Intracortical microstimulation and single cell recordings in non-human primates showed that both, muscles and movements are represented in primary motor cortex (M1). This was also suggested in humans using electrophysiological and neuroimaging techniques. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) thus far was used to study motor cortical muscle representations, but data on movement representations in man are scarce.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSubclinical epileptiform activity in patients with respiratory chain disorders (RCDs) has not been previously investigated by video-EEG monitoring. The purpose of this study was to look for the type and frequency of epileptiform activity during a 24 h-video-EEG recording in RCD patients. Eleven patients with RCD, 7 women and 4 men, aged 24-72 years, underwent a clinical neurologic examination, blood tests, CT/MRI scans of the brain, routine scalp EEG and continuous video-EEG monitoring over 24 consecutive hours.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCerebral haemorrhage without hypertension, arteriosclerosis or clotting defect has not been reported in patients with Turner's syndrome before. In a 51 year old female patient with non-mosaic Turner's syndrome, acute aphasia and right-sided hemiplegia occurred, due to left-sided basal ganglia haemorrhage. The history for hypertension was negative, blood pressure was normal throughout hospitalisation as well as during 24 h monitoring, and all tests for secondary hypertension were negative.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree new aspects of epilepsy are discussed: the mesiotemporal syndrome, vagus nerve stimulation, and epilepsy and driving fitness. In recent years mesiotemporal epilepsy has been recognised as the most frequent epileptic syndrome in adults. The main clinical features are febrile convulsions during childhood, followed by characteristic focal seizures in the second decade of life.
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