A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Lesion-Induced Blepharospasm: Epidemiology and Clinical Characteristics




AuthorsMyller, Elina; Halonen, Rolle; Corp, Daniel T.; Joutsa, Juho

PublisherUbiquity Press, Ltd.

Publishing placeLONDON

Publication year2025

JournalTremor and Other Hyperkinetic Movements

Journal name in sourceTremor and Other Hyperkinetic Movements

Journal acronymTREMOR OTHER HYPERK

Article number1025

Volume15

First page 25

Number of pages9

ISSN2160-8288

eISSN2160-8288

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.5334/tohm.1025

Web address https://doi.org/10.5334/tohm.1025

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/499184016


Abstract

Background: Lesion-induced blepharospasm is considered rare. However, this information is based on a small number of heterogenous retrospective cohorts without routine neuroimaging.

Objectives: To study the epidemiology and clinical characteristics of lesion-induced blepharospasm.

Methods: Patients with blepharospasm with uncertain etiology prior to brain imaging were systematically searched from the electronic medical records of Turku University Hospital (1996-2022). Clinical information and imaging data were extracted from the patients' records and re-evaluated by the investigators. Etiology of blepharospasm was evaluated by an in-depth review of the clinical information in the context of available literature on lesion-induced dystonias. The prevalence and annual incidence of blepharospasm were calculated based on the annual population count in the area.

Results: The search identified 57 patients, of whom four (7.0%) were considered to have lesion-induced blepharospasm, corresponding to a population-based prevalence of 2.5 per million and annual incidence of 0.3 per million. All patients with lesion-induced blepharospasm had atypical features, which were all significantly more common than in patients with idiopathic blepharospasm (P < 0.05).

Conclusions: Lesion-induced blepharospasm is more common than thought previously. However, all these patients showed atypical features, suggesting that brain imaging in blepharospasm can be limited to patients with atypical features only.

Highlights: This study investigated the epidemiology of lesion-induced blepharospasm by systematically re-evaluating all patients with blepharospasm with uncertain etiology prior to structural brain imaging from a university hospital (1996-2022).Our results show that lesion-induced blepharospasm is more common that thought previously (7.0% of included patients, prevalence 2.5 per million, annual incidence 0.3 per million).All patients with lesion-induced blepharospasm showed clinical features that were considered atypical for idiopathic blepharospasm, indicating that routine brain imaging is not needed in patients with typical symptoms.


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Funding information in the publication
The study was supported by the Finnish Parkinson Foundation, Maire Taponen Foundation, Turku University Foundation, Finnish Governmental Research Funding (VTR) , and Sigrid Juselius Foundation.


Last updated on 2025-28-08 at 12:47