2015
DOI: 10.1177/0885066615571533
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Electroencephalographic Findings in Posthypoxic Myoclonus

Abstract: The physical examination findings of early posthypoxic myoclonus (PHM) are associated with poor prognosis. Recent findings indicate that patients with multifocal PHM, assumed to have a cortical origin, have a comparable outcome to resuscitated patients without PHM. Generalized PHM, assumed to have a subcortical myoclonus origin, is still associated with a bad clinical outcome. It is not known whether the electroencephalographic (EEG) findings differ between the multifocal and generalized myoclonus groups nor i… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(70 citation statements)
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“…Moreover, in this cohort CM was more likely present in patients with generalized PHM than in focal PHM. This result is in line with earlier studies who demonstrated that generalized PHM can arise from the cortex 5, 6, 33. These findings suggest that the clinical model of typical CM and SM phenomenology that physicians encounter in noncomatose myoclonus patients at the outpatient clinic does not apply for PHM in the first few days after resuscitation 10, 11.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
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“…Moreover, in this cohort CM was more likely present in patients with generalized PHM than in focal PHM. This result is in line with earlier studies who demonstrated that generalized PHM can arise from the cortex 5, 6, 33. These findings suggest that the clinical model of typical CM and SM phenomenology that physicians encounter in noncomatose myoclonus patients at the outpatient clinic does not apply for PHM in the first few days after resuscitation 10, 11.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…This finding suggests that patients with a multiple lesioned cortex (and CM) could have a worse outcome compared to patients with a singular, small brainstem lesion (and SM). In addition, studies that correlated the generalized and focal PHM phenotype to outcome found that the severity of myoclonus, and not per se the presence or absence of brainstem damage, was related to poor outcome 1, 5, 6. Yet in contrast, another finding of this study was that in patients presenting PHM within 24 h after CPR, significantly less CM occurred (Table 3).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 44%
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