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Epileptic Disorders

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Lingual myoclonus associated with brain tumour: an epileptic origin? Volume 12, numéro 4, December 2010

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  • Longual myoclonus associated with brain tumour: an epileptic origin?

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Auteurs
Department of Neurology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ankara, Turkey

We describe a 59-year-old man, suffering from a left-sided weakness, who was diagnosed with a right frontal oligodendroglioma. One month after a craniotomy, he complained of perioral numbness and slurred speech, which lasted about an hour. Neurological examination discovered dysarthric speech and repetitive, rhythmic myoclonic jerks of the tongue and the lower lip. We suggest this lingual myoclonus was an epileptic phenomenon associated with brain tumour. [Published with video sequences]