Moussavou Cedrick
Wernekink commissure syndrome was first described in 1941 by Lhermitte, but it wasn't until 1958 that it made its first appearance in a publication at the 22nd International Neurological Meeting. This syndrome takes its name from the first illustrations made in 1840 by Franz Joseph Julius Wilbrand, the successor of Friedrich Christian Wernekink (1798-1835). Wernekink's commissure syndrome is characterized by the combination of bilateral cerebellar ataxia with dysarthria or anarthria, associated with occasional internuclear ophthalmoplegia and delayed-onset palatal myoclonus (Holmes tremor), secondary to caudal paramedian midbrain infarction.
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