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Muscle and Nerve 1994-Dec

Brainstem reflexes in patients with olivopontocerebellar atrophy.

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J Valls-Solé
J S Lou
M Hallett

Keywords

Abstract

In 4 patients with familial olivopontocerebellar atrophy (OPCA) we have recently described an abnormal movement of facial muscles characterized by rhythmic muscle twitching during voluntary activation (facial action myoclonus). In the present article, we present the results of a neurophysiological study of brainstem reflexes in those 4 patients, in 4 other patients with OPCA but without facial action myoclonus, in 3 patients with pure cerebellar cortical atrophy, and in 6 normal volunteers used as control subjects. All patients had similar clinical features, but only the patients with facial action myoclonus and only one of the other patients with OPCA had brainstem atrophy detected on magnetic resonance imaging. Electrophysiological abnormalities were found in all patients with facial action myoclonus and consisted of myokymia in perioral muscles at rest, spread of spontaneous and reflex blinking to the orbicularis oris, and enhanced long-latency facial reflex responses to stimuli applied to the facial or trigeminal nerve. Other relevant electrophysiological abnormalities were the absence of jaw jerk in 2 patients, the absence of an R1 response of the blink reflex in 1 patient, and a markedly reduced compound muscle action potential of the facial nerve in another patient. Comparable electrophysiological abnormalities were found in only 1 of the patients with OPCA but without facial action myoclonus, and in none of the patients with pure cerebellar cortical atrophy. Facial action myoclonus is a clinical manifestation of a global brainstem functional derangement that may characterize a subgroup of patients with OPCA or constitute a distinctive step in the natural evolution of some forms of the disease.

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