Publication | Closed Access
Abnormal sensory evoked potentials in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
79
Citations
0
References
1986
Year
Amyotrophic Lateral SclerosisNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyMedicineNeurological DisorderNeurological FunctionEp AbnormalityAls PatientsRehabilitationNeurologyNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMultiple SclerosisNeuropathologyNeurological DiseaseBrain ElectrophysiologySocial Sciences
We have reviewed sensory evoked potential (EP) findings in 17 patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Somatosensory EPs were abnormal in 7 of 16 patients after lower-extremity stimulation and in 2 of 16 patients after upper-extremity stimulation. Brainstem auditory EP abnormalities were found in 2 of 12 patients. No abnormalities were noted on pattern reversal visual EPs in 12 patients. Overall, 47% of all ALS patients studied had at least one EP abnormality. EP evidence of CNS sensory dysfunction in ALS is more frequent than that noted clinically or pathologically and offers further support to previous observations of sensory system involvement in ALS.