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Post-Lesion Yawning and Thalamotomy Site
12
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0
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1975
Year
Traumatic Brain InjuryNeuropsychologyMedial PortionNeurotologyPost-lesion YawningSocial SciencesBrain InjuryNeurologyCognitive ElectrophysiologyNeuropathologySleepPsychiatryEeg AbnormalityNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyNeuroscienceBrain ElectrophysiologyConcussionRecent Head InjuryMedicine
Yawning during hyperventilation occurred in certain patients post-thalamotomy. It was found that all of the lesions which elicited yawning (during the routine recording of electroencephalograms) were localized to the medial portion of the center-median nucleus. Yawning was noted to persist up to 3(1/2) years post surgery. Another group of patients who yawned when hyperventilated were patients with a history of a recent head injury who showed post-traumatic behavioral changes. Patients in both groups were young. There was no direct relationship between yawning and EEG abnormality. It was suggested that yawning during hyperventilation may serve as a sign of brain damage, especially at the brain stem level, in young patients.