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. 2009 Jun;120(6):1213-9.
doi: 10.1016/j.clinph.2009.04.010. Epub 2009 May 17.

Slow pre-movement cortical potentials do not reflect individual response to therapy in writer's cramp

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Slow pre-movement cortical potentials do not reflect individual response to therapy in writer's cramp

K E Zeuner et al. Clin Neurophysiol. 2009 Jun.

Abstract

Objective: To investigate whether movement-related cortical potentials (MRCP) provide a physiological correlate that indicates the response to treatment in patients with writer's cramp.

Methods: In 21 patients with writer's cramp, who underwent 4 weeks of limb immobilization followed by re-training for 8 weeks, we recorded MRCPs preceding a self-initiated brisk finger abduction movement. MRCP measurements of pre-movement activity were performed at baseline, after the end of immobilization and four and 8 weeks of re-training. We examined 12 controls, who received no intervention, twice 4 weeks apart.

Results: Patients benefited from the therapeutical intervention (Zeuner et al., 2008). They showed no abnormalities of the MRCPs at baseline. In controls, MRCPs did not significantly change after 4 weeks. In patients, immobilization and re-training had no effect on MRCPs. There was no correlation between the severity of dystonic symptoms or the individual treatment response and MRCPs.

Conclusion: MRCPs are stable measures for interventional studies. However, they do not reflect clinical severity of dystonic symptoms or improvement after therapeutic interventions.

Significance: This is the first study to investigate MRCPs in a large cohort of patients with writer's cramp compared to a control group at different time points. These potentials do not reflect the motor control disorder in patients with writer's cramp.

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