• Neurophysiol Clin · Oct 2014

    Review

    Clinical neurophysiology of psychogenic movement disorders: how to diagnose psychogenic tremor and myoclonus.

    • E Apartis.
    • Inserm-UPMC UMRS 975-CRICM, Department of Physiology, Saint-Antoine Hospital, AP-HP, 184, rue du Faubourg Saint-Antoine, 75012 Paris, France. Electronic address: emmanuelle.apartis@sat.aphp.fr.
    • Neurophysiol Clin. 2014 Oct 1; 44 (4): 417-24.

    AbstractTremor and myoclonus are very common manifestations of psychogenic movement disorders (PMD). In this context, recording of movement disorders aims to provide objective criteria for a positive diagnosis of PMD, independently of the psychological situation. Neurophysiological observations are therefore considered to have a huge impact both on diagnosis and on therapeutic approaches. A specific recording strategy should be employed whenever the medical history or clinical clues raise the eventuality of a PMD. Polymyography coupled to accelerometry is used to demonstrate the major electrophysiological criteria of psychogenic tremor, namely spontaneous variability of tremor frequency and frequency entrainment induced by contralateral rhythmic tasks. Other features, such as paradoxical increase of tremor amplitude with mass loading, co-activation preceding tremor onset and alteration of voluntary contralateral motor performances when tremor is present, are also of interest. The clinical presentation of psychogenic myoclonus is extremely rich and polymorphous and can mimic virtually all forms of cortical, subcortical or spinal myoclonus. Focal, multifocal, axial or generalized jerks can occur. Psychogenic jerks can be sporadic or repetitive, rhythmic or arrhythmic, spontaneous or stimulus-induced. All of these parameters are crucial to determine an individualized neurophysiological strategy. Polymyography is critical to identify a ballistic pattern or a discordant or non-reproducible temporo-spatial organisation of the jerks, but has usually to be completed by other potentially decisive approaches. Reflex psychogenic myoclonus for example displays stimulus-response delays that are too long and variable. Spontaneous psychogenic jerks may be also preceded by a pre-movement potential, detectable by jerk-locked-back-averaging methods. Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.

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