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Brain, Vol. 117, No. 3, 477-486, 1994
© 1994 Guarantors of Brain


research-article

Cortical reflex negative myoclonus

Hiroshi Shibasaki1,, Akio Ikeda1, Takashi Nagamine1, Tatsuya Mima1, Kiyohito Terada1, Nobuyuki Nishitani1, Masutaro Kanda1, Shin Takano2, Tsutomu Hanazono2, Nobuo Kohara2, Ryuji Kaji2 and Jun Kimura2

1Departments of Brain Pathophysiology Kyoto, Japan 2Departments of Neurology, Kyoto University School of Medicine Kyoto, Japan

Correspondence to: Correspondence to: Hiroshi Shibasaki, Department of Brain Pathophysiology, Kyoto University School of Medicine, Shogoin, Sakyo, Kyoto, 606–01 Japan

Three patients with progressive myoclonic epilepsy (PME), two of them clinically manifesting only negative myoclonus and the other manifesting both positive and negative myoclonus, were electrophysiologically investigated, and compared with two other patients with PME presenting with only positive myoclonus. Electric stimulation of the median nerve during sustained active wrist extension in the three patients with negative myoclonus often elicited a short lapse of the posture in the stimulated hand associated with a silent period in the muscle discharge with or without being preceded by and abrupt increase in the muscle discharge (C reflex). The occurrence of the stimulus-induced silent period was significantly correlated with that of the giant somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs), and in two patients the silent period was elicited also in the opposite (non-stimulated) hand when the giant SEP was recorded at the hemisphere ipsilateral to the stimulus as well. In one patient, the duration of the silent period was positively correlated with the amplitude of the cortical SEP. Furthermore, the duration of the induced silent period was closely related to the recovery function of SEP in each individual case. In contrast, in the two patients manifesting only positive myoclonus, the silent period was not elicited by the peripheral stimulation, and the somatosensory cortex was hyperexcitable immediately after the peripheral stimulus. Thus, this stimulus-sensitive negative myoclonus is mediated by a transcortical reflex mechanism, and corresponds to the negative form of the cortical reflex myoclonus (‘cortical reflex negative myoclonus’).

negative myoclonus; asterixis; transcortical reflex; cortical myoclonus; cortical reflex negative myoclonus

Received November 9, 1993. Revised January 14, 1994. Accepted February 16, 1994.


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