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Brain, Vol. 119, No. 4, 1307-1316, 1996
© 1996 Guarantors of Brain


research-article

Rhythmic cortical and muscle discharge in cortical myoclonus

P. Brown and C. D. Marsden

National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery and MRC Human Movement and Balance Unit, Institute of Neurology London, UK

Correspondence to: Correspondence to: Dr P. Brown, MRC Human Movement and Balance Unit, Institute of Neurology, London WCI 3BG, UK

Seven patients with cortical action myoclonus were studied. Six of these also had cortical reflex myoclonus. Surface and needle recordings were made from intrinsic hand muscles. Reflex and action jerks often consisted of a series of EMG bursts, some of which were polyphasic. The interval between repetitive EMG bursts was most commonly ~20 ms. The first EMG burst following median nerve stimulation varied in latency by a few milliseconds. Needle recordings of this reflex response showed more than one peak in half of the poststimulus time histograms (PSTH) collected. Multiple peaks were narrow and separated by as little as 4 ms. Single trials of the EEG activity over the sensorimotor cortex were recorded during stimulation or voluntary movement of the contralateral limb in five patients. Activity typically consisted of a rhythmic series of giant positive spike—slow negative wave complexes. Intervals between spikes tended to cluster at ~20 ms. Frequency histograms of spike to EMG burst intervals confirmed that spikes preceded muscle discharges but they showed more than one peak. These peaks were narrow and separated by as little as 3 ms. Thus, in patients with cortical myoclonus rhythmic muscle responses are driven by the sensorimotor cortex, which has a tendency to oscillatory activity. Two types of cortical rhythmicity are present. The first determines the frequency of repetitive EEG spikes and EMG bursts. The second is of higher frequency and underlies the multiple peaks separated by short intervals in PSTHs and histograms of spike to EMG burst intervals. Both phenomena may have their correlate in normal functioning.

cortical myoclonus; rhythmic discharges

Received February 16, 1996. Accepted April 14, 1996.


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