AAEM minimonograph #37: facial and limb myokymia.

Autor(es): Gutmann L


Resumo: Myokymia is a clinical phenomenon associated with characteristic electromyographic activity referred to as myokymic discharges. These are spontaneously generated bursts of individual motor unit potentials with each burst recurring rhythmically or semirhythmically, usually several times per second. It involves facial muscles more commonly than those of the extremities, and is most often seen in association with Guillain-Barré syndrome, multiple sclerosis, radiation plexopathy, pontine tumors, and timber rattlesnake envenomation. An alteration in the biochemical microenvironment of axon membranes at one of the various sites along the motor axon is the likely basis for the altered membrane excitability that underlies the myokymic discharges in most cases. The similarity of these discharges to those seen with hypocalcemic tetany, and the ability to manipulate myokymic discharges by altering serum-ionized Ca++, suggests that decrease in the ionized Ca++ in the microenvironment of the axon may play an important role.


Imprenta: Muscle & Nerve, v. 14, n. 11, p. 1043-1049, 1991


Identificador do objeto digital: 10.1002/mus.880141102


Descritores: Guillain-Barre Syndrome - Pathogenesis


Data de publicação: 1991