Hirayama Disease: The Hidden Cause of Upper Limb Weakness — MRI-Based Diagnosis Every Clinician Must Know
Introduction: A Missed Diagnosis in Medical Imaging A 20-year-old man presents with progressive weakness in his right hand. No sensory loss. No pain. Just subtle motor decline. Initial MRI (neutral position) appears nearly normal. But the diagnosis is hidden — only revealed during dynamic imaging . This is the clinical reality of Hirayama disease , a rare yet critical condition that often evades standard radiology interpretation and leads to delayed diagnosis. What is Hirayama Disease? Hirayama disease, also known as: Juvenile muscular atrophy Monomelic amyotrophy Flexion-induced cervical myelopathy …is a non-progressive lower motor neuron disease affecting young males. It is one of the most important rare imaging diagnoses in modern medical imaging , especially in Asia. Pathophysiology: Why Standard MRI Fails Hirayama disease is fundamentally a dynamic spinal cord disorder . Key Mechanism: Disproportionate growth between: Vertebral column Dura mater During neck flexion: Posterior ...