Abstract

Single fibre electromyography is the most sensitive neurophysiological test for the diagnosis of neuromuscular junction disorders, particularly myasthenia gravis. The study aimed at establishing concentric needle (CN) normal jitter values for voluntarily activated orbicularis-oculi (V-OOc) & Frontalis (V-FRO) muscles in Sudanese population. 57 healthy volunteers (20 males & 37 females) were included in the study (mean Age 43.6 ± 14.2 years, range 18–70 years). V-OOc and V-FRO were tested in the same individual using CN. Jitter values were expressed as the mean consecutive difference (MCD) of 30 potential pairs in microseconds. The mean jitter, mean individual fibre pairs jitter & mean outliers jitter values with (upper 95% Confidence Limit-CL) for [OOc] were [26.9 ± 3.3 (31.97), 26.1 ± 8.9 (41.8) & 38.5 ± 5.7 (49.0) µs] & for [FRO] were [27.1 ± 3.0 (31.32), 26.4 ± 9.4 (42.9) & 39.9 ± 5 (49.2) µs] respectively. The suggested practical upper limits for mean jitter & for outliers were (32, 49 µs) for OOc & (31, 49 µs) for FRO. Our CN-jitter values were within the range of the few published studies. The study was unique in that it established and compared between CN reference jitter values of two voluntarily activated facial muscles (V-OOc & V-FRO) in the same individual in large number of healthy subjects.

Highlights

  • Summary of practical upper limit values for the mean jitter and jitter of individual fibre pair in orbicularis oculi and frontalis muscles

  • Our estimated values for upper 95% confidence limit (95% CL) of mean jitter, mean individual fibre pair jitter and mean outliers jitter [i.e. values above which the study should be considered abnormal] were summarized in [Table 3]

  • The limits for outliers are well defined for the current study and Stalberg studies[18,35,37], more than the other studies

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this study was to establish and to compare normal concentric jitter values obtained performing voluntary activation technique in OOc & FRO muscles tested in the same control subject

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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