Abstract:
The neuroanatomic substrate of the alien hand syndrome has
remained controversial due to the noncircumscribed nature of cerebral
injuries present in most cases. There have been few cases studied in
which damage was restricted to portions of the body of the callosum, and
most of those involved surgical callosotomy for tumors or epilepsy. We
report the case of a woman with a transient alien hand syndrome caused
by a stroke limited to the middle and posterior portions of the body of
the corpus callosum. This case provides supportive evidence for damage
to the midbody of the corpus callosum as the anatomic basis of
nondominant alien hand syndrome and conforms to a model of
interhemispheric motor disconnection as the essential component of this
unusual behavioral syndrome. This disconnection can occur with injuries
involving interhemispheric premotor and motor fibers traveling in the
midportion of the callosum in individuals with left hemisphere dominance
for motor activities