“…A variety of terms has been used, in addition to Kinsbourne syndrome, throughout the years to describe this phenomenon including dancing eye and feet syndrome 8 , infantile polymyoclonia 9 , encephalopathia myoclonica infantiles 10 , opsoclonic encephalopathy 11 , polymyoclonia-opsoclonus 12 , and ataxia-opsoclonusmyoclonus 13 , the latter a more descriptive term capturing the entire clinical features of the disease. The words opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome, the currently accepted terminology, first appeared in the literature in 1971 in a paper reported by Tamura and Kuroiwa, titled "Opsoclonusmyoclonus syndrome in acute cerebellar ataxia-clinical and electrophysiological observation of an adult case".…”