pediatric electrodiagnostic evaluation Flashcards
timing of myelination
begins between 10th and 15th week of gestation
Completed 5 years
8-10 years of age, asked on same diameter as adults
nerve conduction velocity premie versus term infant
21 meters per second for premature
28 m/s term
Normal adult is considered 60 m/s
Normal nerve conduction velocity by 3-5 years
sensory nerve conduction velocity adult versus child
approximately 50% of adult values by 4 years of age
his H-reflex easier to obtain preterm internal minutes versus open
can be obtained from most nerves premature in term infants
After age 1 generally only the tibial and median nerves
describe f waves childhood to adult
mean ulnar nerve is 14.6 ms from infancy to 2-1/2 years, gradually increasing until 20 years of age
the lag time between infancy in 2-1/2 years is due to factors of increasing nerve conduction speed of the arm growing
effective repetitive stimulation on compound muscle action potential
infant show greater decrement indicating that they have less neuromuscular junction reserved
3 factors that determine conduction velocity
- myelination
- diameter of fiber
- internodal difference
In general, what is the motor conduction velocity of infants versus adults?
One Half
CMAP (Compound muscle action potential) amplitudes adults compared to infants?
When do they normalize
In general, less than 1/2 infant v adult
normalizes by age 10
How does sensory nerve maturation compare with motor?
About the same
Sometimes double peak due to different maturation rates of different kinds of axons
F-waves in newborns and young infants
20 msec or less upper
30 msec or less lower
Can be measured from all limbs
Speak to the H-Reflex peds v adult
Evident in upper and lower in most infants and then the upper is lost during childhood
Characterize Motor Unit Action Potentials in infants
Low microvolts (2,000 max, usually less than 1,000 age 0-3)
Very short duration
Recruitment is chaotic
Name 5 general categories in the differential diagnosis for the diagnosis of infantile hypotonia
- Cerebral Hypotonia
- Spinal cord
- Polyneuropathies
- Neuromuscular junction
- Myopathies
Causes of acute onset hypotonia in infant
- AIDP (acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy)
- Infantile polymyositis
- Infantile form of myasthenia
- Toxin
- Acute onset myelopathy