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Continuous motor unit activity syndromes: A video-polysomnographic study

Clin Neurophysiol 116(11):9 (2005) PMID 16214406

Objective: To ascertain the presence of abnormalities of sleep in patients with continuous motor unit activity with and without symptoms of central nervous system involvement. Methods: Five patients with isolated neuromyotonia (Isaacs' syndrome) and 1 patient with Morvan syndrome underwent 24-h videopolysomnographic recording to investigate sleep structure, motor activities and autonomic variables during sleep. Results: Macro- and microstructural organization of sleep and of the attending autonomic variables were substantially normal in patients with Isaacs' syndrome. On the contrary, sleep structure was severely disrupted with subcontinuous dream enactment and hallucinations in the patient with Morvan syndrome. The pattern of the neuromyotonic discharges, however, was not different between the patients with Isaacs' syndrome compared to Morvan syndrome, the EMG discharges persisting throughout the 24h of recording and affecting wakefulness and sleep equally. Conclusions: Neuromyotonia is compatible with normal organization of sleep. The severe sleep abnormalities observed in Morvan syndrome cannot be simply attributed to the effects of neuromyotonia of peripheral origin. Significance: Even though neuromyotonia is common to both Isaacs' and Morvan syndromes, the two conditions differ significantly in regard to CNS involvement with sleep abnormalities and lumping the two conditions together is not justified on clinical and neurophysiological grounds.

DOI: 10.1016/j.clinph.2005.07.008
Version: za2963e q8zae q8zb9 q8zc8 q8zdb q8ze5 q8zfb q8zg8

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