Movement Disorders (revue)

Attention, ce site est en cours de développement !
Attention, site généré par des moyens informatiques à partir de corpus bruts.
Les informations ne sont donc pas validées.

Myoclonus of Peripheral Origin : Two Case Reports

Identifieur interne : 000F83 ( PascalFrancis/Corpus ); précédent : 000F82; suivant : 000F84

Myoclonus of Peripheral Origin : Two Case Reports

Auteurs : Louise Tyvaert ; Pierre Krystkowiak ; Francois Cassim ; Elise Houdayer ; Alexandre Kreisler ; Alain Destee ; Luc Defebvre

Source :

RBID : Pascal:09-0104581

Descripteurs français

English descriptors

Abstract

The concept of peripheral myoclonus is not yet fully accepted by the medical community because ot 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.

Notice en format standard (ISO 2709)

Pour connaître la documentation sur le format Inist Standard.

pA  
A01 01  1    @0 0885-3185
A03   1    @0 Mov. disord.
A05       @2 24
A06       @2 2
A08 01  1  ENG  @1 Myoclonus of Peripheral Origin : Two Case Reports
A11 01  1    @1 TYVAERT (Louise)
A11 02  1    @1 KRYSTKOWIAK (Pierre)
A11 03  1    @1 CASSIM (Francois)
A11 04  1    @1 HOUDAYER (Elise)
A11 05  1    @1 KREISLER (Alexandre)
A11 06  1    @1 DESTEE (Alain)
A11 07  1    @1 DEFEBVRE (Luc)
A14 01      @1 Department of Neurology and Movement Disorders, Lille University Hospital @2 Lille @3 FRA @Z 1 aut. @Z 2 aut. @Z 5 aut. @Z 6 aut. @Z 7 aut.
A14 02      @1 Department of Neurology, North Hospital Amiens University @2 Amiens @3 FRA @Z 2 aut. @Z 3 aut. @Z 4 aut.
A14 03      @1 Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, Lille University Hospital @2 Lille @3 FRA
A20       @1 274-277
A21       @1 2009
A23 01      @0 ENG
A43 01      @1 INIST @2 20953 @5 354000184195990170
A44       @0 0000 @1 © 2009 INIST-CNRS. All rights reserved.
A45       @0 20 ref.
A47 01  1    @0 09-0104581
A60       @1 P @3 CC
A61       @0 A
A64 01  1    @0 Movement disorders
A66 01      @0 USA
C01 01    ENG  @0 The concept of peripheral myoclonus is not yet fully accepted by the medical community because ot 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.
C02 01  X    @0 002B17
C02 02  X    @0 002B17E
C03 01  X  FRE  @0 Myoclonie @5 01
C03 01  X  ENG  @0 Myoclonus @5 01
C03 01  X  SPA  @0 Mioclonia @5 01
C03 02  X  FRE  @0 Membre fantôme @5 02
C03 02  X  ENG  @0 Phantom limb @5 02
C03 02  X  SPA  @0 Miembro fantasma @5 02
C03 03  X  FRE  @0 Pathologie du système nerveux @5 03
C03 03  X  ENG  @0 Nervous system diseases @5 03
C03 03  X  SPA  @0 Sistema nervioso patología @5 03
C03 04  X  FRE  @0 Etude cas @5 09
C03 04  X  ENG  @0 Case study @5 09
C03 04  X  SPA  @0 Estudio caso @5 09
C03 05  X  FRE  @0 Douleur @5 10
C03 05  X  ENG  @0 Pain @5 10
C03 05  X  SPA  @0 Dolor @5 10
C07 01  X  FRE  @0 Mouvement involontaire @5 37
C07 01  X  ENG  @0 Involuntary movement @5 37
C07 01  X  SPA  @0 Movimiento involuntario @5 37
C07 02  X  FRE  @0 Trouble neurologique @5 39
C07 02  X  ENG  @0 Neurological disorder @5 39
C07 02  X  SPA  @0 Trastorno neurológico @5 39
N21       @1 075
N44 01      @1 OTO
N82       @1 OTO

Format Inist (serveur)

NO : PASCAL 09-0104581 INIST
ET : Myoclonus of Peripheral Origin : Two Case Reports
AU : TYVAERT (Louise); KRYSTKOWIAK (Pierre); CASSIM (Francois); HOUDAYER (Elise); KREISLER (Alexandre); DESTEE (Alain); DEFEBVRE (Luc)
AF : Department of Neurology and Movement Disorders, Lille University Hospital/Lille/France (1 aut., 2 aut., 5 aut., 6 aut., 7 aut.); Department of Neurology, North Hospital Amiens University/Amiens/France (2 aut., 3 aut., 4 aut.); Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, Lille University Hospital/Lille/France
DT : Publication en série; Courte communication, note brève; Niveau analytique
SO : Movement disorders; ISSN 0885-3185; Etats-Unis; Da. 2009; Vol. 24; No. 2; Pp. 274-277; Bibl. 20 ref.
LA : Anglais
EA : The concept of peripheral myoclonus is not yet fully accepted by the medical community because ot 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.
CC : 002B17; 002B17E
FD : Myoclonie; Membre fantôme; Pathologie du système nerveux; Etude cas; Douleur
FG : Mouvement involontaire; Trouble neurologique
ED : Myoclonus; Phantom limb; Nervous system diseases; Case study; Pain
EG : Involuntary movement; Neurological disorder
SD : Mioclonia; Miembro fantasma; Sistema nervioso patología; Estudio caso; Dolor
LO : INIST-20953.354000184195990170
ID : 09-0104581

Links to Exploration step

Pascal:09-0104581

Le document en format XML

<record>
<TEI>
<teiHeader>
<fileDesc>
<titleStmt>
<title xml:lang="en" level="a">Myoclonus of Peripheral Origin : Two Case Reports</title>
<author>
<name sortKey="Tyvaert, Louise" sort="Tyvaert, Louise" uniqKey="Tyvaert L" first="Louise" last="Tyvaert">Louise Tyvaert</name>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="01">
<s1>Department of Neurology and Movement Disorders, Lille University Hospital</s1>
<s2>Lille</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>1 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>5 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>6 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>7 aut.</sZ>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="03">
<s1>Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, Lille University Hospital</s1>
<s2>Lille</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Krystkowiak, Pierre" sort="Krystkowiak, Pierre" uniqKey="Krystkowiak P" first="Pierre" last="Krystkowiak">Pierre Krystkowiak</name>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="01">
<s1>Department of Neurology and Movement Disorders, Lille University Hospital</s1>
<s2>Lille</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>1 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>5 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>6 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>7 aut.</sZ>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="02">
<s1>Department of Neurology, North Hospital Amiens University</s1>
<s2>Amiens</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>3 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>4 aut.</sZ>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Cassim, Francois" sort="Cassim, Francois" uniqKey="Cassim F" first="Francois" last="Cassim">Francois Cassim</name>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="02">
<s1>Department of Neurology, North Hospital Amiens University</s1>
<s2>Amiens</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>3 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>4 aut.</sZ>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Houdayer, Elise" sort="Houdayer, Elise" uniqKey="Houdayer E" first="Elise" last="Houdayer">Elise Houdayer</name>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="02">
<s1>Department of Neurology, North Hospital Amiens University</s1>
<s2>Amiens</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>3 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>4 aut.</sZ>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Kreisler, Alexandre" sort="Kreisler, Alexandre" uniqKey="Kreisler A" first="Alexandre" last="Kreisler">Alexandre Kreisler</name>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="01">
<s1>Department of Neurology and Movement Disorders, Lille University Hospital</s1>
<s2>Lille</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>1 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>5 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>6 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>7 aut.</sZ>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Destee, Alain" sort="Destee, Alain" uniqKey="Destee A" first="Alain" last="Destee">Alain Destee</name>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="01">
<s1>Department of Neurology and Movement Disorders, Lille University Hospital</s1>
<s2>Lille</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>1 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>5 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>6 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>7 aut.</sZ>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Defebvre, Luc" sort="Defebvre, Luc" uniqKey="Defebvre L" first="Luc" last="Defebvre">Luc Defebvre</name>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="01">
<s1>Department of Neurology and Movement Disorders, Lille University Hospital</s1>
<s2>Lille</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>1 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>5 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>6 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>7 aut.</sZ>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
</author>
</titleStmt>
<publicationStmt>
<idno type="wicri:source">INIST</idno>
<idno type="inist">09-0104581</idno>
<date when="2009">2009</date>
<idno type="stanalyst">PASCAL 09-0104581 INIST</idno>
<idno type="RBID">Pascal:09-0104581</idno>
<idno type="wicri:Area/PascalFrancis/Corpus">000F83</idno>
</publicationStmt>
<sourceDesc>
<biblStruct>
<analytic>
<title xml:lang="en" level="a">Myoclonus of Peripheral Origin : Two Case Reports</title>
<author>
<name sortKey="Tyvaert, Louise" sort="Tyvaert, Louise" uniqKey="Tyvaert L" first="Louise" last="Tyvaert">Louise Tyvaert</name>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="01">
<s1>Department of Neurology and Movement Disorders, Lille University Hospital</s1>
<s2>Lille</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>1 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>5 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>6 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>7 aut.</sZ>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="03">
<s1>Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, Lille University Hospital</s1>
<s2>Lille</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Krystkowiak, Pierre" sort="Krystkowiak, Pierre" uniqKey="Krystkowiak P" first="Pierre" last="Krystkowiak">Pierre Krystkowiak</name>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="01">
<s1>Department of Neurology and Movement Disorders, Lille University Hospital</s1>
<s2>Lille</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>1 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>5 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>6 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>7 aut.</sZ>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="02">
<s1>Department of Neurology, North Hospital Amiens University</s1>
<s2>Amiens</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>3 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>4 aut.</sZ>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Cassim, Francois" sort="Cassim, Francois" uniqKey="Cassim F" first="Francois" last="Cassim">Francois Cassim</name>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="02">
<s1>Department of Neurology, North Hospital Amiens University</s1>
<s2>Amiens</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>3 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>4 aut.</sZ>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Houdayer, Elise" sort="Houdayer, Elise" uniqKey="Houdayer E" first="Elise" last="Houdayer">Elise Houdayer</name>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="02">
<s1>Department of Neurology, North Hospital Amiens University</s1>
<s2>Amiens</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>3 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>4 aut.</sZ>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Kreisler, Alexandre" sort="Kreisler, Alexandre" uniqKey="Kreisler A" first="Alexandre" last="Kreisler">Alexandre Kreisler</name>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="01">
<s1>Department of Neurology and Movement Disorders, Lille University Hospital</s1>
<s2>Lille</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>1 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>5 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>6 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>7 aut.</sZ>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Destee, Alain" sort="Destee, Alain" uniqKey="Destee A" first="Alain" last="Destee">Alain Destee</name>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="01">
<s1>Department of Neurology and Movement Disorders, Lille University Hospital</s1>
<s2>Lille</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>1 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>5 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>6 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>7 aut.</sZ>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Defebvre, Luc" sort="Defebvre, Luc" uniqKey="Defebvre L" first="Luc" last="Defebvre">Luc Defebvre</name>
<affiliation>
<inist:fA14 i1="01">
<s1>Department of Neurology and Movement Disorders, Lille University Hospital</s1>
<s2>Lille</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>1 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>5 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>6 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>7 aut.</sZ>
</inist:fA14>
</affiliation>
</author>
</analytic>
<series>
<title level="j" type="main">Movement disorders</title>
<title level="j" type="abbreviated">Mov. disord.</title>
<idno type="ISSN">0885-3185</idno>
<imprint>
<date when="2009">2009</date>
</imprint>
</series>
</biblStruct>
</sourceDesc>
<seriesStmt>
<title level="j" type="main">Movement disorders</title>
<title level="j" type="abbreviated">Mov. disord.</title>
<idno type="ISSN">0885-3185</idno>
</seriesStmt>
</fileDesc>
<profileDesc>
<textClass>
<keywords scheme="KwdEn" xml:lang="en">
<term>Case study</term>
<term>Myoclonus</term>
<term>Nervous system diseases</term>
<term>Pain</term>
<term>Phantom limb</term>
</keywords>
<keywords scheme="Pascal" xml:lang="fr">
<term>Myoclonie</term>
<term>Membre fantôme</term>
<term>Pathologie du système nerveux</term>
<term>Etude cas</term>
<term>Douleur</term>
</keywords>
</textClass>
</profileDesc>
</teiHeader>
<front>
<div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">The concept of peripheral myoclonus is not yet fully accepted by the medical community because ot 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.</div>
</front>
</TEI>
<inist>
<standard h6="B">
<pA>
<fA01 i1="01" i2="1">
<s0>0885-3185</s0>
</fA01>
<fA03 i2="1">
<s0>Mov. disord.</s0>
</fA03>
<fA05>
<s2>24</s2>
</fA05>
<fA06>
<s2>2</s2>
</fA06>
<fA08 i1="01" i2="1" l="ENG">
<s1>Myoclonus of Peripheral Origin : Two Case Reports</s1>
</fA08>
<fA11 i1="01" i2="1">
<s1>TYVAERT (Louise)</s1>
</fA11>
<fA11 i1="02" i2="1">
<s1>KRYSTKOWIAK (Pierre)</s1>
</fA11>
<fA11 i1="03" i2="1">
<s1>CASSIM (Francois)</s1>
</fA11>
<fA11 i1="04" i2="1">
<s1>HOUDAYER (Elise)</s1>
</fA11>
<fA11 i1="05" i2="1">
<s1>KREISLER (Alexandre)</s1>
</fA11>
<fA11 i1="06" i2="1">
<s1>DESTEE (Alain)</s1>
</fA11>
<fA11 i1="07" i2="1">
<s1>DEFEBVRE (Luc)</s1>
</fA11>
<fA14 i1="01">
<s1>Department of Neurology and Movement Disorders, Lille University Hospital</s1>
<s2>Lille</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>1 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>5 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>6 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>7 aut.</sZ>
</fA14>
<fA14 i1="02">
<s1>Department of Neurology, North Hospital Amiens University</s1>
<s2>Amiens</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
<sZ>2 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>3 aut.</sZ>
<sZ>4 aut.</sZ>
</fA14>
<fA14 i1="03">
<s1>Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, Lille University Hospital</s1>
<s2>Lille</s2>
<s3>FRA</s3>
</fA14>
<fA20>
<s1>274-277</s1>
</fA20>
<fA21>
<s1>2009</s1>
</fA21>
<fA23 i1="01">
<s0>ENG</s0>
</fA23>
<fA43 i1="01">
<s1>INIST</s1>
<s2>20953</s2>
<s5>354000184195990170</s5>
</fA43>
<fA44>
<s0>0000</s0>
<s1>© 2009 INIST-CNRS. All rights reserved.</s1>
</fA44>
<fA45>
<s0>20 ref.</s0>
</fA45>
<fA47 i1="01" i2="1">
<s0>09-0104581</s0>
</fA47>
<fA60>
<s1>P</s1>
<s3>CC</s3>
</fA60>
<fA61>
<s0>A</s0>
</fA61>
<fA64 i1="01" i2="1">
<s0>Movement disorders</s0>
</fA64>
<fA66 i1="01">
<s0>USA</s0>
</fA66>
<fC01 i1="01" l="ENG">
<s0>The concept of peripheral myoclonus is not yet fully accepted by the medical community because ot 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.</s0>
</fC01>
<fC02 i1="01" i2="X">
<s0>002B17</s0>
</fC02>
<fC02 i1="02" i2="X">
<s0>002B17E</s0>
</fC02>
<fC03 i1="01" i2="X" l="FRE">
<s0>Myoclonie</s0>
<s5>01</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="01" i2="X" l="ENG">
<s0>Myoclonus</s0>
<s5>01</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="01" i2="X" l="SPA">
<s0>Mioclonia</s0>
<s5>01</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="02" i2="X" l="FRE">
<s0>Membre fantôme</s0>
<s5>02</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="02" i2="X" l="ENG">
<s0>Phantom limb</s0>
<s5>02</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="02" i2="X" l="SPA">
<s0>Miembro fantasma</s0>
<s5>02</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="03" i2="X" l="FRE">
<s0>Pathologie du système nerveux</s0>
<s5>03</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="03" i2="X" l="ENG">
<s0>Nervous system diseases</s0>
<s5>03</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="03" i2="X" l="SPA">
<s0>Sistema nervioso patología</s0>
<s5>03</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="04" i2="X" l="FRE">
<s0>Etude cas</s0>
<s5>09</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="04" i2="X" l="ENG">
<s0>Case study</s0>
<s5>09</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="04" i2="X" l="SPA">
<s0>Estudio caso</s0>
<s5>09</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="05" i2="X" l="FRE">
<s0>Douleur</s0>
<s5>10</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="05" i2="X" l="ENG">
<s0>Pain</s0>
<s5>10</s5>
</fC03>
<fC03 i1="05" i2="X" l="SPA">
<s0>Dolor</s0>
<s5>10</s5>
</fC03>
<fC07 i1="01" i2="X" l="FRE">
<s0>Mouvement involontaire</s0>
<s5>37</s5>
</fC07>
<fC07 i1="01" i2="X" l="ENG">
<s0>Involuntary movement</s0>
<s5>37</s5>
</fC07>
<fC07 i1="01" i2="X" l="SPA">
<s0>Movimiento involuntario</s0>
<s5>37</s5>
</fC07>
<fC07 i1="02" i2="X" l="FRE">
<s0>Trouble neurologique</s0>
<s5>39</s5>
</fC07>
<fC07 i1="02" i2="X" l="ENG">
<s0>Neurological disorder</s0>
<s5>39</s5>
</fC07>
<fC07 i1="02" i2="X" l="SPA">
<s0>Trastorno neurológico</s0>
<s5>39</s5>
</fC07>
<fN21>
<s1>075</s1>
</fN21>
<fN44 i1="01">
<s1>OTO</s1>
</fN44>
<fN82>
<s1>OTO</s1>
</fN82>
</pA>
</standard>
<server>
<NO>PASCAL 09-0104581 INIST</NO>
<ET>Myoclonus of Peripheral Origin : Two Case Reports</ET>
<AU>TYVAERT (Louise); KRYSTKOWIAK (Pierre); CASSIM (Francois); HOUDAYER (Elise); KREISLER (Alexandre); DESTEE (Alain); DEFEBVRE (Luc)</AU>
<AF>Department of Neurology and Movement Disorders, Lille University Hospital/Lille/France (1 aut., 2 aut., 5 aut., 6 aut., 7 aut.); Department of Neurology, North Hospital Amiens University/Amiens/France (2 aut., 3 aut., 4 aut.); Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, Lille University Hospital/Lille/France</AF>
<DT>Publication en série; Courte communication, note brève; Niveau analytique</DT>
<SO>Movement disorders; ISSN 0885-3185; Etats-Unis; Da. 2009; Vol. 24; No. 2; Pp. 274-277; Bibl. 20 ref.</SO>
<LA>Anglais</LA>
<EA>The concept of peripheral myoclonus is not yet fully accepted by the medical community because ot 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.</EA>
<CC>002B17; 002B17E</CC>
<FD>Myoclonie; Membre fantôme; Pathologie du système nerveux; Etude cas; Douleur</FD>
<FG>Mouvement involontaire; Trouble neurologique</FG>
<ED>Myoclonus; Phantom limb; Nervous system diseases; Case study; Pain</ED>
<EG>Involuntary movement; Neurological disorder</EG>
<SD>Mioclonia; Miembro fantasma; Sistema nervioso patología; Estudio caso; Dolor</SD>
<LO>INIST-20953.354000184195990170</LO>
<ID>09-0104581</ID>
</server>
</inist>
</record>

Pour manipuler ce document sous Unix (Dilib)

EXPLOR_STEP=$WICRI_ROOT/Wicri/Santé/explor/MovDisordV3/Data/PascalFrancis/Corpus
HfdSelect -h $EXPLOR_STEP/biblio.hfd -nk 000F83 | SxmlIndent | more

Ou

HfdSelect -h $EXPLOR_AREA/Data/PascalFrancis/Corpus/biblio.hfd -nk 000F83 | SxmlIndent | more

Pour mettre un lien sur cette page dans le réseau Wicri

{{Explor lien
   |wiki=    Wicri/Santé
   |area=    MovDisordV3
   |flux=    PascalFrancis
   |étape=   Corpus
   |type=    RBID
   |clé=     Pascal:09-0104581
   |texte=   Myoclonus of Peripheral Origin : Two Case Reports
}}

Wicri

This area was generated with Dilib version V0.6.23.
Data generation: Sun Jul 3 12:29:32 2016. Site generation: Wed Feb 14 10:52:30 2024