Repetitive Muscle Silent Periods in Acute Post-anoxic Brain Injury: A Form of Acute Negative Myoclonus?
Saeideh Salehizadeh1, Suhailah Hakami2, Ramesh Shrestha1, Neel Fotedar1
1Epilepsy Center, Neurological Institute, University Hospitals, Cleveland Medical Center, 2Epilepsy Center, Department of Neurology, Alfred Hospital, Melborne, Australia
Objective:
To report the previously unknown phenomenon of repetitive and quasi-periodic muscle silent periods (SP) in patients with acute post-anoxic brain injury (PABI).
Background:

Acute post-anoxic myoclonic status epilepticus is a well-defined entity, comprising mainly positive myoclonic jerks. However, there is limited literature on negative myoclonus in acute PABI. Negative myoclonus is a jerky, involuntary movement caused by a brief interruption of sustained muscle activity. It is well-described in chronic post-anoxic myoclonus (Lance Adams syndrome), leading to postural lapses. It can be of reticular or cortical origin.

Design/Methods:

This is a retrospective analysis of video-EEG and surface-electromyography (sEMG) recordings from the neck and bulbar muscles of three comatose patients with acute PABI. We measured the duration of EEG bursts, sEMG SPs, and EEG-SP latency.

Results:

All three patients had a generalized burst-suppression pattern on the EEG with brief sEMG SPs. In patients #1 and #2, all SPs were time-locked to EEG bursts, with the bursts preceding the SPs by an average latency of ~135ms and 124ms, respectively. The average SP duration was ~910ms and 852ms in patients #1 and 2, respectively. In patient #3, only ~31% of SPs were time-locked to EEG bursts. Interestingly, ~27% of SPs preceded the EEG bursts. The average SP duration was ~661ms.

Conclusions:

Our study demonstrates the presence of quasi-periodic muscle SPs in acute PABI. We postulate that this finding is analogous to the ‘postural lapses’ seen in Lance-Adams syndrome. The generator can be cortical (as evidenced by preceding EEG bursts in patients #1 and 2) or reticular (patient #3). Covering the neck and bulbar muscles with sEMG electrodes provides a unique opportunity to study this phenomenon in comatose patients.

10.1212/WNL.0000000000204832