
Background: Myoclonus is a hyperkinetic movement with various attributable etiologies, semiologies, and treatment outcomes. To our knowledge, few studies investigated adult-onset myoclonus in an inpatient setting.
Methods: We retrospectively reviewed charts of adult inpatients with myoclonus at New York Presbyterian Brooklyn Methodist Hospital between 2011 and 2021. Data was analyzed with descriptive statistical methods to elucidate etiology-specific demographics and outcomes.
Results: 279 individuals, 56.63% female, were included in our study, aging at 70.61 + 15.76 years. More than 50% were not initially diagnosed with myoclonus by the admitting medical team, and more than 50% had 2 or more ascribable etiologies. Symptomatic myoclonus – mostly of toxic-metabolic or hypoxic-ischemic etiology – accounted for most cases. Hypoxic-ischemic etiologies had shorter durations prior to presentation and were also most resistant to treatment. Renal-associated myoclonus was most associated with asterixis, whereas stimulus-sensitive myoclonus was strongly associated with hypoxic-ischemic etiology. Mortality in-hospital was strongly associated with hypoxic-ischemic etiology and least associated with neurodegenerative and idiopathic etiologies. Treatment response rate diminished in patients who were tried on a second or third anti-seizure drug compared to those trialed on one.
Discussion: Myoclonus remains an underdiagnosed hyperkinetic movement disorder with various ascribable etiologies of varying demographic characteristics and treatment outcomes.
© 2025 Karin Oh, Moath Hamed, Donna Zarandi, Moyosore Oluleye, Anas Zaher, Jude Elsayegh, Shaheen-Ahmed Rizly, Xiaoyue Ma, Hwai Yin Ooi, Harini Sarva, Miran Salgado, Daryl Victor, published by Ubiquity Press
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