OBJECTIVE: To determine the contribution of electrophysiologic testing in the diagnosis and anatomical classification of myoclonus. METHODS: Participants with a clinical diagnosis of myoclonus were prospectively recruited, each undergoing a videotaped clinical examination and battery of electrophysiologic tests. The diagnosis of myoclonus and its subtype was reviewed after 6 months in the context of the electrophysiologic findings and specialist review of the videotaped clinical examination. RESULTS: Seventy-two patients with myoclonus were recruited. Initial clinical anatomical classification included 25 patients with cortical myoclonus, 7 with subcortical myoclonus, 2 with spinal myoclonus, and 15 with functional myoclonic jerks. In 23 ca...
Objective: Recent diagnostic criteria for functional movement disorders have proposed a "laboratory ...
Myoclonus is defined as a brief and jerky shock-like involuntary movement caused by abrupt muscle co...
OBJECTIVE: Recent diagnostic criteria for functional movement disorders have proposed a "laboratory ...
OBJECTIVE: To determine the contribution of electrophysiologic testing in the diagnosis and anatomic...
Objective: To evaluate the accuracy of clinical phenotyping of myoclonus patients and to determine d...
Objective: We investigated how clinical neurophysiological testing can help distinguish tremor and m...
Abstract Background Electrophysiological techniques have been used for discriminating myoclonus from...
Objective: We aimed to identify the possible causes of myoclonus and related electrophysiological fe...
Tremor is defined as a rhythmical, involuntary oscillatory movement of a body part. Although neurolo...
Tremor and myoclonus are two common hyperkinetic movement disorders. Tremor is characterized by rhyt...
Myoclonus is a sudden, brief, involuntary muscle jerk. It is caused by abrupt muscle contraction, in...
Myoclonus is a hyperkinetic movement disorder characterized by a sudden, brief, involuntary jerk. Po...
Myoclonus and other jerky movements form a large heterogeneous group of disorders. Clinical neurophy...
Objective: Recent diagnostic criteria for functional movement disorders have proposed a "laboratory ...
Myoclonus is defined as a brief and jerky shock-like involuntary movement caused by abrupt muscle co...
OBJECTIVE: Recent diagnostic criteria for functional movement disorders have proposed a "laboratory ...
OBJECTIVE: To determine the contribution of electrophysiologic testing in the diagnosis and anatomic...
Objective: To evaluate the accuracy of clinical phenotyping of myoclonus patients and to determine d...
Objective: We investigated how clinical neurophysiological testing can help distinguish tremor and m...
Abstract Background Electrophysiological techniques have been used for discriminating myoclonus from...
Objective: We aimed to identify the possible causes of myoclonus and related electrophysiological fe...
Tremor is defined as a rhythmical, involuntary oscillatory movement of a body part. Although neurolo...
Tremor and myoclonus are two common hyperkinetic movement disorders. Tremor is characterized by rhyt...
Myoclonus is a sudden, brief, involuntary muscle jerk. It is caused by abrupt muscle contraction, in...
Myoclonus is a hyperkinetic movement disorder characterized by a sudden, brief, involuntary jerk. Po...
Myoclonus and other jerky movements form a large heterogeneous group of disorders. Clinical neurophy...
Objective: Recent diagnostic criteria for functional movement disorders have proposed a "laboratory ...
Myoclonus is defined as a brief and jerky shock-like involuntary movement caused by abrupt muscle co...
OBJECTIVE: Recent diagnostic criteria for functional movement disorders have proposed a "laboratory ...