## Abstract Focal myoclonus of peripheral origin, i.e., peripheral myoclonus (PM), is a rare disorder. Although PM always accompanies a lesion in the peripheral nerve, supplying the affected muscles, its mechanism remains unclear. Here we present a patient with focal myoclonus of the thigh muscles
Myoclonus of peripheral origin: Two case reports
✍ Scribed by Louise Tyvaert; Pierre Krystkowiak; Francois Cassim; Elise Houdayer; Alexandre Kreisler; Alain Destée; Luc Defebvre
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 321 KB
- Volume
- 24
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-3185
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
The concept of peripheral myoclonus is not yet fully accepted by the medical community because of the difficulty in establishing a cause‐and‐effect relationship between trauma and subsequent movement disorders. Here, we report two cases of patients suffering from peripheral myoclonus after nerve injury. The first patient experienced myoclonus of the 4th dorsal interosseous muscle several days after trauma to the elbow. The second patient presented myoclonus of the arm stump (combined with phantom‐limb pain) 1 year after amputation. In both cases, central nervous system function (spine and brain imaging, somesthetic evoked potentials, EEG back‐averaging) was normal. For the second patient, local infiltration of xylocaine and botulinum toxin into the stump scar rapidly stopped myoclonus and pain. Nerve injury induces ephaptic transmission and ectopic excitation. The physiopathological mechanisms of this type of myoclonus involve a peripheral generator that induces central (spinal) generator activity. © 2008 Movement Disorder Society
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