RESUMO
Chorea may be secondary to hyperosmolar nonketotic hyperglycemia, but such situation has rarely been described in adolescents, particularly as the initial and single manifestation of type 1 diabetes. We describe a case of a previously healthy 14-year-old girl with sudden onset of choreic movements on her left upper and lower limbs. Brain computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed an area of hyperdensity/hyperintensity affecting the right striatum. Blood glucose was 349 mg/dL. Despite adequate glucose control, the involuntary movements persisted and haloperidol, later substituted with valproate, was prescribed, with satisfactory but not complete resolution of the chorea. In 2 other occasions, when the patient had an infection and subsequent hyperglycemia, the chorea relapsed. Although not common, hyperglycemia must be considered in the differential diagnosis of acute hemichorea-hemiballismus in children and adolescents, particularly because it is a potentially reversible cause.