INTRODUCTION — Movement disorders are
characterized by either excessive (hyperkinetic) or
reduced (bradykinetic) activity. Hyperkinetic
disorders are characterized by abnormal involuntary
movement. These excess movements can be regular and
rhythmic, as in tremor; more sustained and
patterned, as in dystonia; brief and random, as in
chorea; or jerk-like and temporarily suppressible,
as in tics. Diagnosis of the specific condition
depends primarily upon careful observation of the
clinical features. Tics are the most common
hyperkinetic disorder in children. Dystonia,
stereotypies, choreoathetosis, tremors, and
myoclonus also occur but are less common.
ANATOMY OF THE BASAL GANGLIA — A brief review
of the anatomy of the basal ganglia is appropriate
since this site is involved in many of the
bradykinetic disorders. The basal ganglia regulate
the initiation, scaling, and control of the
amplitude and direction of movement. Movement
disorders can result from biochemical or structural
abnormalities in these structures. The basal ganglia
are a complex of deep nuclei that consist of the
corpus striatum, globus pallidus, and substantia
nigra. The corpus striatum, which includes the
caudate nucleus and the putamen, receives input from
the cerebral cortex and the thalamus and, in turn,
projects to the globus pallidus. The substantia
nigra is divided into the dopamine-rich pars
compacta and the less dense pars reticularis. The
pars reticularis is similar histologically and
chemically to the medial segment of the globus
pallidus, and both project via the thalamus to the
premotor and motor cortex. The substantia nigra pars
compacta gives rise to the nigral-striatal pathway,
which is the main dopaminergic tract. The output of
the basal ganglia projects by way of the thalamus to
the cerebral cortex and then to the pyramidal
system. Basal ganglia output is known as the
extrapyramidal system because it was formerly
thought to be in parallel with the pyramidal system.
Integration of the basal ganglia with the cortex
facilitates motor control.
TOURETTE SYNDROME —
Tourette syndrome (TS) is
a common movement and neurobehavioral disorder in
children. The hallmark of TS is the occurrence of
multiple motor and vocal (phonic) tics. Tics in TS
may be simple, involving a single muscle or muscle
group, or complex, involving sequential, coordinated
movements. Simple tics include blinking, facial
grimacing, shoulder shrugging, and head jerking.
Complex tics include bizarre gait, kicking, jumping,
body gyrations, and seductive or obscene gestures.
Involuntary vocalizations may include simple noises
to more complex utterances such as coprolalia
(shouting of obscenities or profanities), echolalia
(repeating what others say), and palilalia
(repeating the patient's own words or phrases). TS
must be differentiated from transient tics, which
occur in otherwise normal children and spontaneously
remit in a few weeks or months.
Dystonia consists of repetitive, patterned, twisting,
and sustained movements that may be either slow or rapid.
Dystonic states are classified as primary, secondary, or
psychogenic depending upon the cause. By definition, primary
dystonia (formerly known as dystonia musculorum deformans or
idiopathic torsion dystonia) is associated with no other
neurologic impairment, such as intellectual, pyramidal,
cerebellar, or sensory deficits. However, tremor that appears
identical to essential tremor occurs in approximately 20 percent
of patients with this condition. In some families, dystonia and
essential tremor coexist. Cerebral palsy probably is the most
common cause of secondary dystonia seen in children.
STEREOTYPIES — Stereotypies are repetitive,
purposeless, and apparently voluntary movements such
as chewing, rocking, twirling, or touching. These
movements typically occur in children with infantile
autism or mental retardation. In addition,
stereotypies also can occur in otherwise normal
children. The clinical features and course of
complex stereotypies of the upper extremity were
described in a case series of 40 children and
adolescents from a tertiary specialty clinic. The
following features were noted: The mean age was 7.9
years 90 percent had onset before 3 years of age 90
percent had occurrence at least daily, but were not
reported to occur during sleep. The typical duration
of episodes ranged from <10 seconds (30 percent) to
>60 seconds (30 percent) The movement involved
flapping in 48 percent, shaking in 28 percent,
clenching-stiffening-posturing in 38 percent, and
ritual in 13 percent of patients The movement
stopped when cued in all but one patient. Triggers
included excitement, boredom, being focused or
engrossed, and anxiety/stress 25 percent had
comorbid attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder 20
percent had comorbid learning disability 25 percent
had a positive family history of stereotypies The
clinical course involved resolution in 5 percent,
improvement in 33 percent, no change in 50 percent,
and worsening in 13 percent of patients
Rett syndrome — Rett syndrome is an example of a
disorder characterized by marked stereotypy. This
condition is one of the most common causes of mental
retardation in females. Most cases are caused by
mutations in the gene for methyl-CpG-binding protein
2 (MeCP2).
Rett syndrome typically presents at six to 18 months
of age in girls with previously normal growth and
development. Affected patients regress in their
verbal and motor skills, lose purposeful use of
their hands, and have jerky ataxia and typical
stereotyped movements of the hands resembling hand
washing and kneading. Other symptoms include
breath-holding spells, hyperventilation, loss of
facial expression, poor eye contact, bruxism,
dystonia, occasional seizures, apparent
insensitivity to pain, and a variety of
self-injurious and aggressive behaviors.
The clinical features, diagnosis and management of
Rett syndrome are discussed in detail separately.
(See "Rett syndrome").
CHOREA, ATHETOSIS, AND BALLISMUS — Children can
be affected by many acquired and hereditary types of
chorea and related movement disorders. The following
definitions apply: Chorea refers to continuous,
unsustained, rapid, abrupt, and random contractions.
Athetosis consists of nonpatterned, writhing
movements that represent a form of "slow chorea".
Ballismus is a form of severe, coarse chorea; it is
usually unilateral (hemiballismus) and often results
from a lesion in the contralateral subthalamic
nucleus and adjacent structures
Physiologic chorea — Almost all normal
infants make movements that resemble chorea, but
this physiologic chorea resolves by eight months of
age. Children with attention deficit disorder and
hyperactivity may have distal chorea (chorea
minima).
Cerebral palsy — Cerebral palsy is a common
cause of chorea in children. Chorea or athetosis
(choreoathetosis) is the predominant motor
disturbance in approximately one-third of cases but
occurs to a variable degree in almost all patients.
In one series, choreoathetosis was apparent in
one-half of patients during the first year and
developed in the remainder during the next four to
five years, after which it remained static. Most
patients with athetoid cerebral palsy were born
prematurely (60 percent) or had a perinatal history
of jaundice and/or asphyxia (82 percent). Dystonia
also is common, occurring in up to 70 percent of
cases.
Several patients have been reported with
choreoathetosis and dystonia that is delayed in
onset and progressive, in contrast to the
nonprogressive neurologic impairment in cerebral
palsy. The mechanism is attributed to sprouting and
denervation supersensitivity of receptors in the
basal ganglia.
Sydenham chorea — Sydenham chorea (SC) is one
of the major clinical manifestations of acute
rheumatic fever and the most common form of acquired
chorea in childhood. The initial presentation
typically occurs in patients between 5 and 13 years
of age. This disorder is discussed in detail
elsewhere and will be reviewed briefly here. (See
"Sydenham chorea").
Chorea usually develops one to eight months after
the inciting infection, in contrast to carditis and
arthritis which most often present within 21 days.
The onset usually is insidious but may be abrupt.
The chorea typically begins with distal movements of
the hands, but generalized jerking of the face and
feet emerges as the chorea becomes more active. The
movements are rapid, irregular, and nonstereotyped
jerks that are continuous while the patient is awake
but improve with sleep. The chorea usually is
generalized but may be more prominent on one side;
approximately 20 percent of patients have hemichorea
(i.e, unilateral chorea). Emotional changes, such as
easy crying or inappropriate laughing, may precede
the development of chorea and, in some cases,
regression in school performance is the initial
concern.
The diagnosis of SC is made clinically as no
specific laboratory test exists. Although the
neuropathology of SC is not well studied, vasculitis
involving the basal ganglia, cortex, and cerebellum
has been identified in some brains of affected
patients.
Sydenham chorea typically improves gradually, with a
mean duration of 12 to 15 weeks. Treatment includes
antibiotic therapy with penicillin for at least 10
days followed by antibiotic prophylaxis. Specific
treatment for the chorea may be warranted when
significant impairment of motor function and the
possibility of self-injury are present. Treatments
reported to be effective include valproic acid,
phenobarbital, haloperidol, pemozide, diazepam,
chlorpromazine, and carbamazepine. Corticosteroids
may shorten the course of SC.
Post pump chorea — A dyskinetic movement
disorder may complicate cardiac surgery in a small
number of children with congenital heart disease.
The estimated frequency of this complication is 10
percent (0.6 to 18 percent) per procedure, but the
incidence appears to be decreasing over time,
presumably as a result of changing operative
techniques. The complication has been described in
children ages six weeks to 52 months. Risk factors
include more time on pump, deeper hypothermia (<36
degrees), and circulatory arrest. Symptoms begin
three to twelve days postoperatively. The dyskinesia
is usually in the form of choreoathetosis and mainly
involves the mouth, tongue and face. More severely
affected children have involvement of extremities
and trunk. Neuroimaging studies and EEG are normal.
The underlying etiology is not understood. In two
patients, neuropathologic findings included neuronal
loss, reactive astrocytosis, and degeneration of
myelinated fibers in the globus pallidus, primarily
the outer segment. Locations typically affected by
hypoxic ischemic insult were spared. In some milder
and transient cases, certain medications (eg,
fentanyl, midazolam, captopril) have been
implicated.
The movements remit in some children over several
weeks; others, particularly those who are more
severely affected, have persistent chorea.
Associated neurological deficits are common and
range from mild learning deficits to hypotonia and
obtundation. Severely affected children may die. In
one series, 1 of 8 died; in another, 3 of 36 died.
Abnormal motor, cognitive and behavioral development
is the rule among children followed over several
years. Older children and those most severely
affected at onset appear to be a higher risk for
serious and more persistent deficits.
Other acquired causes —
Kernicterus is a neurologic condition that
may occur when serum total bilirubin concentrations
in the perinatal period are excessive. In the
chronic phase, the disorder is characterized by
choreoathetosis, tremor, dystonia, rigidity,
dysarthria, sensorineural hearing loss, and
limitation of upward gaze. Affected infants may have
increased signal intensity in the basal ganglia in
T2-weighted magnetic resonance images because of
deposition of bilirubin.
Some infants with severe
bronchopulmonary dysplasia develop a movement
disorder similar to chorea. In one report describing
10 infants, the condition developed at approximately
the third postnatal month and involved the limbs,
neck, trunk, and oral-buccal-lingual structures. The
abnormalities completely or partially resolved in
the seven surviving infants. A neuropathologic study
of one infant showed neuronal loss with astrocytosis
in the caudate, putamen, globus pallidus, and
thalamus.
Hereditary chorea — Huntington disease is the
most frequent cause of hereditary chorea in
children. Other causes include benign hereditary
chorea and Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. Huntington’s
disease (HD) is an autosomal-dominant inherited
neurodegenerative disorder caused by a CAG polyglutamine repeat
expansion in exon 1 of the HD gene. Patients affected by this
devastating disease suffer early cognitive impairment, motor
deficits, and psychiatric disturbances. Symptoms are attributed
to cell death in the striatum and disruption of cortico–striatal
circuitry. The mechanisms that underlie selective neuronal cell
death and dysfunction remain poorly understood, but processes
involving mitochondrial abnormalities, excitotoxicity, and
abnormal protein degradation have been implicated. The diagnosis
may be made by genetic testing. Therapy that slows the
progressive neuronal dysfunction or degeneration is unavailable
and pharmaceutical therapies are commonly used, with limited
benefit, to treat disease symptoms.
Several neuroprotective therapies as well as cell replacement
strategies such as fetal transplantation have been used with
minimal success. In this context, newer neuroimaging
technologies may provide surrogate markers of both disease onset
and disease progression.
Most of the HD studies using either qualitative or volumetric
MRI have focused on the basal ganglia. Several studies have
shown evidence of basal ganglia atrophy, even before the onset
of motor symptoms. Caudate volumes were found to correlate with
performance on neuropsychological tests, suggesting that caudate
atrophy may play a role in cognitive symptoms. A measurable rate
of change in caudate volume over time was reported, which
correlated with age at onset and length of trinucleotide repeat,
suggesting that striatal volume loss is a potentially important
surrogate marker of HD that may be useful in clinical
therapeutic trials. Studies showed that, as suggested by the
clinical picture, extrastriatal degeneration also plays an
important role in HD with regionally specific degeneration of
the cortex. Patients at earlier or even at preclinical disease
stages may demonstrate prominent cortical thinning, suggesting
that cortical degeneration may play a role in the clinical
symptoms.
1H-MRSpectroscopy in Huntington disease.
1H-MRS has been essentially used to assess disease
mechanisms and, in rare cases, to monitor the effect of
treatment in patients with HD. These studies mainly found
reduced NAA and increased Lac in the striatum, occipital cortex,
and frontal cortex. Lac levels were increased in the occipital
cortex and basal ganglia of symptomatic HD patients and the Lac
level correlated with duration of illness. Subsequently, an
elevation of Lac signal was found in the striatum and not in the
cortex in a few presymptomatic carriers of the HD gene. However,
other studies have failed to observe elevated lactate with
1H-MRS in HD patients. Increased glutamine–glutamate level in
the striatum also have been reported, supporting the theory of
glutamate excitotoxicity in HD.
Overall, the 1H-MRS studies support the notion of the altered
energy metabolism in HD. Future studies are needed to determine
whether these alterations are causative or secondary measures.
The use of 1H-MRS in HD for diagnostic purposes is not
recommended.
Nevertheless, 1H-MRS can definitely provide surrogate markers,
especially with respect to the use of potential therapeutic
intervention. In this context, 1H-MRS should be performed in the
basal ganglia at either relatively long TE (135 ms) or short TE
(30–35 ms) to allow quantification of Lac or
glutamine–glutamate, respectively.
Benign hereditary chorea — Benign hereditary
chorea (BHC) is an autosomal dominant disorder that
may present during infancy, childhood, or
adolescence and persists throughout life. The
mechanism of benign hereditary chorea may be related
to impaired cerebral glucose metabolism in the
caudate nucleus, as demonstrated by positron
emission tomography with 18F-2-fluorodeoxyglucose.
However, this finding has not been found in all
cases. Patients thought to have this disorder
require thorough investigation and follow-up because
some and perhaps many are diagnosed subsequently
with other conditions.
Some patients with BHC are heterozygous for
mutations in the thyroid transcription factor-1
(TITF1) gene on chromosome 14q13. A rare syndrome of
chorea combined with mental retardation, congenital
hypothyroidism, and chronic lung disease has also
been linked to a TITF1 gene mutation. This
constellation of features is the basis for the term
Brain-Thyroid-Lung syndrome
proposed for this disease. Suspicion should be
raised for a TITF1 gene mutation in children and
adults who have these combined features.
Although there is no established therapy for BHC,
one study reported that two patients with BHC and
typical choreoathetosis responded to levodopa, 7 to
20 mg/kg per day, with sustained improvement of gait
and chorea.
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome — Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
is a complex motor-behavioral condition that is
inherited as an X-linked recessive trait. The
disorder results from mutations in the gene coding
for the enzyme hypoxanthine-guanine
phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT), leading to
deficient enzyme activity. This defect results in an
often marked increase in production of uric acid and
hyperuricemia.
More than 2000 mutations of the HPRT gene have been
reported, and the wide spectrum of neurologic
symptoms (with some patients being asymptomatic) and
severity of the disease have been associated with
the degree of enzyme deficiency. Affected boys have
delayed developmental milestones, mental
retardation, and extrapyramidal and pyramidal motor
symptoms; they also develop self-mutilating
behavior.
While earlier literature emphasized choreoathetosis
and spasticity as typical features of the motor
disorder associated with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome,
dystonia may be more common. This observation comes
from a prospective observational study of a series
of 44 patients with complete HPRT deficiency. The
study found a characteristic evolution of motor
involvement, which began at three to six months of
age with hypotonia, with or without delayed
acquisition of motor skills. Involuntary movements,
predominantly dystonia, developed between six and 24
months. Thereafter, the clinical course is
relatively static and characterized by severe action
dystonia with baseline hypotonia. Extrapyramidal
symptoms such as choreoathetosis or ballismus may
occur, but are less prominent than dystonia.
ESSENTIAL TREMOR — Tremor is defined as a
rhythmic and oscillatory movement of a body part
with a relatively constant frequency and variable
amplitude. It is caused by either alternating or
synchronous contractions of antagonistic muscles. By
definition, tremor should be the only neurologic
manifestation of essential tremor (ET). ET usually
is a benign condition. However, it may progress to a
disabling movement disorder that interferes with
feeding, speaking, writing, and other activities of
daily living. The cause of ET is uncertain. One form
is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner. At
least two loci have been identified: one on
chromosome 3q13 and one on chromosome 2p22. Although
no neurotransmitter abnormalities have been
demonstrated in ET, physiologic studies have
demonstrated dysfunction of the cerebellar system.
ET is the most common cause of an oscillatory
involuntary movement disorder in childhood. ET may
start at any age, including infancy. The clinical
features of childhood-onset ET were described in a
case series of 39 patients who were evaluated in a
movement disorders clinic: The mean age of onset was
8.8 years (range 1 to 16 years), with a mean age of
evaluation of 20.3 years The majority of patients
were boys (74 percent) 46 percent of patients had
some neurologic comorbidity, including dystonia,
which was present in 28 percent 80 percent of
patients reported at least one relative with tremor.
Exacerbating factors included stress, anxiety,
physical activity, and caffeine
Two forms of hereditary ET that may begin in infancy
are hereditary chin tremor and shuddering attacks.
Hereditary chin tremor
— Hereditary chin tremor (also called hereditary
geniospasm) consists of rhythmic contractions of the
chin that occur at a frequency of 3/sec. This
condition is inherited in an autosomal dominant
pattern, with one locus on chromosome 9q13, and
often is associated with deafness.
Shuddering attacks —
Shuddering attacks begin during infancy or early
childhood. Affected children have bursts of rapid
trembling of the entire body, occasionally
associated with head turning, involuntary sniffing,
and throat clearing. They usually fall to the floor
if they have been standing. Attacks may occur during
sleep. More than 100 attacks per day may occur; on
the other hand, patients may be free of symptoms for
as long as two weeks. The episodes tend to decrease
in frequency or disappear over time.
Other variants — Another form of ET seen in children
is an action-postural tremor that consists of slower
and faster components. The slower tremor
(approximately 6.5 Hz) typically involves the head
and neck, whereas the more rapid tremor (8 to 12 Hz)
usually involves the hands.
Other oscillatory involuntary movements occasionally
are seen in infants and children. They include "head
nodding," which is often associated with congenital
nystagmus, including spasmus mutans, and the
"bobble-headed doll's syndrome," which occurs with
diencephalic lesions, including third-ventricle
cysts or tumors, craniopharyngioma, hydrocephalus,
and hypothalamic lesions.
Treatment — Therapy for ET is discussed
separately. (See "Pharmacologic treatment of
essential tremor" and see "Surgical treatment of
essential tremor").
MYOCLONUS — Myoclonus is a simple, jerk-like
movement that is not coordinated or suppressible and
often is activated by volitional movement. Myoclonus
can be physiologic or pathologic and can occur as an
isolated disorder or associated with seizures or
other conditions.
Benign neonatal sleep myoclonus — Benign
neonatal sleep myoclonus occurs in the first month
after birth. It usually occurs in the early stages
of sleep and is stimulus-sensitive. It should be
differentiated from neonatal seizures and infantile
spasms.
Essential myoclonus — Essential myoclonus has no
associated neurologic deficit, although it may be
associated with ET. The disorder is inherited in an
autosomal dominant pattern or may occur
sporadically. It typically begins before the patient
reaches age 20 years.
Cortical myoclonus — Cortical myoclonus
consists of continuous, repetitive, focal jerking
that sometimes is associated with characteristic
electroencephalographic (EEG) changes. The myoclonus
may be triggered by external stimuli or evoked by
muscle stretch reflex.
The underlying mechanism of cortical myoclonus is
thought to be a hyperexcitable sensorimotor cortex.
In cortical reflex myoclonus, quick, passive
movement of a distal phalanx elicits the myoclonic
movement. This movement is preceded by a specific
EEG event and enhanced amplitude of the
somatosensory evoked potential. In cortical action
myoclonus, myoclonus is elicited by active movement
which may have an EEG correlate.
Epilepsia partialis continua — Epilepsia
partialis continua (partial status epilepticus) may
be associated with myoclonus. Common causes include
cortical stroke and Rasmussen encephalitis, which
results from a focal cortical lesion or inflammation
possibly induced by viral infection.
Reticular reflex myoclonus is thought to result from
a hyperexcitable brainstem reticular formation,
particularly the nucleus reticularis
gigantocellularis.
Unverricht-Lundborg disease —
Unverricht-Lundborg disease (ULD; also known as
"Mediterranean" or "Baltic" myoclonus or EPM1) is
one form of progressive myoclonus epilepsy (PME), a
condition that consists of myoclonus, seizures, and
a progressive clinical course.
In the EPM1 form, stimulus-sensitive myoclonus
usually begins between ages 6 and 15 years. Affected
patients develop dysarthria, ataxia, intention
tremor, and mild intellectual decline; many become
bedridden within five years after onset of symptoms.
Epileptiform EEG findings may precede symptoms by up
to three years. Valproate and carbamazepine are
often very effective treatments for EPM1, however,
phenytoin and possibly lamotrigine have been
associated with exacerbations. A French case series
suggests that, with improved treatment, the course
is not necessarily dire and stabilizes after five to
ten years. Among 20 patients with ULD who were
followed over 25 years, only three were severely
handicapped, and six led fully independent lives.
EPM1 is inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern.
The responsible gene is localized to 21q22 and
encodes cystatin B, a cysteine protease inhibitor.
Several different mutations have been identified in
this gene in patients with EPM1, but the most common
is an unstable expansion of a dodecamer
minisatellite repeat unit in the promoter region of
the cystatin B gene.
A novel form of ULD that maps to chromosome 12 has
been described in an Arab family. The locus on
chromosome 12 (designated EPM1B) does not have genes
known to be related to cystatin B or other forms of
PME. The clinical phenotype of EPM1B is similar to
EPM1, but appears to be distinguished by an earlier
age of onset.
Lafora body disease — Lafora body disease is
another form of progressive myoclonus epilepsy (PME)
that is characterized by progressive and intractable
myoclonic and photoconvulsive seizures, dementia,
apraxia, and cortical blindness. Age of onset is
usually between ages 11 and 18 years. Total
disability typically occurs within five to eight
years. Biopsy of the skin (especially in the
axillary region), liver, muscle, or brain reveals
pathognomonic polyglucosan inclusions (Lafora
bodies) that appear positive on periodic acid-Schiff
staining.
The mode of inheritance is autosomal recessive.
Lafora body disease has been associated with
mutations in the EPM2A and EPM2B genes, and a third
locus may exist as well. The EPM2A gene codes for
the protein laforin, and the EPM2B gene codes for
the protein malin. Laforin has a starch binding
domain, while malin binds laforin, suggesting that
both proteins interact in a cellular pathway that
protects against polyglucosan accumulation and
epilepsy.
Hyperekplexia — Hyperekplexia, or 'human startle
disease', is a rare disorder characterized by
generalized stiffness beginning in infancy.
Affected patients develop exaggerated myoclonic
startle reactions that may result in falling.
Both hereditary and sporadic hyperekplexia are
genetically heterogeneous. The hereditary form (OMIM
149400) is typically caused by mutations in the gene
coding for the alpha-1 subunit of the inhibitory
glycine receptor (GLRA1) on chromosome 5. The
disorder is also caused by mutations in the beta
subunit of the inhibitory glycine receptor (GLRB),
by mutations in the gephyrin gene (GPHN), and by
mutations in SLC6A5, which encodes the presynaptic
glycine transporter-2 (GlyT2).
The SLC6A5 mutations are predominately associated
with recessive hyperekplexia; symptoms include
life-threatening neonatal apnea and breath-holding
spells.
Other — A number of other types of symptomatic
myoclonus include: Ramsay Hunt
syndrome is a group of heterogeneous
disorders characterized by a combination of
progressive myoclonus and cerebellar ataxia.
Subacute sclerosing
panencephalitis after viral encephalitis (eg,
measles) may present with progressive dementia and
slow myoclonus that occurs at a rate of
approximately one per second and is associated with
periodic complexes on EEG.
Opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome or
"dancing eyes-dancing feet"
syndrome may occur in young children after a
febrile viral illness or as a paraneoplastic
syndrome associated with neuroblastoma. This
disorder often improves with steroid therapy. The
pathogenesis is thought to be immune mediated, but
the precise mechanism remains unclear. One study
found that B and T cell markers correlated with
neurologic severity, and another found evidence of
autoantibody reactivity to a neuronal surface
antigen, but no single antibody has been
consistently identified in children with this
disorder. Small myoclonic jerks (minipolymyoclonus)
may occur in children with chronic spinal muscular
atrophy.
Treatment — The idiopathic, generalized, or
segmental forms of myoclonus may improve with drug
therapy. Therapeutic trials are attempted using (in
order) clonazepam, piracetam, levetiracetam, sodium
valproate, 5-hydroxytryptophan, tetrabenazine,
reserpine, levodopa, trihexyphenidyl, and lisuride. |