Muscle & nerve
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Comparative Study
Fasciculation potentials: a study of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and other neurogenic disorders.
We studied fasciculation potentials in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and in other neurogenic disorders, in strength and single-fiber electromyography-matched muscles. Benign fasciculations were studied in 3 normal subjects. Fasciculations were more stable and easier to recruit voluntarily in the early phase of ALS; later, fasciculations were more unstable, more complex, and less likely to be voluntarily recruited. ⋯ Benign fasciculations have a high firing rate and normal morphologic parameters. In ALS fasciculations arise proximally early in the disease and distally in the later stages. Fasciculation may be important in excitotoxic cell death in ALS.