## Abstract Patients with writer's cramp (WC) show abnormalities of sensorimotor integration possibly contributing to their motor deficit. We studied sensorimotor integration by determining shortโlatency afferent inhibition (SAI) in 12 WC patients and 10 ageโmatched healthy controls. A conditioning
Reciprocal inhibition in writer's cramp
โ Scribed by Rou-Shayn Chen; Chon-Haw Tsai; Dr. Chin-Song Lu
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 506 KB
- Volume
- 10
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-3185
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โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
We studied the inhibition of median Hโreflexes by conditioning stimuli on the radial nerve in 13 patients with writer's cramp, eight of the simple type and five of the dystonic type, and in 14 normal volunteers. The patients and controls were rightโhanded, and their right arms were studied. Asymptomatic left arms were also studied in nine of 13 patients. In the control group we identified three periods of inhibition, with maximum peaks at conditioningโtest intervals of 0 ms (41 ยฑ 17%), 20 ms (40 ยฑ 13%), and 100 ms (36 ยฑ 20%). In the patient group, the amplitudes of inhibition of these three periods in both arms were significantly less than those in the control group. However, there were no significant differences in the amplitudes of inhibition of these three periods between symptomatic and asymptomatic arms. There were also no significant differences between simple and dystonic writer's cramps. Our results indicate that the attenuation of reciprocal inhibition was present not only in symptomatic arms but also in asymptomatic arms of patients with writer's cramp. The defect of reciprocal inhibition in the asymptomatic hand has never been documented. We suggest that the preexistent electrophysiological abnormality may provide an explanation for the development of hand cramp after shifted writing.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract We investigated the extent to which oscillatory drives to muscle, believed to arise mainly from the motor cortex, are exaggerated and/or fail to react normally to peripheral stimulation in writer's cramp. We used the coherence between active forearm flexor and intrinsic hand muscles as
## Abstract ## Background: Focal hand dystonia may be task specific, as is the case with writer's cramp. In early stages, task specificity can be so specific that it may be mistaken for a psychogenic movement disorder. ## Methods: We describe 4 patients who showed extreme task specificity in wri