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Multiple sclerosis and non-dystrophic myotonias: do they share a common pathophysiology? | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Some patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) experience symptoms like myokymia and myotonia, which might be linked to conditions called myotonia congenita or paramyotonia congenita.
  • A study involving 30 MS patients suggested that some exhibited abnormal muscle excitability, hinting at the possibility of a primary ion channel dysfunction rather than just an acquired condition related to MS.
  • Identifying a primary channelopathy in MS could pave the way for targeted therapies, as ion channel dysfunctions may present viable treatment options for managing the disease.

Article Abstract

Some patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) complain of symptoms, such as myokymia, myotonia, spasms, and stiffness, which have been demonstrated to be due to a concurrent non-dystrophic myotonia, i.e. myotonia congenita or paramyotonia congenita. Beyond the known casual association between MS and non-dystrophic myotonia, a channelopathy representing a primary trait of MS rather than an epiphenomenon of demyelization (i.e., an acquired channelopathy) may exist. Indeed, the finding of MS patients with no genetic evidence of non-dystrophic myotonia but showing a clinical picture resembling this condition would support this hypothesis. Thirty patients with MS and no concurrent diagnosis of myotonia congenita or paramyotonia congenita were submitted to the Fournier protocol. Some of these MS patients presented abnormal muscle excitability with scarce myotonic discharges, but only a few of them had clinical features compatible with myotonia congenita or paramyotonia congenita syndromes. Even though the low number of recruited patients did not allow a robust statistical analysis, our data seemed to indicate the presence of an ion channel dysfunction that is independent of the acquired channelopathies and likely represents a common pathophysiological mechanism underlying a unique channelopathy simultaneously involving the peripheral and the central nervous system in individuals with MS. Confirming the presence of such a primary channelopathy in MS patients is of non-negligible importance, since dysfunction of ion channels may represent a suitable therapeutic target in MS.

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