Title: MUSCLES DISORDERS
1MUSCLES DISORDERS
- Definition
- Diseases involving the muscle fibers (myogenic)
- Unlike neuronopathies secondary to LMN
- Heterogenous etiology, genotype, phenotype
- Devastating evolution
- No specific treatment for most of them
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3Myoblasts fusing to form large multi-nucleate
muscle cells
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9white fast (speed) red slow (endurance)
10How do the myosin heads coordinate to slide the
actin filament?
- They move independently.
- If so how do the individual myosin heads avoid
interfering with each other? - They move together like oars on a 8 oar rowing
shell, or the multiple oars of a Roman ship
11ATP dependent Calcium pump Ca ATPase pumps
calcium from the cytoplasm surrounding the
sarcomers back into sarcoplasmic reticulum
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13Common Features
- ? Clinical
- Muscle weakness main feature
- Gowers sign (proximaly dominating deficit)
- Contractures /- severe advanced stages
- Pain in inflamm. Disorders only
- Atrophy (/- pseudohypertrophy in X-linked)
- Deformity advanced disease
- DTR normal, diminished or absent
- Tone slightly? or normal
- Other systems may be involved
14Common Features
- ? Laboratory Investigations
- CBC, LFT.. Normal
- ESR high in inflammatory only
- UE abnormalities in some endocrinopathies and
periodic paralysis - C.K aldolase generaly raised (normal in few
sittings metabolic, endocrine) - Lactic acid
- Genetic study location type of chromozomal
abnormalities
15Common Features
- ? Neurophysiology
- NCS normal
- EMG
- Spontaneous activities /- in inflammatory
disorders - Interferential tracing
- MUPs ? small A
- ? Short D
- polyphsics
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19Common Features
- Pathology
- /- Severe reduction in the muscle fibers
- Muscles fibers are replaced by fat orfibrosis
- Centralized nuclei
- Fibrosis
- Inflammatory infiltrate in inflamm disorders
- Type / I type II
- Electron microscopy
- abnormal mithochondries in mithochondriopathies
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21ETIOLOGY / CLASSIFICATION
- Inherited myopathies
- Muscular dystrophies
- Congenital myopathies
- Inherited channelopathies
- Periodic paralysis
- Inherited metabolic myopathies
- Disorders of glycolysis
- Disorders of oxidative metabolism
- Lipid myopathies
- Mitochondrial myopathies
22- Acquired myopathies
- Inflammatory myopathies
- Acquired metabolic myopathies
- Toxic myopathies
23- ? Hereditary transmitted (Muscles Dystrophies)
- X- linked?
- -Duchenne ( cardiac involv..)
- -Becker
- ?Emery-Dreifuss ( severe cardiomyopathy)
- Non-X linek
- Limb Girdle
- Facio-scapulo-humoral
- Scapulo-peroneal
- Scapulo-humeral
- Ocular-pharyngeal.
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- Inflammatory muscle disorders
- Autoimmune
- Primary dysautoimmune or complicating systemic
diseases SLE.. - Polymyositis
- Dermatomyositis
- Paraneoplastic
- Viral
- Infective toxoplasmosis,trichinosis..
- Toxic drug induced muscle disorders.
25Muscle Dystrophies
26Muscular Dystrophy
Duchenne/ Becker Emery-Dreifuss, Congenital Limb-Girdle, Distal Myopathy
Onset 2-6 years Childhood to early teens, infancy Late childhood-middle age
Muscle groups affected
Life expectancy Rarely beyond 20s varies Middle age
Inheritance X-linked recessive X-linked recessive, autosomal dom rec. Autosomal dominant recessive
Genetic linkage Dystrophin Emerin, lamin, merosin, etc. Calpain-3, Dysferlin, Caveolin-3, a???-sargoglycans, etc.
Source www.mdausa.org
27X-linked Dystrophinopathies
- Groupe of hereditary myopathies
- Pathophysiology defective or absent Dystrophin
- Dystrophin
- Has integral role in sarcolemmal stability
- Consist in 2 globular heads with flexible
rod-shaped center - Associated in a complex with sarcoglycans
dystroglycans (transmembrane proteins
glycoproteins) - Coding gene on Chromosom X short arm Xp21
location - Function loss ? cascade of events (including
loss of other components of dystrophin-associated
glycoprotein complex, sarcolemmal breakdown with
attendant Ca ion influx phosphlipase activation,
oxidative cellular injury) and ultimately
myonecrosis
28X- Linked Ducenne, Beker..
- X- linked, recessive transmission
- Affects males
- Females are Carrier
- Onset 2-5 years in Duchenne, end 1st decade in
Becker) - Proximal muscles mainly , (early)
- Severe disease ( other systemes cardiac..)
- death in the 2d decade
29DUCHENNE MD
- progressive skeletal muscle weakness.
- Absence of the dystrophin protein ? weakens the
connections between proteins in the muscle fibers
the cell membrane. (?the cell membrane becomes
weaker ruptures) - As a result ions such as Ca can move in out
of the ruptured cell membrane ? contraction at
the damaged site ? the muscle fibers will break
? the muscle will begin to waste away.
30Prevalence of DMD(1)
- Affects one in 3500 to 5000 newborn males
- 1/3 of these with previous family history
- 2/3 sporadic
31Clinically onset of DMD
- Delayed developmental milestones
- Loss of motor skills
- Characteristic gait
- Calf hypertrophy (pseudohypertrophy)
- Clumsiness/frequent falls
32Symptoms of DMD
- Muscle weakness Difficulty in walking/running
- Difficulty climbing stairs or hills
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- Difficulty in rising (Gowers sign)
33- DIAGNOSIS
- Clinical,
- Lab Invest. CPK
- Neurophysiol. (EMG) myogenic changes
- Muscle biopsy
- Genetic study (Immunoblot homogenate allow
diffenrentiation between Duchenne Becker) - Asymptomatic female
- Foetus diagnsis possible (as early as 8 weeks)
34DMD where is the Gene?
- The gene for dystrophin production sits on the X
chromosome. - If a normal gene for dystrophin is present, then
the protein will be made. - If the gene is missing or altered, dystrophin may
not be produced at all or only in abnormal forms,
resulting in Duchenne muscular dystrophy
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36- Dystrophin connects the myofibrils to a complex
of proteins - in the muscle cell membrane. This in turn
connects to the - extracellular matrix protein laminin, stabilizing
the membrane
37Spectrin connects the actin cytoskeleton in Red
Blood Cells to the membrane
38What is Utophin?
- Utophin is a protein that acts the same as
dystrophin where the nerve cells meet muscular
tissue. - Dystrophin and Utophin both help to protect
muscle tissue through wear and tear. - Dystrophin works as a shock absorber to the
muscles. Utophin does also
39What is the connection between Dystrophin and
Utophin?
- Studies done on mice showed that if there is
- an abnormally high amount of Utophin in the
- body, the symptoms of MD reverse.
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41Dystrophinopathies. Dystrophic muscle
42Dystrophinopathies dystrophin staining
Normal dystrophin
Intermediate dystrophin Becker MD
Duchenne dystrophy
43Treatments for DMD
- To improve breathing
- O2 therapy
- Ventilator
- Scoliosis surgery
- Tracheotomy
44Treatments (cont.)
- To improve mobility
- Physical therapy
- Surgery on tight joints
- Prednisone
- Non-steroidal medications
- Wheelchair
45Treatments (cont.)
- To improve mobility
- Physical therapy
- Surgery on tight joints
- Prednisone
- Non-steroidal medications
- Wheelchair
46Advances in Gene Therapy
- Researches have developed "minigenes," which
carry instructions for a slightly smaller version
of dystrophin, that can fit inside a virus - Researchers have also created the so-called
gutted virus, a virus that has had its own genes
removed so that it is carrying only the
dystrophin gene
47Problems with Gene Therapy
- Muscle tissue is large and relatively
impenetrable - Viruses might provoke the immune system and cause
the destruction of muscle fibers with the new
genes
48Other MDLimb Girdle MD
49Common features
- Expression in either male or female sex
- Onset usually in the late first or second decade
of life (but also middle age) - Usually autosomal recessive and less frequently
autosomal dominant - Involvement of shoulder or pelvic-girdle muscles
with variable rates of progression - Severe disability within 20-30 years
- Muscular pseudohypertrophy and/or contractures
uncommon
50- Molecular genetics revolutionized LGMD
classification - Rrecent classification (clinical and molecular
characteristics) - autosomal dominant (LGMD1)
- autosomal recessive (LGMD2)
- The list continues to expand
- Genetic linkages have been identified for 6
autosomal dominant and 11 autosomal recessive
LGMDs, - Myofibrillar myopathies share several phenotypic
characteristics with the LGMDs.
51Limb Girdle MD
- LGMD may show an autosomal recessive (autosomal
dominant forms reported) - or sporadic method of inheritance.
- Some forms of LGMD dramatically affect young
adults, while other types progress so slowly that
they are not detected until much later in life.
52- LGMD protein defects occur in several pathways
- proteins associated with the sarcolemma
- proteins associated with the contractile
apparatus - Various enzymes involved in muscle function.
53Autosomal recessive LGMD
- This childhood form
- Affects both males and females
- First decade of life. In general
- The course is of gradual progression over years.
- Distribution of weakness is typically in the
pelvis (80-90 of cases) - later in life, involvement of the shoulder
girdle (30) - No hypertrophy of the calves (contrast to other
forms of MD
54Autosomal recessive LGMD
- CPK elevated (2-3 times)
- The inheritance pattern is strongly autosomal
recessive with consanguinity - Positive family history often is reported.
- The abnormal gene is linked to chromosome arm
15q.
55Pelvifemoral atrophy (Leyden-Mobius)
- Most heterogeneous of all limb-girdle
dystrophies. - 60-70 of cases are sporadic (few cases
familial) - Symmetric or asymmetric involvement of the pelvic
girdle. - Late onset second to sixth decades.
- Slow progression ? clinical arrest (ambulate into
70s) - The survival rate seventh decade of life.
- CPK vary from normal to significant elevation.
- No identified gene yet.
56Scapulo-humeral dystrophy (Erb)
- Involves mainly the upper extremities.
- Autosomal recessive in some cases.
- starts later in life (second to the fifth
decades), - Benign (years before it is diagnosed).
- Weakness generally is asymmetric may spare the
deltoid, supra-spinatus, and infra-spinatus
muscles. - lower extremities involvement very late in life
show - The progression very slow (normal life
expectancy). - Minimal, disability
57Late-onset autosomal myopathy
- Third to the fifth decades of life.
- The course is benign
- Upper lower extremity weakness little
functional impairment. - Patients ambulate well into their 6th and 7th
decade - Affects males and females.
58Oculopharyngeal
- Late onset
- Ocular and bulbar symptoms
- Slowly progressing
59Congenital Muscular Dystrophy
- autosomal-recessive disease
- Severe proximal weakness at birth (or within
6/12) Slowly progressive or nonprogressive.
Contractures are common - central nervous system (CNS) abnormalities can
occur. - Biopsy signs of dystrophy, a marked ? in
endomysial and perimysial connective tissue, and
fiber size variability with small round
immature fibers, less commonly, necrosis - No distinguishing features (as in congenital
myopathies)
60Congenital Muscular Dystrophy
- The pathophysiology of CMD depend on specific
associated genetic defect (known with 4 of the
CMDs) - Functions of the disrupted proteins defined in
2 - Deficiency of laminin-alpha2 (merosin), a
skeletal muscle extracellular matrix protein that
binds the dystrophin-associated glycoprotein
complex (see Picture 1) - Deficiency of integrin-alpha7 beta1, a skeletal
muscle membrane protein that binds laminin-2 - The pathophysiology of the other CMDs is unknown
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62Muscular dystrophy
Congenital
Limb girdle
Duchenne, Becker
Emery-Dreifuss
63Dysferlinopathies
- Distal myopathy Miyoshi (1967, 1986)
- Locus 2p13.3
- DYSF gene mutation (Bashir et al Liu et al,
1998) - Type 2B limb girdle myopathy
- Firstly described in Palestinian families
(Mahjneh et al, 1992) - Chromosome 2p linked (Bashir et al, 1994)
- Both MM and LGMD phenotype in the same family
- (Illiaroshkin et al Weiler et al, 1996)
64- Distal myopathy Miyoshi (1967, 1986)
- Locus 2p13.3
- DYSF gene mutation
- (Bashir et al Liu et al, 1998)
- Type 2B limb girdle myopathy
- Firstly described in Palestinian families
(Mahjneh et al, 1992) - Chromosome 2p linked
- (Bashir et al, 1994)
- Both MM and LGMD phenotype in the same family
- (Illiaroshkin et al Weiler et al, 1996)
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66Dysferlinopathies Epidemiology
- Geographical distribution
- MM identified in Japan
- LGMD (Palestinian, Lybian Jews)
- Dysferlin mutation 1/3000 Lybian Jews (Argov et
al, 2000) - Most frequent distal myopathy (except
Scandinavia) - LGMD2B second cause of LGMD (Tagawa et al)
- Dysferlinopathies about 25 of unindentified
muscular dystrophy
67Dysferlin is located to muscle cell membranes,
and is missing in patients with severe limb
girdle muscular dystrophy
68Model for the function of Dysferlin in
muscle repair
69Dysferlinopathies Common traits
- AR inheritance
- Normal developmental milestones, sport possible
prior to first symptoms - Onset between 15 35 y (young adults)
- LL distal, proximo-distal, or proximal wk calf
involvment - UL biceps atrophy, moderate scapular involvment
- Facial, bulbar muscles spared
- Normal cardiac and respiratory function
- CK (10 to 123 N)
- Unspecific myopathic pattern, necrosis, no
vacuoles - Various severity
70- Distal myopathy
- Posterior leg (Miyoshi myopathy)
- Anterior leg compartment
- Proximal myopathy limb girdle (LGMD2B)
- High CPK
- Polymyositis-like
- Exercise intolerance
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74Myotonic Dystrophy
- Myotonic dystrophy
- Autosommal dominant disorder with highly variable
expression of the disease phenotype - The molecular abnormality is an expansion of a
CTG nucleic acid triplet repeat sequence on the
nineteenth chromosome - The muscle weakness can be mild
- Marked facial weakness, ptosis
- Greater distal weakness
75- Difficulty in releasing hand grip. At the
bedside, myotonia - Frontal balding usually more prominent in men
- Premature cataracts, arrhythmias, diabetes, and
testicular atrophy - Myotonia can be a disturbing symptom or does not
- In disabling myotonia, quinine, Phenytoin,
henytoin - Mexiletine should not be used if cardiac
manifestations
76Myotonic dystrophy
- Type 1 (most common, 98)
- an expansion of CTG repeats in the DMPK gene on
chromosome 19 - Prevalence in West 13.5 per 100,000
- Type 2
- an expansion of CCTG repeats in the ZNF9 gene on
chromosome 3 - Type 3 ?
77Inflammatory Myopathies
- Age young/adult
- /- Skin rash
- Main feature weakness Muscle pain
tenderness - Investigations
- High C.K.
- EMG
- Muscle biopsy
- Diagnosis
- Treatment Immune suppressive steroids
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80Metabolic myopathies
- Thyroid disease
- Hypothyroid or hyperthyroid ophthalmopathy
- periodic paralysis
- Pituitary and adrenal disease
- Cushing's syndrome
- Steroid myopathy
- Adrenal insufficiency
- Primary hyperaldosteronism
- Acromegaly
- Hyperparathyroidism Hypoparathyroidism
81MYASTHENIA GRAVIS
82MYASTHENIA GRAVIS
- DEFINITION Disorder of the NMJ (postsynaptic
membr) - Forms
- Transient neonatal (10 of neonate myasthenic
mothers) - Different prognosis, effective treatment
- Congenital myasthenia
- Common myasthenia gravis
- Any age 2 pics 20-30 (F gt M) 60-70 M gt F)
- Usually progressing (remission are possible but
relapse later)
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85 MYASTHENIA GRAVIS
- CLINICAL FEATURES
- Onset insidious
- Fluctuating weakness ? with exercise
- Fatigability (worsening with exercise
improvement in rest) - Precipitating factors Infection, Pregnancy,
stress, hot temperature, drugs muscle
relaxants, BZDZ,phenytoin antibiotics (neomycin) - Clinical presentation
- Ocular ptosis, diplopia? opthalmoplegia
- Bulbar dysphagia, dysphonia, /-facial weakness
- Generalized /-respiratory muscles weakness ?
risk of death
86MYASTHENIA GRAVIS
- Clsassification Osserman classification
- I ocular
- II (A B) mild to moderate generalised, /-
drug response, no crises - III Acute fulminant crises, risk of death,
high mortality - IV late severe MG
- Associated disorder-
- Dysthyroidism
- Rh. Arthritis, P. anaemia, SLE
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89The Spectrum of autoimmune Diseases
Organ specific
Systemic
Hashimotos thyroiditis Pernicious
anaemia Insulin dependent
diabetes Myasthenia gravis
Multiple sclerosis Ulcerative
colitis Rheumatoid arthritis Systemic
lupus erythematous
90PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- Neuromuscular junction transmission autoimmune
disorder (Post synaptic membrane) - Destruction of the Ach. receptors on the post
synaptic membrane by the AB ? insufficient muscle
fibers contraction - Ach.receptor Anti-bodies
- circulating level can be done
- Origine thymus (hyperplasia, thymoma)
- association of HLA, A1 B8.
91Tr
B cell
IL-6, etc
Cytokines
Auto reactive T cell
Genetically predisposed
Tissue damage
CD8
Cytokines
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93- ? Diagnosis
- Clinical presentation, excrcise test, rest test
- Tensilon Test 10 mg Edrophonium IV carrefullty
slowly - Investigations
- ? Investigations
- Laboratory Investigations.
- Acetycholine receptor antibodies level
- Straited muscle AB, other antibodies
- Neurophsiology
- EMG decrement test
- Imaging Chest x-ray and chest CT scan / MRI
- Others PFT..
94MANAGEMENT
- ? Medical treatment
- Anticholinesterase
- Immunosupressant Steroids
- Azathioprin
- ? Plasmaphoresis
- ? Immunoglobulins
- ? Surgery Thymectomy
95Prognosis
- Remission 30 .
- More likely in patient with short history
- Less in prominent thymic hyperplasia/thymoma
- Approach through suprasternal or transsternal
- (extensive, large thymectomy)
- Medical treatment
- may be D/C, need for low doses, same doses
- or worsening ? other ttt
96Myasthenic crises
- Severe situation
- Needs urgent management
- Diferentiate from cholinergic crises
97Myasthenic syndrome
- Clinically differences
- Pathophysiology presynaptic membrane
- Neurophsiology increament
- Poor response to Anti Ch-esterase
- Etiology paraneoplastic