Continuum Audio

Huntington Disease and Chorea with Dr. Kathryn Moore

Sep 3, 2025
Kathryn P. L. Moore, assistant professor of neurology and movement disorder specialist at Duke, explains chorea and Huntington disease in clear clinical terms. She describes how to distinguish chorea from tics and dystonia, practical exam tips like observing forehead movements, approaches to imaging and labs, genetic testing considerations, and pros and cons of symptomatic treatments.
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INSIGHT

How To Recognize True Chorea

  • Chorea presents as brief, involuntary movements that flow unpredictably from one body part to another.
  • If movements are predictable or repetitive, consider tics, dystonia, or myoclonus instead of chorea.
ADVICE

Use Age And Time Course To Narrow Causes

  • Use patient age and onset acuity to guide the chorea differential diagnosis.
  • Acute onset suggests structural or systemic causes; gradual progressive chorea points to genetic causes; subacute suggests autoimmune or paraneoplastic workup.
INSIGHT

Chorea Distribution Is Helpful But Not Definitive

  • Distribution can hint at causes but is often nonspecific; systemic issues can produce hemichorea.
  • Forehead involvement raises suspicion for Huntington disease; orofacial/dental movements suggest neuroacanthocytosis or tardive dyskinesia.
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