Action myoclonus, Ramsay Hunt syndrome, and other cerebellar myoclonic syndromes

Adv Neurol. 1986:43:33-55.

Abstract

Action myoclonus, reviewed in this chapter, is the term applied to arrhythmic muscular jerking induced by voluntary movement. It is made worse by attempts at precise or coordinated movement (intention myoclonus) and may also be provoked by certain sensory stimuli. The effective stimuli for action myoclonus is probably feedback from muscle afferents, although it may be initiated by corollary discharge from motor cortex to reticular formation before or at the onset of voluntary movement. The condition is usually associated with diffuse neuronal disease such as post-hypoxic encephalopathy, uremia, and the various forms of PME, although action myoclonus may be limited to one limb in some cases of focal cerebral damage. It is caused by hyperexcitability of the sensorimotor cortex (cortical reflex myoclonus) or reticular formation (reticular reflex myoclonus), or both. No consistent pathological change has been reported in autopsied cases of action myoclonus. The underlying disorder appears to be a loss of inhibitory mechanisms involving serotonin and possibly GABA as transmitter agents. The term PME is used for the association of myoclonus with degenerative changes in the nervous system which are commonly diffuse but may predominate in certain systems. There may or may not be associated tonic-clonic seizures, other manifestations of epilepsy, or dementia. Those cases of PME associated with Lafora inclusion bodies and cerebral storage diseases can be distinguished from the system degenerations. Systems which may be involved in the latter group include cerebellodentatorubral, pyramidal, extrapyramidal, optic, auditory, posterior columns and gracile and cuneate nuclei, spinocerebellar pathways, motor neurons of cranial nerves and anterior horns, and muscle fibers. Confronted with this diversity of pathological change, it seems unnecessary to make any clinical distinction between Ramsay Hunt syndrome and Unverricht-Lundborg syndrome (Baltic myoclonus) because cerebellar signs are found in patients described under both headings. Additional systems may be involved in individuals or families who are otherwise typical. All three names could well be joined in an eponymous title (Unverricht-Lundborg-Hunt disease) or the condition simply known as the systems degeneration type of PME, as Halliday (43) suggested. The cause of the condition (or spectrum of conditions) is at present unknown. Action myoclonus usually responds to sodium valproate or clonazepam, and some individuals, particularly those with posthypoxic myoclonus, improve with the administration of serotonin precursors.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Aged
  • Alzheimer Disease / complications
  • Cerebellar Ataxia / physiopathology*
  • Cerebellum / pathology
  • Craniocerebral Trauma / complications
  • Electroencephalography
  • Epilepsies, Myoclonic / complications
  • Epilepsies, Myoclonic / physiopathology*
  • Humans
  • Hypoxia / complications
  • Infections / complications
  • Leukemia, Lymphoid / complications
  • Middle Aged
  • Movement
  • Myoclonic Cerebellar Dyssynergia / complications
  • Myoclonic Cerebellar Dyssynergia / physiopathology*
  • Myoclonus / complications
  • Myoclonus / genetics
  • Myoclonus / pathology
  • Myoclonus / physiopathology*
  • Posture
  • Uremia / complications