Case Report

Wrist Drop: Acute Ischemic Stroke or Radial Nerve Palsy or Both

Abstract

Stroke has many different symptoms, isolated hand weakness is the rarest one. Even less common are concomitant radial nerve lesions and ischemic stroke that leads to isolated hand weakness. We report a patient with sudden onset of right wrist drop mimicking radial nerve palsy, found to be due to a acute cerebral infarct and radial nerve palsy in the same time. A well-taken history of the patient's illness and thorough clinical examination can differentiate stroke from peripheral neuropathy as the cause of hand weakness. Modern neuroradiological methods such as brain MSCT or MRI can quickly and reliably indicate the etiology of a neurological disease. In every patient who presents with isolated arm weakness, and for whom we are not sure whether it is a lesion of the central or peripheral nervous system, cerebral infarction must be included as a critical differential diagnosis because it can divert attention from sometimes harmful thrombolytic therapy.

1. Melo TP, Bogousslavsky J, Van Melle G, et al. Pure motor stroke: a reappraisal. Neurology 1992;42:789–98.
2. Castaldo J, Rodgers J, Rae-Grant A, et al. Diagnosis and neuroimaging of acute stroke producing distal arm monoparesis. J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis 2003;12:253–8.
3. Takahashi N, Kawamura M, Araki S. Isolate hand palsy due to cortical infarction: localization of the motor hand area. Neurology, 2002;58:1412–14.
4. Gass A, Szabo K, Behrens S, Rossmanith C, Hennerici M. A diffusion-weighted MRI study of acute ischemic distal arm paresis. Neurology 2001; 57:1589-1594.
5. Timsit S, Logak M, Manai R, Rancurel G. Evolving isolated hand palsy: a parietal lobe syndrome associated with carotid artery disease. Brain 1997;120:2251-2257.
6. Lampl Y, Gilad R, Eshel Y, Sarova-Pinhas I. Strokes mimicking peripheral nerve lesions. Clin Neurol Neurosurg 1995; 97:203-207
7. Hassan KM. Fractional arm weakness as presentation of stroke due to posterior borderzone infarct: a report of two cases. Ann Indian Acad Neurol. 2010;13:302-304. doi:10.4103/0972-2327.74196.
8. Paciaroni M, Caso V, Milia P, et al. Isolated monoparesis following stroke. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2005;76:805-807.
9. Pikula A, Romero JR, Kase CS. An unusual clinical presentation of ischemic stroke due to carotid dissection: the wrist drop. Internet J Neurol. 2009;11(2).
Files
IssueVol 61 No 8 (2023) QRcode
SectionCase Report(s)
DOI https://doi.org/10.18502/acta.v61i8.14908
Keywords
Isolated hand weakness Stroke Radial nerve palsy

Rights and permissions
Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
How to Cite
1.
Marčić B, Marčić L, Marcic M. Wrist Drop: Acute Ischemic Stroke or Radial Nerve Palsy or Both. Acta Med Iran. 2024;61(8):488-491.