Publication

Teaching video neuroimages: Beevor sign: when the umbilicus is pointing to neurologic disease.

Journal Paper/Review - Jan 8, 2013

Units
PubMed
Doi
Contact

Citation
Mathys J, De Marchis G. Teaching video neuroimages: Beevor sign: when the umbilicus is pointing to neurologic disease. Neurology 2013; 80:e20.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
Neurology 2013; 80
Publication Date
Jan 8, 2013
Issn Electronic
1526-632X
Pages
e20
Brief description/objective

A 57-year-old man with genetically proven facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHMD 1A) demonstrated Beevor sign (video on the Neurology Web site at www.neurology.org). The upward movement of the umbilicus in a supine patient flexing the neck or sitting up is named after the British neurologist Charles Edward Beevor (1854-1908). He described a "marked elevation of the umbilicus in the act of sitting up" due to a paralyzed infraumbilical part of the rectus abdominis muscle, indicating a lesion of the spinal cord between the segments T10 and T12 or its nerve roots.(1) Beevor sign may also be present, as in our patient, in myopathies affecting the abdominal muscles, particularly in FSHMD, in which predominant involvement of the lower part of the rectus abdominis muscle is typical.(2).