| Literature DB >> 12766683 |
Sasa A Zivkovic1, Richard P Brenner.
Abstract
The authors report a case of area-specific stimulus-sensitive postanoxic myoclonus and discuss possible pathophysiology. A 71-year-old man sustained cardiorespiratory arrest that lasted 10 minutes and remained unresponsive. On the first EEG obtained 8 hours after the arrest there was no cerebral electrical activity before stimulation of the trigeminal-innervated areas. Periorbital stimulation was associated with bursts of spike-wave activity and generalized myoclonic jerks, whereas other types of stimulation did not elicit any response. A second EEG obtained 32 hours later showed a nonreactive alpha coma pattern. The patient died 7 days after the arrest. Area-specific stimulus-sensitive postanoxic myoclonus is very rare. The regularity of generalized bursts of spike-wave activity (cortical response) in response to stimulation of trigeminal-innervated areas suggests that the resting EEG electrocerebral silence may have been a result of cortical suppression with disinhibition of stimulus-sensitive brainstem-generated myoclonus.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2003 PMID: 12766683 DOI: 10.1097/00004691-200304000-00004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Neurophysiol ISSN: 0736-0258 Impact factor: 2.177