Torticollis
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Basics
Description
- Torticollis is a symptom, not a disease
- “Twisted neck” (L. tortus, twisted + collum, neck)
- A fixed or dynamic posturing of the head and neck
- Synonym(s):
- Cervical dystonia
- Wry neck
Etiology
Local- Acute wry neck:
- Develops overnight without provocation
- Most prevalent
- Self-limited, symptoms resolve in 1–2 wk
- Cervical spine disease
- Fracture
- Dislocation, subluxation
- Infections
- Spondylosis
- Tumor
- Scar tissue–producing injuries
- Ligamentous laxity in atlantoaxial region
- Inflammatory disease causing muscular damage:
- Myositis
- Lymphadenitis
- Tuberculosis
- Myasthenia gravis
- Neuritis of the auriculotemporal branch of the trigeminal nerve
- Infections of surrounding soft tissues:
- Nasopharyngeal abscess
- Retropharyngeal abscess
- Cervical adenitis
- Tonsillitis
- Meningitis
- Mastoiditis
- Sinusitis
Compensatory
- Tilt with essential head tremor (patient tilts head to suppress tremor)
- Ocular muscle palsy
Central
- Idiopathic spasmodic torticollis:
- Female > male
- Onset 31–60 yr old
- Dystonias:
- Torsion dystonia
- Generalized tardive dystonia
- Wilson disease
- λ-Dopa therapy
- Acute (neuroleptic drugs)
- Strychnine poisoning
Pediatric Considerations
Local
- Congenital:
- Odontoid hypoplasia
- Hemivertebrae
- Spina bifida
- Arnold–Chiari syndrome
- Pseudotumor of infancy
- Hypertrophy or absence of cervical musculature
- Otolaryngologic (Grisel syndrome):
- Vestibular dysfunction
- Otitis media
- Cervical adenitis
- Retropharyngeal abscess
- Pharyngitis
- Mastoiditis
- Esophageal reflux
- Syrinx with spinal cord tumor
- Trauma:
- Cervical fracture/dislocation
- Clavicular fractures
- Pneumomediastinum
- Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis
Compensatory
- Strabismus (fourth cranial nerve paresis)
- Congenital nystagmus
- Posterior fossa tumor
Central
- Dystonias:
- Torsion dystonia
- Drug induced
- Cerebral palsy
-- To view the remaining sections of this topic, please log in or purchase a subscription --
Basics
Description
- Torticollis is a symptom, not a disease
- “Twisted neck” (L. tortus, twisted + collum, neck)
- A fixed or dynamic posturing of the head and neck
- Synonym(s):
- Cervical dystonia
- Wry neck
Etiology
Local- Acute wry neck:
- Develops overnight without provocation
- Most prevalent
- Self-limited, symptoms resolve in 1–2 wk
- Cervical spine disease
- Fracture
- Dislocation, subluxation
- Infections
- Spondylosis
- Tumor
- Scar tissue–producing injuries
- Ligamentous laxity in atlantoaxial region
- Inflammatory disease causing muscular damage:
- Myositis
- Lymphadenitis
- Tuberculosis
- Myasthenia gravis
- Neuritis of the auriculotemporal branch of the trigeminal nerve
- Infections of surrounding soft tissues:
- Nasopharyngeal abscess
- Retropharyngeal abscess
- Cervical adenitis
- Tonsillitis
- Meningitis
- Mastoiditis
- Sinusitis
Compensatory
- Tilt with essential head tremor (patient tilts head to suppress tremor)
- Ocular muscle palsy
Central
- Idiopathic spasmodic torticollis:
- Female > male
- Onset 31–60 yr old
- Dystonias:
- Torsion dystonia
- Generalized tardive dystonia
- Wilson disease
- λ-Dopa therapy
- Acute (neuroleptic drugs)
- Strychnine poisoning
Pediatric Considerations
Local
- Congenital:
- Odontoid hypoplasia
- Hemivertebrae
- Spina bifida
- Arnold–Chiari syndrome
- Pseudotumor of infancy
- Hypertrophy or absence of cervical musculature
- Otolaryngologic (Grisel syndrome):
- Vestibular dysfunction
- Otitis media
- Cervical adenitis
- Retropharyngeal abscess
- Pharyngitis
- Mastoiditis
- Esophageal reflux
- Syrinx with spinal cord tumor
- Trauma:
- Cervical fracture/dislocation
- Clavicular fractures
- Pneumomediastinum
- Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis
Compensatory
- Strabismus (fourth cranial nerve paresis)
- Congenital nystagmus
- Posterior fossa tumor
Central
- Dystonias:
- Torsion dystonia
- Drug induced
- Cerebral palsy
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