion of the right foot causing marked gait impairment and fixed abnormal posture.

C12c5 (Video 12.5): DYT1 Leg Dystonia with State Function Phenomenon
Walking-induced inversion and plantarflexion dystonia improving during running and backward walking.

C12c6 (Video 12.6): Lower Extremity DYT1 Dystonia
Complex gait dystonia with ankle and knee flexion triggered during walking and improved with backward gait.

C12c7 (Video 12.7): Severe Generalized Childhood-Onset DYT1 Dystonia
Rapidly progressive generalized dystonia with prominent opisthotonus successfully treated with bilateral GPi deep brain stimulation.

C12c8 (Video 12.8): Chronic Upper-Limb DYT1 Dystonia
Longstanding left arm dystonia with null point phenomenon, dystonic tremor, severe writer's cramp, and preserved gait.

C12c9 (Video 12.9): Hemidystonic DYT1 Phenotype
Right-sided arm and leg dystonia with null point behavior, mirror dystonia, and dramatic improvement after GPi DBS.

C12c10 (Video 12.10): Early DYT1 Dystonia
Childhood-onset writer's cramp and gait-induced lower extremity dystonia improved by running and backward walking.

C12c11 (Video 12.11): DYT1 Dystonia with Adductor Dysphonia
Writer's cramp associated with spasmodic dysphonia and mild postural upper-limb dystonia.

C12c12 (Video 12.12): Progressive DYT1 Foot Dystonia
Severe lower-limb dystonia and writer's cramp markedly improved with trihexyphenidyl and later GPi DBS.

C12c13 (Video 12.13): Dystonic Storm in DYT1
Severe generalized dystonia with retrocollic arching, initially misdiagnosed as functional, subsequently improved after DBS.

C12c14 (Video 12.14): Adult DYT1 Dystonia with Camptocormia
Generalized dystonia with spasmodic dysphonia, sensory tricks, upper-limb dystonia, and classic “dromedary gait.”

C12c15 (Video 12.15): Severe DYT1 Dystonia with Dystonic Storm
Childhood generalized dystonia complicated by DBS infection, hardware removal, and recurrent dystonic storm.

C12c16 (Video 12.16): Familial DYT1 Dystonia
Multigenerational DYT1 dystonia characterized by arm tremor, severe writer's cramp, truncal dystonia, and gait abnormalities.

DYT3 (X-Linked Dystonia-Parkinsonism)

C12c17 (Video 12.17): DYT3 Dystonia-Parkinsonism
Blepharospasm, torticollis, left upper limb tremor, and superimposed parkinsonian features in a Filipino patient.

C12c18 (Video 12.18): DYT3 with Medication Wearing-Off
Reemergence of hand dystonia and eyelid-opening apraxia several hours after trihexyphenidyl dosing.

C12c19 (Video 12.19): DYT3 Cervical Dystonia
Rightward torticollis and laterocollis demonstrating benefit from a sensory trick.

C12c20 (Video 12.20): Parkinsonian Phase of DYT3
Predominantly symmetric akinetic-rigid parkinsonism with minimal residual dystonia.

Dopa-Responsive Dystonia (DYT5)

C12c21 (Video 12.21): Classic Dopa-Responsive Dystonia
Lower-extremity dystonia with diurnal fluctuation showing complete resolution after levodopa treatment.

C12c22 (Video 12.22): DYT5 Mimicking Spastic Diplegia
Scissoring dystonic gait dramatically responsive to low-dose levodopa.

C12c23 (Video 12.23): Treated DYT5
Normal neurological examination following levodopa initiation in genetically confirmed disease.

C12c24 (Video 12.24): Early Dopa-Responsive Dystonia
Subtle gait stiffness and hyperreflexia improving with very low-dose levodopa.

C12c25 (Video 12.25): Adult Manifestation of DYT5
Mild spastic gait and tremor despite treatment.

C12c26 (Video 12.26): Cervical and Limb Dopa-Responsive Dystonia
Torticollis and writer's cramp demonstrating classic sensory tricks.

DYT6 Dystonia

C12c27 (Video 12.27): DYT6 with Cranial Involvement
Speech-induced cranial dystonia associated with task-specific writer's cramp.

C12c28 (Video 12.28): Advanced DYT6 Dystonia
Complex cranio-cervical dystonia with prominent sensory tricks and task-induced arm dystonia.

DYT12 (Rapid-Onset Dystonia-Parkinsonism)

C12c29 (Video 12.29): Juvenile Rapid-Onset Dystonia-Parkinsonism
Generalized bradykinesia, hypophonia, limb dystonia, and spastic gait.

C12c30 (Video 12.30): Progressive DYT12
Asymmetric parkinsonism evolving into combined dystonia-parkinsonism over years.

C12c31 (Video 12.31): Levodopa-Responsive DYT12 Phenotype
Mixed dystonia and parkinsonism with partial improvement in speech, gait, and limb function.

C12c32 (Video 12.32): Advanced DYT12 Syndrome
Severe dysarthria, bulbar dystonia, parkinsonism, and prominent upper-limb posturing.

C12c33 (Video 12.33): DYT12 with Oculogyric Crisis
Painful dystonic attacks and sustained upgaze episodes dramatically responsive to levodopa.

DYT28 (KMT2B Dystonia)

C12c34 (Video 12.34): Early DYT28 Dystonia
Writer's cramp and gait-induced generalized dystonia improving during running and skipping.

C12c35 (Video 12.35): DYT28 with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Severe generalized dystonia, spasticity, and scissoring gait associated with SHANK-related neurodevelopmental disease.