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Neurology 2013-May

Cerebellar learning distinguishes inflammatory neuropathy with and without tremor.

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Petra Schwingenschuh
Tabish A Saifee
Petra Katschnig-Winter
Mary M Reilly
Michael P Lunn
Hadi Manji
Maria Aguirregomozcorta
Reinhold Schmidt
Kailash P Bhatia
John C Rothwell

Keywords

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

This study aims to investigate if patients with inflammatory neuropathies and tremor have evidence of dysfunction in the cerebellum and interactions in sensorimotor cortex compared to nontremulous patients and healthy controls.

METHODS

A prospective data collection study investigating patients with inflammatory neuropathy and tremor, patients with inflammatory neuropathy without tremor, and healthy controls on a test of cerebellar associative learning (eyeblink classical conditioning), a test of sensorimotor integration (short afferent inhibition), and a test of associative plasticity (paired associative stimulation). We also recorded tremor in the arms using accelerometry and surface EMG.

RESULTS

We found impaired responses to eyeblink classical conditioning and paired associative stimulation in patients with neuropathy and tremor compared with neuropathy patients without tremor and healthy controls. Short afferent inhibition was normal in all groups.

CONCLUSIONS

Our data strongly suggest impairment of cerebellar function is linked to the production of tremor in patients with inflammatory neuropathy.

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