Of or pertaining to myoclonus; consisting of or characterized by suddenjerking motions.
1891, James Hendrie Lloyd, “Report of Two Cases of Rare Myoclonic Disorderâ€, paper to be read at the Seventh Annual Meeting of the American Neurological Association, 1891 September 22-24, listed in George F. Shrady (editor), Medical Record volume 40, William Wood & Company, number 1, 1891 July 4.
2008, David R. Gambling, Obstetric Anesthesia and Uncommon Disorders, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0521870828, page 3,Propofol has been implicated in epileptogenesis, with myoclonic activity and opisthotonos during clinical use, prompting a warning from the United Kingdom Committee on the safety of medicine.