Publications by authors named "F BUCHTHAL"

To study slowly conducted components of the orthodromic compound sensory action potential (CSAP), the response evoked at the lateral malleolus in the sural nerve was recorded through near-nerve needles at two to four sites along the nerve at midcalf. When 500 to 2000 responses were averaged at high gain, components with latencies of 30 to 80 ms were often recorded. In contrast to the main component and late components with latencies of less than 15 to 20 ms, the latencies of these extremely late components diminished the closer to the spinal cord that they were recorded.

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A 16-year-old boy had a 10-year history of stiffness in leg muscles. There was marked weakness of neck flexors, shoulder abductors, and ankle dorsiflexors, with hypertrophy of most muscle groups and both action and percussion myotonia. The parents were normal.

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The main component of the compound sensory action potential reflects the activity of large myelinated sensory fibers with diameters of greater than 9 micron(s). By recording the averaged potential using a needle electrode placed close to the nerve, small late components can be measured. The latency of these late components can be used to calculate minimum conduction velocity (CV); in normal subjects, average minimum CV is 15 m/s, corresponding to conduction in fibers of about 4 micron(s) in diameter.

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In the human sural nerve, large myelinated fibers contained 35 Schmidt-Lanterman (SL) clefts per mm, and small myelinated fibers contained only eight SL clefts per mm. The incidence of SL clefts is linearly related to myelin thickness. The SL clefts extended over 13 micron in large and over 9 micron in small fibers, the total extent of the SL region amounting to nearly 50% of internodal length in large and to 6% in small fibers.

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Clinical, electrophysiological, histological and biochemical studies of two patients with mitochondrial disease revealed a moderately advanced axonal neuropathy with mitochondrial paracrystalline inclusions in Schwann cells, fibroblasts and muscle fibers. In addition there was a myopathy, and the activity of muscle cytochrome c oxidase was diminished by more than 50%. There were electrophysiological signs of myopathy, neuropathy and failure of excitation-contraction coupling in both patients.

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