11/1404. Phenotypic variability in rippling muscle disease.OBJECTIVE: To characterize the phenotype of hereditary rippling muscle disease (RMD) and to report the results of genetic linkage studies. BACKGROUND: RMD is a rare autosomal-dominant inherited muscle disorder. Individuals complain of muscle stiffness, exercise-induced muscle pain, and cramp-like sensations. The characteristic feature of RMD is increased mechanical muscle irritability, which is electrically silent in electromyographic examinations. methods: Forty-six individuals from two unrelated German kindreds with RMD were examined. Linkage analysis to the RMD locus on chromosome 1q41-q43 was performed. RESULTS: In kindred A, 15 individuals from four generations, and in kindred B, four individuals from three generations had clinical features of RMD. The most consistent clinical findings were percussion-induced rapid muscle contractions (PIRCs) and muscle mounding, which were present in all 19 affected individuals. Only 12 individuals exhibited muscle rippling, indicating that rippling is not always present in RMD. Twelve of 19 individuals had muscle-related complaints, primarily exertional cramps and stiffness. The mean age at the onset of complaints was 22 years (range, 5 to 54 years). Seven of 19 individuals showed only mechanical-induced muscle irritability but did not have muscular symptoms. Genetic analysis excluded linkage to the RMD locus on chromosome 1q4 in both kindreds. CONCLUSIONS: The phenotype of RMD is variable but generalized PIRCs are the most obvious and reliable clinical feature of RMD. Diagnostic criteria of RMD should include generalized PIRCs in addition to muscle mounding, rippling, and creatine kinase elevation.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = cramp, muscle (Clic here for more details about this article) |
12/1404. The syndrome of carnitine deficiency.Three cases of lipid storage myopathy and carnitine deficiency are presented. Two had a fatal course and were insensitive to cortisone and carnitine-replacement therapy. The two fatal cases had lipid accumulation in organs other than the skeletal muscles and carnitine was reduced in plasma, skeletal muscles, heart and liver. fibroblasts from one of these "generalized" cases of carnitine deficiency were grown from a skin biopsy. carnitine level, fatty acids uptake and oxidation were not appreciably different between the patients' fibroblasts and those of controls.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 0.094159266512652keywords = muscle (Clic here for more details about this article) |
13/1404. Skewed X-inactivation in a manifesting carrier of X-linked myotubular myopathy and in her non-manifesting carrier mother.X-linked recessive myotubular myopathy (XLMTM) is a muscle disorder usually affecting newborn males. In the majority of cases, muscle weakness and hypotonia lead to a rapid demise at neonatal age. The responsible MTM1 gene is located in proximal Xq28. Heterozygous carriers are described as being asymptomatic but, in a few cases, mild facial weakness has been reported. We report a family in which a 39-year old female showed severe progressive muscle weakness. XLMTM was initially diagnosed in the male offspring of one of the patient's sisters. The patient, one of her sisters, and their mother were heterozygous carriers for a common MTM1 gene mutation. We found an extremely skewed X-inactivation pattern in the patient and, in the opposite direction, in her non-manifesting carrier mother, thus explaining her normal phenotype and indicating a possible inheritance of skewed X-inactivation. Linkage analysis excluded a possible involvement of the XIST locus at Xq13.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 0.14123889976898keywords = muscle (Clic here for more details about this article) |
14/1404. Changes in the cytoskeletal proteins, sarcoplasmic reticulum, and capillaries in acute relaxant-steroid myopathy (ARSM) in contrast to the corticosteroid myopathy.Since we reported a case of acute relaxant-steroid myopathy (ARSM) in 1994, we continued histological studies and compared the findings with those in a case of corticosteroid myopathy (CM). It was revealed that (1) dystrophin, spectrin, beta dystroglycan, and sarcoglycans on the cell surface were decreased, (2) regular arrangement of the sarcoplasmic reticulum was lost, and (3) some capillaries were degenerated. Since none of these changes were seen in CM, it became clear that ARSM is different from CM. It was estimated that continuous administration of non-depolarizing muscle relaxant produces a state akin to denervation. Combination of denervation, immobilization and circulatory disturbance in ARSM not only augments the effects of corticosteroids, but they produce changes different from CM, namely impairment of the cell membrane system (both internal and external) and capillary degeneration.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 0.047079633256326keywords = muscle (Clic here for more details about this article) |
15/1404. An unusual manifestation of diabetes mellitus.MEDICAL history: Type 2 diabetes mellitus for five years; unexplained 35-lb weight loss three years ago; Bell's palsy on right side many years ago. MEDICATIONS: glipizide, 10 mg/day. family history: Father died of leukemia at age 65; mother has kidney stones; no diabetes or neuromuscular disease. SOCIAL history: insurance salesman; heterosexual, promiscuous, uses condoms; smokes (25 pack years); does not drink. physical examination: Well-nourished, well developed, not in acute distress; had difficulty rising from a sitting position because of right lower extremity weakness. blood pressure, 154/74; pulse, 88; temperature, 36.6 degrees C; respiratory rate, 16. head, eyes, ears, nose, and throat: normal. neck: normal. heart: S4. Lungs: clear. abdomen: mildly obese. extremities: no cyanosis, clubbing, or edema; atrophy and weakness of right thigh and both calves; wide-based gait; able to walk on toes but not heels. Neurologic responses: cranial nerves intact; deep tendon reflexes, 1 symmetrically; plantar reflexes, flexor bilaterally. Skin: macular rash in sun-exposed areas. LABORATORY FINDINGS: Hemoglobin, 13.2 gm/dL; mean corpuscular volume, 80 micron 3; white blood cell count, 7,200/mm3 (normal differential); platelet count, 137,000/mm3. serum: electrolytes, normal; blood urea nitrogen, 18 mg/dL; creatinine, 0.8 mg/dL; glucose, 308 mg/dL; total protein, albumin, liver enzymes, and creatine kinase, normal. urine: 1 glucose. Venereal disease test: nonreactive; hiv test: negative. DIFFERENTIAL diagnosis: dermatomyositis; heavy-metal poisoning; diabetic amyotrophy. HOSPITAL COURSE: The patient was given 50 mg/day of oral amitriptyline to alleviate the painful paresthesias and was switched to 20 U/day of subcutaneously injected neutral protamine Hagedorn (NPH) insulin to normalize the blood glucose level. Histologic studies of skin and muscle showed sun damage and neuropathic changes, respectively. There was no evidence of vasculitis. Screening for heavy-metal toxins produced negative results.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 0.047079633256326keywords = muscle (Clic here for more details about this article) |
16/1404. Atypical and typical cranial dystonia following dental procedures.It is generally recognized that focal dystonia of the limbs or cervical region and blepharospasm sometimes follow, and in these cases may be caused or triggered by, peripheral injury. However, the association between peripheral injury and lower cranial dystonia is rare. We report eight cases who developed cranial dystonia within hours to months following a dental procedure. One group of five cases, all women, developed atypical dystonia associated with painful paresthesias at the site of dystonia. Two of these five cases had fixed jaw-deviating dystonia, whereas the remaining three had additional tremor and spread of their dystonia to involve the tongue in all three, and the lips and neck in two cases. These five patients are reminiscent of cases of limb causalgia-dystonia syndrome, which occurs after minor peripheral trauma and can spread. The remaining three cases developed more typical cranial dystonia following the dental procedure. There was no family history of dystonia or prior use of neuroleptics in any of the patients. The close association in time and location of the procedure and onset of symptoms suggests that the onset of the dystonia may have been caused by the dental intervention, but whether there is a causal relationship between the dental intervention and the development of the dyskinesias requires further epidemiologic studies.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 0.00029957072045995keywords = limb (Clic here for more details about this article) |
17/1404. paraquat myopathy: report on two suicide cases.We describe two suicide cases in which old paraquat was ingested. In conjunction with lung involvement a pronounced degeneration was observed in skeletal muscle of one who died on the 14th day after the ingestion. The following sarcoplasmic or endoplasmic reticulum Ca2 ATPase (SERCA) monoclonal antibodies were used for skeletal muscle fiber typing by an immunohistochemical method: NCL-SERCA1, reactive with type 2 fiber (fast-twitch), and NCL-SERCA2, reactive with type 1 fiber (slow-twitch). The examination revealed that the remarkably degenerated fibers belonged to type 1 muscle fibers. This case showed an abrupt increase of plasma CK levels (1796 mU/ml) on the fifth day after the ingestion. The authors presume that the damage to the skeletal muscle had occurred in this period. The degeneration of the muscle seemed to be attributable to the long retention of paraquat in the tissue because these findings were not observed in the other case who died on the fifth day. paraquat-induced myopathy may develop in prolonged paraquat poisoning. The examination of CK levels in plasma will be useful for diagnosis of damage of skeletal muscle.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 0.28247779953796keywords = muscle (Clic here for more details about this article) |
18/1404. exercise intolerance due to a nonsense mutation in the mtDNA ND4 gene.We report the first molecular defect in an NADH-dehydrogenase gene presenting as isolated myopathy. The proband had lifelong exercise intolerance but no weakness. A muscle biopsy showed cytochrome c oxidase (COX)-positive ragged-red fibers (RRFs), and analysis of the mitochondrial enzymes revealed complex I deficiency. sequence analysis of the mitochondrial genes encoding the seven NADH-dehydrogenase subunits showed a G-to-A transition at nucleotide 11832 in the subunit 4 (ND4) gene, which changed an encoded tryptophan to a stop codon. The mutation was heteroplasmic (54%) in muscle dna. Defects in mitochondrially encoded complex I subunits should be added to the differential diagnosis of mitochondrial myopathies.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 0.094159266512652keywords = muscle (Clic here for more details about this article) |
19/1404. Muscle function in a patient with Brody's disease.Adductor pollicis muscle function of a 21-year-old man with genetically confirmed Brody's disease (sarcoplasmic reticulum [SR] -Ca2 ATPase deficiency) was investigated to study the possible effects of reduced SR-Ca2 ATPase activity on muscle relaxation and force production. Following maximal electrical activation of the ulnar nerve, tetanic muscle half-relaxation time was greater in the patient (246 /- 10 ms) than control subjects (97 /- 4 ms, n = 8). During repetitive activation, there was a similar decline in maximal shortening velocity in the patient and controls, indicating a comparable reduction in cross-bridge cycling rate. The finding that the slowing of relaxation was greater in the patient (329 ms versus 138 /- 20 ms) suggests that there was a further reduction of SR-Ca2 ATPase activity in the patient's muscle during fatigue. Following a voluntary contraction, involuntary activity of the antagonist muscles facilitated force decline and masked the impaired relaxation in the patient. This antagonist-induced relaxation indicates that it might be difficult to establish impaired muscle relaxation with voluntary contractions.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 0.28247779953796keywords = muscle (Clic here for more details about this article) |
20/1404. Myopathy with trabecular muscle fibers.A systematic review of muscle biopsies over a 15 year period in a large neurological hospital revealed 21 cases (7% of the total of non-inflammatory myopathies) with a distinctive pattern of myopathology and a limb-girdle clinical phenotype. The muscle pathology was dominated by a large prevalence (20-90%) of trabecular or lobulated fibers in which maldistribution of intermyofibrillar mitochondria produced a lobulated pattern of oxidative enzyme activity on transverse sections. The clinical picture was characterized by adult onset, slowly progressive muscle weakness affecting mainly proximal limb musculature, although mild distal weakness was also present in 60% of the cases. The trabecular pattern of oxidative enzyme reaction reflects maldistribution of the intermyofibrillar mitochondria; this may be caused by malfunction of a putative anchoring mechanism. While trabecular fibers can occur as a nonspecific alteration of muscle fibers in many diverse myopathies, the high prevalence of trabecular fibers as the dominant pathology in trabecular fiber myopathy makes it a distinctive (though not necessarily etiologically homogeneous) clinico-pathological entity.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 0.37693663677107keywords = muscle, limb (Clic here for more details about this article) |
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