Objective: A general lack of longitudinal studies on interhemispheric interactions following stroke led us to use transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to examine changes in corticospinal/intracortical excitability and transcallosal inhibition over a 1-year period following subcortical stroke.
Methods: We measured TMS parameters such as motor threshold (MT), short-interval intracortical inhibition (SICI), and ipsilateral silent period (iSP) and evaluated clinical scores at three time-points (T1, T2, and T3) in 24 patients and 25 age-matched healthy subjects.
Results: At T1, we observed reduced MTs and SICIs with prolonged iSPs in the unaffected hemisphere (UH).
Twelve patients with cortical reflex myoclonus were electrophysiologically investigated. From the results of the recording of the C reflex during voluntary contraction, cortical reflex myoclonus was classified into three subtypes: type I; C reflex with recurrent C reflex (C'), type II; double C reflexes (C1, C2) and type III; C reflex with evident inhibition. The jerk-locked motor evoked potential (MEP) showed different mechanisms in the C' and C2 reflexes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRinsho Shinkeigaku
January 2008
A 56-year-old right-handed man with recurrent orogenital aphtoid ulcers and bilateral uveitis had presented with memory disturbance, dressing apraxia and constructional apraxia at age 53. Neuro-Behçet disease was diagnosed based on pathergy test results and positivity for HLA-B51. Four months after azathioprine was introduced, he presented with subacute spastic paraparesis and urinary retention at age 56.
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