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Reduction of cortical myoclonus-related epileptic activity following slow-frequency rTMS

Authors :
Rossi, Simone
Ulivelli, Monica
Bartalini, S
Galli, R
Passero, STEFANO GIACOMO
Battistini, Noe'
Vatti, G.
Source :
Neuroreport. 15(2)
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

In a drug-resistant epilepsy patient with continuous forearm/hand positive myoclonia due to a focal cortical dysplasia of the right motor cortex, cortical jerk-related and electromyographic activity were recorded for 15 min before and after 1 Hz rTMS (15 min, 10% below the resting excitability threshold) of the right motor cortex. A stable negative cortical spike, time-locked with contralateral muscle jerks (60100 microV), was detected only at perirolandic electrodes (maximal amplitudes: block 1 = 21.3 microV, block 2 = 22 microV, block 3 = 25.9 microV). After rTMS, only 20 muscle jerks accomplished the criterion of100 microV; blind back-averaging of these disclosed a topographically similar cortical spike, but with amplitude reduced by at least 50% (11.2 microV). This represents in vivo evidence of the possibility to selectively modulate the activity of an epileptic focus by intervening with local low-frequency rTMS.

Details

ISSN :
09594965
Volume :
15
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neuroreport
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....31d0a3c8f8470767bcc3411810a9970a