We here present the case of a patient with a congenital myasthenic syndrome (CMS) due to pathogenic variants in the RAPSN gene. During childhood he experienced recurrent episodes of respiratory failure during respiratory infections. This and other cases were reported as isolated dystrophy of the diaphragmatic musculature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The purpose of this study was to evaluate oxygen extraction and utilization in end stage chronic complex regional pain syndrome type I (CRPS I) patients undergoing amputation and to relate these to muscle histology of the amputated limb.
Materials And Methods: In 25 patients with severe CRPS I requiring amputation of the affected limb venous blood samples and in 11 patients skeletal muscle specimens were analyzed.
Results: The mean venous oxygen saturation (S(v)O(2)) value (94.
Background: In the chronic constriction injury model of rat neuropathic pain, oxidative stress as well as antioxidants superoxide dismutase and reduced glutathione (GSH) are important determinants of neuropathological and behavioral consequences. Studies of the chronic constriction injury model observed (indirect) signs of inflammation. We, therefore, investigated the level of oxidative stress and antioxidant enzymes in skeletal muscle tissue of the rat hind paw and (jugular vein) plasma at d 7 after nerve injury.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuromyopathy is a rare side effect of chronic colchicine therapy, most often occurring in patients with chronic renal failure. Drugs interacting with colchicine metabolism through CYP(3)A(4) and P-glycoprotein can accelerate accumulation and toxicity. We describe a case of an interaction between clarithromycin and colchicine resulting in acute neuromyopathy, and we conclude that combined use of macrolides and colchicine should be avoided.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: It is unclear to what extent muscle phosphorylase b kinase (PHK) deficiency is associated with exercise-related symptoms and impaired muscle metabolism, because 1) only four patients have been characterized at the molecular level, 2) reported symptoms have been nonspecific, and 3) lactate responses to ischemic handgrip exercise have been normal.
Methods: We studied a 50-year-old man with X-linked PHK deficiency using ischemic forearm and cycle ergometry exercise tests to define the derangement of muscle metabolism. We compared our findings with those in patients with McArdle disease and in healthy subjects.
Objective: The mitochondrial energy-generating system (MEGS) encompasses the mitochondrial enzymatic reactions from oxidation of pyruvate to the export of adenosine triphosphate. It is investigated in intact muscle mitochondria by measuring the pyruvate oxidation and adenosine triphosphate production rates, which we refer to as the "MEGS capacity." Currently, little is known about MEGS pathology in patients with mutations in the mitochondrial DNA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThirteen classical ataxia telangiectasia (A-T) patients, varying in age from 1 to 25 years, were studied clinically, electrophysiologically as well as by muscle ultrasound to chart the development and spectrum of neuromuscular abnormalities in A-T. The most prominent finding was a progressive axonal sensorimotor polyneuropathy, apparent by electromyography and muscle ultrasound from the age of 8 years and becoming clinically discernible around 12 years of age. Before the age of 8 years decreased tendon reflexes and slightly slowed sensory nerve conduction velocities could already be observed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClinical features and molecular data are described for a patient with undetectable expression of laminin alpha2 chain (merosin) and severe congenital muscular dystrophy. Molecular analysis of the LAMA2 gene revealed two previously un-described mutations. The patient achieved independent sitting at age 2, but lost head balance at age 7; he was never able to stand unsupported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Biophys Res Commun
September 2007
Glycogen branching enzyme deficiency (glycogen storage disease type IV, GSD-IV) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder of the glycogen synthesis with high mortality. Two female newborns showed severe hypotonia at birth and both died of cardiorespiratory failure, at 4 and 12 weeks, respectively. In both patients, muscle biopsies showed deposits of PAS-positive diastase-resistant material and biochemical analysis in cultured fibroblasts showed markedly reduced glycogen branching enzyme activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim And Methods: We prospectively investigated whether early diagnosis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) could be facilitated by demonstrating signs of denervation in a muscle of a clinical and electromyographical unaffected region. Muscle fibre conduction velocity (MFCV) was determined in 18 patients in whom the diagnosis ALS was considered but not established beyond a level of clinically possible ALS according to the revised El Escorial criteria. A muscle biopsy was obtained from the same muscle, to demonstrate neurogenic changes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMutations in the myosin heavy chain gene (MYH7) can cause several distinct phenotypes depending on the location of the mutation: hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (several exons), myosin storage myopathy (exon 37/39) or Laing distal myopathy (exons 32-36). Here, we describe a unique combination of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and hypertrophic distal myopathy in a family with a MYH7 Val606Met mutation (exon 16).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The aim of this prospective study was to investigate the diagnostic value of quantitative skeletal muscle ultrasonography in children suspected of having a mitochondrial disorder.
Methods: Muscle thickness and quantitatively determined echo intensity of four muscles were established in 53 children with symptoms indicative of a mitochondrial disorder.
Results: A sensitivity of 25 to 46 % was found, depending on the chosen cut-off point (abnormal or borderline abnormal), with a specificity of 85 to 100 %.
Failure to thrive, feeding difficulties, variable forms of infantile epilepsy or psychomotor developmental delay and hypotonia were the most frequent clinical disease presentations in eight children with combined oxidative phosphorylation enzyme complex deficiencies carrying mutations in the polymerase gamma (POLG1) gene. Five out of eight patients developed severe liver dysfunction during the course of the disease. Three of these patients fulfilled the disease criteria for Alpers syndrome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecognizing an ALS-mimic can be challenging. Here, we describe a patient with a slowly progressive dysarthria and dysphagia, with fasciculations of the tongue and general hyperreflexia, fulfilling the diagnostic criteria of 'clinical probable ALS'. Because of a non-conclusive EMG, a muscle biopsy was performed that surprisingly showed widespread nemaline rods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors report four adult-onset ataxia telangiectasia (AT) patients belonging to two families lacking pronounced cerebellar ataxia but displaying distal spinal muscular atrophy. AT was proven by genetic studies showing ATM mutations and a reduced level of ATM. ATM activity, as measured by phosphorylation of p53, was close to normal, indicating that the p53 response is not the only factor in preventing neural damage in anterior horn cells in AT.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMitochondrial dysfunction during acute metabolic crises is considered an important pathomechanism in inherited disorders of propionate metabolism, i.e. propionic and methylmalonic acidurias.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To elucidate the clinical importance of the anti-signal recognition particle (SRP) autoantibody in patients with myositis.
Methods: Retrospective systematic assessment of the clinical, laboratory and histological characteristics of 23 anti-SRP-positive patients from six European centres. Data were compared with a large group of anti-SRP-negative patients with myositis published previously.
Purpose: Several types of inborn errors of the O-glycan biosynthesis are known, leading to clinically very distinct phenotypes. Children with O-mannosyl glycan biosynthesis defects commonly present as a severe form of congenital muscular dystrophy with decreased alpha-dystroglycan staining, congenital eye anomalies, and brain migration defects. Alpha-dystroglycan is an O-mannosylated glycoprotein with additional mucin type O-glycans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo determine the relation between muscle fiber conduction velocity (MFCV) and muscle fiber diameter (MFD) in pathological conditions, we correlated invasively measured MFCV values with MFD data obtained from muscle needle biopsies in 96 patients with various neuromuscular disorders. MFCV was significantly correlated with MFD and independent of the underlying disorder. Pathological diameter changes were fiber-type dependent, with corresponding MFCVs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report the findings in five muscle and three sural nerve biopsies, and in one postmortem plexus specimen, from six patients with hereditary neuralgic amyotrophy (HNA). We found that the sensory nerves are definitely involved in HNA despite the mainly motor symptoms, and that lesions in nerves and muscles are more widespread throughout the peripheral nervous system than clinically presumed, but, simultaneously, very focally affect isolated fascicles within individual nerves.
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