Hypertrophic olivary degeneration and holmes' tremor secondary to bleeding of cavernous malformation in the midbrain

Tremor Other Hyperkinet Mov (N Y). 2014 Oct 8:4:264. doi: 10.7916/D8PG1PXT. eCollection 2014.

Abstract

Background: Hypertrophic olivary degeneration (HOD) is a rare phenomenon, probably related to transsynaptic degeneration of the inferior olivary nucleus. It usually occurs as a response to primary injury of dento-rubro-olivary pathways.

Case report: A young man developed Holmes' tremor 7 months after a cavernous malformation bleed in the midbrain. Typical findings of HOD were observed in the magnetic resonance images: bilateral and asymmetric hypertrophy of the olivary nucleus with slight hypersignal in T2-weighted images. Because of the striking disability related to drug-resistant tremor, the patient underwent stereotactic thalamotomy (nucleus ventralis intermedius of the thalamus/zona incerta) with pronounced functional improvement over time.

Discussion: Disruption of circuits in the Guillain-Mollaret triangle classically results in palatal myoclonus, however midbrain (Holmes') tremor can also occur, as we now describe.

Keywords: Olivary nucleus/pathology; central nervous system vascular malformations; magnetic resonance imaging; stereotaxic surgery; tremor/etiology.