Isaac Lamb, MD Profile picture
Sep 6 9 tweets 4 min read
There are a lot of jargon words in #neurology. As a student, I felt particularly confused by the words clonus, myoclonus, and asterixis, so I made this #tweetorial for learners who feel like I did.
#MedTwitter #MedEd #medicalschool #neurotwitter
Clonus is RHYTHMIC involuntary muscle contractions. It's caused by lesions to the pyramidal tract (ie UMN). It's likely due to exquisitely hyperreflexic muscle stretch reflexes - basically the muscle contraction triggers itself to keep firing in a feedback loop. Image
An easy way to check for clonus is by rapidly plantarflexing the foot, but you can sometimes see clonus just by checking muscle stretch reflexes.

Sustained clonus is defined as > 10 consecutive beats, but both sustained and unsustained clonus are generally pathologic in adults.
Myoclonus, on the other hand, is NONRHYTHMIC, involuntary, brief muscle contractions.

Myoclonus can be primary (e.g. hereditary essential myoclonus) or secondary to medications/epilepsy, etc. The etiology is unfortunately pretty complex and outside the scope of this lesson.
Interestingly, myoclonus can be completely normal.

Ever do that sudden jerk right when you're falling asleep? Myoclonus.

Even hiccups are just a kind of myoclonus.
Asterixis is that hand-flapping thing cirrhotics get, right?
Well, yeah, but it's actually much simpler than that: asterixis is just negative myoclonus.
It tends to occur with global metabolic issues such as cirrhosis (hyperammonemia) and renal failure (hyperuremia). Muscle tone is lost due to what's basically a transient "dropped call" from the brain.
Look for asterixis in movements that require sustained flexion or extension: firmly gripping your hand, walking, or holding the wrists in extension.
As you can see, while the three terms are related, they are very different in terms of their presentation and meaning:

* Clonus: rhythmic. Super-hyperreflexia. UMN lesion.

* Myoclonus: irregular rapid jerks. Wide ddx.

* Asterixis: negative myoclonus. Metabolic derangements.

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More from @IsaacLamb01

Apr 21
Learning brainstem #neuroanatomy would be nearly impossible without the rule of 4s. I'm going to pass this along for anyone trying to learn #neurology, as this might be the single most powerful mnemonic I know of.

I present to you, The Rule of 4s: a #MedEd #tweetorial

(1/10)
4 cranial nerves per brainstem level
- Midbrain: 1-4
- Pons: 5-8
- Medulla: 9-12

* CNs 1 and 11 do not connect with the brainstem
* CN5 enters in the pons, but has nuclei at all three levels

(2/10)
4 lateral (side) structures, all with an "S":
- Spinocerebellar pathway
- Spinothalamic pathway
- Sensory nucleus of CN5
- Sympathetic pathway

(3/10)
Read 10 tweets

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