par Manto, Mario ;Hildebrand, Jerzy ;Jacquy, Jean
Référence Journal of the neurological sciences, 157, 1, page (42-51)
Publication Publié, 1998-04
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : Cerebellar hypermetria, a classical sign designating the overshoot when the patient attempts to reach rapidly an aimed target, is associated with an imbalance between timing and/or intensity of agonist and antagonist EMG activities. Recovery of hypermetria following a cerebellar ischemia or hemorrhage has been demonstrated to take place in a multistage process, but aberrant recovery following a cerebellar stroke has not been described previously. We report an 85-year-old woman presenting an abnormal recovery following a cerebellar infarction. We identified three successive stages. At stage 1, fast wrist flexion movements were severely hypermetric and associated with three EMG defects: a delayed onset latency of antagonist EMG activity, a reduction of intensity of the agonist EMG activity and a depression of intensity of antagonist EMG activity. At stage 2, movements were characterized by terminal oscillations around the target and the onset latency of the antagonist activity had returned to normal. At stage 3, movements were markedly hypometric, the intensity of the antagonist EMG activity had returned to normal, while the intensity of the agonist EMG activity remained abnormally low. This case illustrates an abnormal reprogramming of the EMG triphasic pattern, resulting in the shift from severe hypermetria to severe hypometria.