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Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging in a case of facial myokymia with multiple sclerosis

Abstract

A 59-year-old female of facial myokymia with multiple sclerosis was reported. In this case, facial myokymia appeared at the same time as the first attack of multiple sclerosis, in association with paroxysmal pain and desesthesia of the neck, painful tonic seizures of the right upper and lower extremities and cervical transverse myelopathy. The facial myokymia consisted of grossly visible, continuous, fine and worm-like movement, which often began in the area of the left orbicularis oculi and spread to the other facial muscles on one side. Electromyographic studies revealed grouping of motor units and continuous spontaneous rhythmic discharges in the left orbicularis oris suggesting facial myokymia, but there were no abnormalities on voluntary contraction. Sometimes doublet or multiplet patterns occurred while at other times the bursts were of single motor potential. The respective frequencies were 3-4/sec and 40-50/sec. There was no evidence of fibrillation. The facial myokymia disappeared after 4-8 weeks of administration of prednisolone and did not recur. In the remission stage after disappearance of the facial myokymia, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) imaging by the inversion recovery method demonstrated low intensity demyelinated plaque in the left lateral segmentum of the inferior pons, which was responsible for the facial myokymia, but  More>>
Publication Date:
Jun 01, 1985
Product Type:
Journal Article
Reference Number:
AIX-17-019185; EDB-86-066614
Resource Relation:
Journal Name: No To Shinkei; (Japan); Journal Volume: 37:6
Subject:
62 RADIOLOGY AND NUCLEAR MEDICINE; BRAIN; COMPUTERIZED TOMOGRAPHY; NUCLEAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE; NERVOUS SYSTEM DISEASES; DIAGNOSIS; FACE; IMAGES; NERVE CELLS; PATIENTS; PREDNISOLONE; ADRENAL HORMONES; ANIMAL CELLS; BODY; BODY AREAS; CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM; CORTICOSTEROIDS; DIAGNOSTIC TECHNIQUES; DISEASES; GLUCOCORTICOIDS; HEAD; HORMONES; HYDROXY COMPOUNDS; KETONES; MAGNETIC RESONANCE; NERVOUS SYSTEM; ORGANIC COMPOUNDS; ORGANS; PREGNANES; RESONANCE; SOMATIC CELLS; STEROID HORMONES; STEROIDS; TOMOGRAPHY; 550602* - Medicine- External Radiation in Diagnostics- (1980-); 550600 - Medicine
OSTI ID:
6103915
Research Organizations:
Chiba Univ., Japan. School of Medicine
Country of Origin:
Japan
Language:
Japanese
Other Identifying Numbers:
Journal ID: CODEN: NOTOA
Submitting Site:
INIS
Size:
Pages: 583-588
Announcement Date:
Feb 01, 1986

Citation Formats

Kojima, Shigeyuki, Yagishita, Toshiyuki, Kita, Kohei, Hirayama, Keizo, Ikehira, Hiroo, Fukuda, Nobuo, and Tateno, Yukio. Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging in a case of facial myokymia with multiple sclerosis. Japan: N. p., 1985. Web.
Kojima, Shigeyuki, Yagishita, Toshiyuki, Kita, Kohei, Hirayama, Keizo, Ikehira, Hiroo, Fukuda, Nobuo, & Tateno, Yukio. Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging in a case of facial myokymia with multiple sclerosis. Japan.
Kojima, Shigeyuki, Yagishita, Toshiyuki, Kita, Kohei, Hirayama, Keizo, Ikehira, Hiroo, Fukuda, Nobuo, and Tateno, Yukio. 1985. "Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging in a case of facial myokymia with multiple sclerosis." Japan.
@misc{etde_6103915,
title = {Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging in a case of facial myokymia with multiple sclerosis}
author = {Kojima, Shigeyuki, Yagishita, Toshiyuki, Kita, Kohei, Hirayama, Keizo, Ikehira, Hiroo, Fukuda, Nobuo, and Tateno, Yukio}
abstractNote = {A 59-year-old female of facial myokymia with multiple sclerosis was reported. In this case, facial myokymia appeared at the same time as the first attack of multiple sclerosis, in association with paroxysmal pain and desesthesia of the neck, painful tonic seizures of the right upper and lower extremities and cervical transverse myelopathy. The facial myokymia consisted of grossly visible, continuous, fine and worm-like movement, which often began in the area of the left orbicularis oculi and spread to the other facial muscles on one side. Electromyographic studies revealed grouping of motor units and continuous spontaneous rhythmic discharges in the left orbicularis oris suggesting facial myokymia, but there were no abnormalities on voluntary contraction. Sometimes doublet or multiplet patterns occurred while at other times the bursts were of single motor potential. The respective frequencies were 3-4/sec and 40-50/sec. There was no evidence of fibrillation. The facial myokymia disappeared after 4-8 weeks of administration of prednisolone and did not recur. In the remission stage after disappearance of the facial myokymia, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) imaging by the inversion recovery method demonstrated low intensity demyelinated plaque in the left lateral segmentum of the inferior pons, which was responsible for the facial myokymia, but X-ray computed tomography revealed no pathological findings. The demyelinated plaque demonstrated by NMR imaging seemed to be located in the infranuclear area of the facial nerve nucleus and to involve the intramedurally root.}
journal = []
volume = {37:6}
journal type = {AC}
place = {Japan}
year = {1985}
month = {Jun}
}