Movement disorders : official journal of the Movement Disorder Society
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Brain-dead patients may exhibit gross spontaneous and reflex movements (e.g., Babinski sign, stereotypic flexion of one or more limbs, and Lazarus sign). We report three brain-dead patients who had unusual complex sequential movements of the toes. ⋯ The undulating toe flexion sign differs from previously described responses characterized by plantar flexion of the toes (e.g., Rosselimo's sign and the Mendel-Bechterew sign) in that it consists of complex patterned sequential movements of the digits rather than brief simultaneous flexion and/or fanning of the toes. Neurologists should be aware of this unusual finding, which should not preclude the diagnosis of brain death.
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Isolated continuous lingual myoclonus is an exceptional entity, poorly documented and understood. A patient with a nonepileptic continuous rhythmical myoclonus, affecting the anterior portion of the tongue, as an independent involuntary disorder, is reported. ⋯ Imaging techniques like CT and MRI failed to reveal any brainstem or cerebellar lesion. Lingual myoclonus showed a very good response to sodium valproate.