Abstract
An 86-year-old woman presented with an acute onset of confusion, garbled speech, and decreased left arm movement. On exam, she had a forced right gaze, left homonymous hemianopsia, left hemiparesis, and left face and arm hypoesthesia. Forty-eight hours after successful revascularization therapies, the patient started complaining of abnormal involuntary movements. This manus- cript discusses the phenomenology of these involuntary movements, their neuroanatomical correlates, management, and evolution. Neurologists should be mindful of post-stroke movement disorders, their latency period after stroke, and the functional-anatomic networks involved.
