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.