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Carotid Case 6: Unbuttoned

When seen in clinic, the patient had no apparent motor deficit: there was no weakness and no gait abnormality.  Although movements of the arms and hands were fluid and skillful, he had to labor for several minutes to button a single shirt button because he seemed not to understand how a button relates to a buttonhole. His repeated efforts to put on a pair of work gloves were equally unsuccessful, and he ended up with the left glove on his right hand and 3 fingers where his thumb should go. Throughout all these efforts his face remained blank, with no indication of either concern or frustration. He spoke in a monotone. Pinprick, temperature and touch sensation were normal over both sides of the face, arm and leg when they were tested separately. However, when tactile stimuli were presented simultaneously on the left and right, only the right-sided stimuli were recognized. He could not see objects on his left with either eye (visual field testing showed an incomplete left homonymous hemianopsia). 

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