Thymomas occurring in myasthenia gravis (MG) are usually of the cortical subtype and are usually treated by thymectomy. However, the factors that influence MG outcome in thymoma MG patients are not known. In a long-term study, MG severity and treatment was observed in 24 thymoma and 24 non-thymoma MG patients for up to 30 years, and the occurrence of muscle autoantibodies was assayed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPoliovirus (PV) subjected to genetic characterization is often isolated from faecal carriage. Such virus is not necessarily identical to the virus causing paralytic disease since genetic modifications may occur during replication outside the nervous system. We have searched for poliovirus genomes in the 14 fatal cases occurring during the last epidemics in Norway in 1951-1952.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn N Y Acad Sci
September 2003
The clinical effect of thymectomy in early- and late-onset myasthenia gravis (MG) and the correlation to MG severity, pharmacological treatment, and antimuscle antibodies were examined in two series of consecutive acetylcholine receptor (AChR) antibody-positive nonthymoma MG patients. The results indicate a benefit of thymectomy in early-onset MG, but no obvious clinical benefit in late-onset MG. The presence of muscle autoantibodies did not influence the outcome of thymectomy in early-onset MG.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To study the clinical effect of thymectomy in a well-defined early-onset MG subgroup and to correlate it to MG severity, the presence of circulating muscle autoantibodies, and the need for pharmacological treatment in a long-term setting.
Methods: Fifty-two consecutive AChR antibody-positive early-onset MG patients (34 thymectomized and 18 nonthymectomized) were included. Severity was assessed and the pharmacological treatment monitored on a yearly basis, starting from the year of MG onset, for 5, 10, 15, and 20 consecutive years; AChR, titin, and RyR antibodies were assayed.
Cortical-type thymomas are associated with myasthenia gravis (MG) in 50% of the cases. MG is caused by antibodies against the acetylcholine receptors (AChR), but additional non-AChR muscle autoantibodies such as those against titin and ryanodine receptor (RyR) are found in up to 95% of MG patients with thymoma. To elucidate the induction of non-AChR autoantibodies in thymoma-associated MG, we studied cortical-type thymomas from seven thymoma MG patients, and sera from six of them.
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