Electrodiagnostic findings in syringomyelia
Electrodiagnostic abnormalities are well known to occur in syringomyelia although the findings are nonspecific. The objective of this work was to describe different types of spontaneous electromyographic (EMG) activity and reflex responses, which may be useful and more specific than conventional fin...
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Acceso en línea: | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_0148639X_v22_n12_p1653_Nogues |
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todo:paper_0148639X_v22_n12_p1653_Nogues2023-10-03T15:01:02Z Electrodiagnostic findings in syringomyelia Nogués, M.A. Stålberg, E. Chiari malformation Electromyography (EMG) Long-latency responses (LLR) Spontaneous activity Syringomyelia adult article clinical article electrodiagnosis electromyogram human motor unit potential muscle action potential muscle excitation nerve compression priority journal syringomyelia Electrodiagnostic abnormalities are well known to occur in syringomyelia although the findings are nonspecific. The objective of this work was to describe different types of spontaneous electromyographic (EMG) activity and reflex responses, which may be useful and more specific than conventional findings for the electrodiagnosis of syringomyelia. We studied 43 patients with syringomyelia by four-channel surface EMG and by recording the long- latency responses to distal stimulation of the median and tibial nerves. Continuous motor unit activity (CMUA) was found in 18 patients, synchronous motor unit potentials (SMUP) in 10, respiratory synkinesis (RS) in 5, and myokymic discharges in 4. Long-latency responses (LLR) with latencies ranging from 55 to 150 ms were found in 14 patients. Patients with syringomyelia thus show a wide variation of spontaneous EMG activity. An increase in excitability of spinal motor neurons is probably the basic underlying mechanism. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_0148639X_v22_n12_p1653_Nogues |
institution |
Universidad de Buenos Aires |
institution_str |
I-28 |
repository_str |
R-134 |
collection |
Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA) |
topic |
Chiari malformation Electromyography (EMG) Long-latency responses (LLR) Spontaneous activity Syringomyelia adult article clinical article electrodiagnosis electromyogram human motor unit potential muscle action potential muscle excitation nerve compression priority journal syringomyelia |
spellingShingle |
Chiari malformation Electromyography (EMG) Long-latency responses (LLR) Spontaneous activity Syringomyelia adult article clinical article electrodiagnosis electromyogram human motor unit potential muscle action potential muscle excitation nerve compression priority journal syringomyelia Nogués, M.A. Stålberg, E. Electrodiagnostic findings in syringomyelia |
topic_facet |
Chiari malformation Electromyography (EMG) Long-latency responses (LLR) Spontaneous activity Syringomyelia adult article clinical article electrodiagnosis electromyogram human motor unit potential muscle action potential muscle excitation nerve compression priority journal syringomyelia |
description |
Electrodiagnostic abnormalities are well known to occur in syringomyelia although the findings are nonspecific. The objective of this work was to describe different types of spontaneous electromyographic (EMG) activity and reflex responses, which may be useful and more specific than conventional findings for the electrodiagnosis of syringomyelia. We studied 43 patients with syringomyelia by four-channel surface EMG and by recording the long- latency responses to distal stimulation of the median and tibial nerves. Continuous motor unit activity (CMUA) was found in 18 patients, synchronous motor unit potentials (SMUP) in 10, respiratory synkinesis (RS) in 5, and myokymic discharges in 4. Long-latency responses (LLR) with latencies ranging from 55 to 150 ms were found in 14 patients. Patients with syringomyelia thus show a wide variation of spontaneous EMG activity. An increase in excitability of spinal motor neurons is probably the basic underlying mechanism. |
format |
JOUR |
author |
Nogués, M.A. Stålberg, E. |
author_facet |
Nogués, M.A. Stålberg, E. |
author_sort |
Nogués, M.A. |
title |
Electrodiagnostic findings in syringomyelia |
title_short |
Electrodiagnostic findings in syringomyelia |
title_full |
Electrodiagnostic findings in syringomyelia |
title_fullStr |
Electrodiagnostic findings in syringomyelia |
title_full_unstemmed |
Electrodiagnostic findings in syringomyelia |
title_sort |
electrodiagnostic findings in syringomyelia |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_0148639X_v22_n12_p1653_Nogues |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT noguesma electrodiagnosticfindingsinsyringomyelia AT stalberge electrodiagnosticfindingsinsyringomyelia |
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1807322879125094400 |