Volume 21, Issue 4 pp. 533-535
Short Report

Fasciculation potentials in healthy people

Dimos D. Mitsikostas MD

Dimos D. Mitsikostas MD

Athens University, School of Medicine, Department of Neurology, Aeginition Hospital, 72 Vas. Sofias Av., Athens 11521, Greece

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Nikos Karandreas MD

Corresponding Author

Nikos Karandreas MD

Athens University, School of Medicine, Department of Neurology, Aeginition Hospital, 72 Vas. Sofias Av., Athens 11521, Greece

Athens University, School of Medicine, Department of Neurology, Aeginition Hospital, 72 Vas. Sofias Av., Athens 11521, GreeceSearch for more papers by this author
Petros Coutsopetras MD

Petros Coutsopetras MD

Athens University, School of Medicine, Department of Neurology, Aeginition Hospital, 72 Vas. Sofias Av., Athens 11521, Greece

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Panayiotis Piperos MD

Panayiotis Piperos MD

Athens University, School of Medicine, Department of Neurology, Aeginition Hospital, 72 Vas. Sofias Av., Athens 11521, Greece

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Costas Lygidakis MD

Costas Lygidakis MD

Athens University, School of Medicine, Department of Neurology, Aeginition Hospital, 72 Vas. Sofias Av., Athens 11521, Greece

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Costas Papageorgiou MD

Costas Papageorgiou MD

Athens University, School of Medicine, Department of Neurology, Aeginition Hospital, 72 Vas. Sofias Av., Athens 11521, Greece

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Abstract

The aim of this study was to investigate the fasciculation potentials (FPs) in the small-peripheral muscles of the foot and hand and the possible associated factors, in a healthy population. One hundred-twenty-two normal individuals (65 men and 57 women), aged 17–67 years (mean 39.96, SD=12.76) participated in the study. A special questionnaire consisting of 47 questions was devised as the basic instrument of the interview, which included the Hamilton anxiety rating scale. The extensor digitorum brevis (EDB), the flexor hallucis brevis (FHB) and the first dorsal interosseous (FDI) muscles were studied bilaterally using surface electrodes. In 94 (58 men and 36 women) from 122 participants (65 men and 57 women) FPs were recorded (men 89.2%, women 63.1%, all 77%). The mean FPs per minute and muscle, in all three muscles, was 8.0 (SD=4.6). More FPs were recorded in the muscles of foot than in FDI (p<0.01) and in FHB than in EDB (p<0.001). FPs were correlated to gender, body height and weight and to the score of the Hamilton scale (r2>0.1, p<0.01). The syndrome of benign FPs was observed in 2 men (1.6% of men). These results suggest that FPs are a very common phenomenon in the peripheral muscles of healthy persons. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Muscle Nerve 21:533–535.

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