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University
Department of Neurology, Hôpital de la Citadelle, B-4000 Liège,
Belgium
Correspondence to: Professor A Maertens de Noordhout al.maertens{at}chu.ulg.ac.be
Received 15 May 2001 and in revised form 19 July 2001;
Accepted 6 August 2001
OBJECTIVES
Transcranial
magnetic stimulation (TMS) was used to investigate motor cortex
excitability, intracortical excitatory, and inhibitory pathways in 18 patients having experienced a first "grand mal" seizure within 48 hours of the electrophysiological test. All had normal brain MRI, and
were free of any treatment, drug, or alcohol misuse. Results were
compared with those of 35 age matched normal volunteers.
METHODS
The following
parameters of responses to TMS were measured: motor thresholds at rest
and with voluntary contraction, amplitudes of responses, cortical
silent periods, and responses to paired pulse stimulation with
interstimulus intervals of 1 to 20 ms.
RESULTS
In patients,
there were significantly increased motor thresholds with normal
amplitudes of motor evoked potentials (MEPs), suggesting decreased
cortical excitability. Cortical silent periods were not significantly
different from those of normal subjects. Paired TMS with short
interstimulus intervals (1-5 ms) induced normal inhibition of test
MEPs, suggesting preserved function of GABAergic intracortical
inhibitory interneurons. On the contrary, the subsequent period of MEP
facilitation found in normal subjects (ISIs of 6-20 ms) was markedly
reduced in patients. This suggests the existence of abnormally
prolonged intracortical inhibition or deficient intracortical
excitation. In nine patients retested 2 to 4 weeks after the initial
seizure, these abnormalities persisted, although to a lesser extent.
CONCLUSION
The present
findings together with abnormally high motor thresholds could represent
protective mechanisms against the spread or recurrence of seizures.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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P. Mir, Y.-Z. Huang, F. Gilio, M. J. Edwards, A. Berardelli, J. C. Rothwell, and K. P. Bhatia Abnormal cortical and spinal inhibition in paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia Brain, February 1, 2005; 128(2): 291 - 299. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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