Benign Idiopathic Myoclonus: A New Clinical Entity?
Giorgia Sciacca, A.M. Madelein van der Stouwe, Sterre van der Veen, Hendriekje Eggink, Martje E. van Egmond, Jan Willem J. Elting, Marina A.J. Tijssen

TL;DR
The paper proposes a new type of myoclonus called 'benign idiopathic myoclonus' that starts in adolescence and has a non-progressive, benign course.
Contribution
The study introduces 'benign idiopathic myoclonus' as a new clinical entity within physiologic myoclonus.
Findings
Fifteen patients showed distal limb myoclonus without known cause or progression.
Neurophysiological tests confirmed cortical origin in some cases but no genetic causes were found.
Most patients had stable conditions or remission over follow-up periods.
Abstract
Myoclonus is a brief shock‐like, involuntary movement, which can be distinguished in physiologic, essential, epileptic, and symptomatic, according to its etiology. Physiologic myoclonus typically occurs in healthy people without disability or progression. We suggest a new nosological entity in the physiologic group: “benign idiopathic myoclonus.” We present a cohort of patients with isolated adolescent‐onset, distal limb myoclonus at rest and during action, in absence of a known cause and disabling progression, who underwent both clinical and neurophysiological examination in our tertiary Movement Disorders Expertise Center Groningen. Fifteen patients (4 men [26.7%]; age at onset, 18.1 ± 3.6 years; disease‐duration, 5.3 ± 3.7 years) were assessed. Neurophysiological examinations, including electromyography (EMG) (n = 14), somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs, n = 4);…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlycogen Storage Diseases and Myoclonus · Neurological disorders and treatments · Autoimmune Neurological Disorders and Treatments
