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Journal article

Propriospinal myoclonus: clinical reappraisal and review of literature.

Abstract:
OBJECTIVE: Propriospinal myoclonus (PSM) is a rare disorder with repetitive, usually flexor arrhythmic brief jerks of the trunk, hips, and knees in a fixed pattern. It has a presumed generation in the spinal cord and diagnosis depends on characteristic features at polymyography. Recently, a historical paradigm shift took place as PSM has been reported to be a functional (or psychogenic) movement disorder (FMD) in most patients. This review aims to characterize the clinical features, etiology, electrophysiologic features, and treatment outcomes of PSM. METHODS: Re-evaluation of all published PSM cases and systematic scoring of clinical and electrophysiologic characteristics in all published cases since 1991. RESULTS: Of the 179 identified patients with PSM (55% male), the mean age at onset was 43 years (range 6-88 years). FMD was diagnosed in 104 (58%) cases. In 12 cases (26% of reported secondary cases, 7% of total cases), a structural spinal cord lesion was found. Clonazepam and botulinum toxin may be effective in reducing jerks. CONCLUSIONS: FMD is more frequent than previously assumed. Structural lesions reported to underlie PSM are scarce. Based on our clinical experience and the reviewed literature, we recommend polymyography to assess recruitment variability combined with a Bereitschaftspotential recording in all cases.
Publication status:
Published

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Publisher copy:
10.1212/wnl.0000000000000982

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Journal:
Neurology More from this journal
Volume:
83
Issue:
20
Pages:
1862-1870
Publication date:
2014-11-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1526-632X
ISSN:
0028-3878


Language:
English
Pubs id:
pubs:486699
UUID:
uuid:a03de2be-0a3a-4167-bfc6-42cd14fb3e39
Local pid:
pubs:486699
Source identifiers:
486699
Deposit date:
2014-10-16

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