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Muscle disease for physios May 2014 Categories of muscle disease • Congenital – muscular dystrophy, congenital myopathy – Mitochondrial – Metabolic – Channelopathy • Inflammatory – polymyositis – Degenerative eg inclusion body myopathy – Iatrogenic eg drugs, statins • Function – watch how they walk into clinic/get out of their seat etc before actual assessment – Limb girdle type of pattern? (waddling gait; lordosis) – Facial weakness? Droopy eyelid? – Foot drop? – Odd shoulders? – Scoliosis/other spinal deformity? – Small stature? Dysmorphic? Hearing aids? – Walking aids, Wheelchair? • Alteration in function – Difficulty getting up and out of chairs/sofas/cars – Difficulty rising from a squat – Climbing stairs/holding onto bannisters – Reaching out for shelves; raising arms; hairdrying; shaving – Difficulty opening jars; picking objects; doing buttons – Slapping feet Muscle pain • Myalgia (flu-like) – myositis, Vitamin D def, fibromyalgia/PMR • Cramp • Contracture (cramp but muscle goes rock hard) • Myotonia (muscle stiffness) look for grip and percussion myotonia • Muscle pain with focal swelling (myositis/metabolic) Contractures • Progressive fibrosis of muscle + weakness of antagonistic muscles = muscle shortening and inability to passively stretch to normal length • Sometimes pathognomic of certain disease Contractures are typical especially in Lamin A/C mutations (LGMD) and Bethlem myopathy (congenital myopathy with collagen 6 mutations) Skeleton – look for rigid spine Emery-Dreifuss Selenoprotein Scapular winging in FSH muscular dystrophy But other LGMDs can give you scapular winging Muscle weakness • Distribution – Axial (do they have a dropped head? Do they have a bent spine – camptocormia?) – Limbs – Face – Eyes – Bulbar Anaesthetic complications • Patient should wear Medic-Alert bracelet • Anaesthetist should be informed of condition and long-acting neuromuscular blocking agents should be avoided Dystrophinopathies • Duchenne (DMD): Commonest childhood muscular dystrophy • 1:3500 male births • Becker (BMD): 1:18,000 male births • X-linked recessive • Females not generally affected, but some may have abnormalities on clinical exam, or nonprogressive myopathy, or manifesting carriers (skewed inactivation of X chromosome and higher proportion of defective gene producing mutant protein) Origin of DMD • 1/3 previous family history • 2/3 no family history • In the latter, mother is an undiagnosed carrier (33%) • Or mutation occurred in ovum producing the son with DMD (germ line mutation) (66%) • Once the diagnosis is made, genetic counselling should be offered to the family especially maternal female relatives who are likely to be carriers Molecular genetics • Dystrophin is a large protein • Gives structural integrity to the sarcolemma and prevents contractioninduced damage • Links intracellular cytoskeleton to the extracellular matrix • Gene lies on X chromosome, at Xp21 • Large gene – 2500 kb long, >70 exons Clinical manifestations • Progressive weakness and wasting of mainly proximal muscles first, distal muscles later • Girdle muscles affected first • Calf pseudohypertrophy (fat replacement) • Abnormal gait in the child, frequent falls • Waddling gait because of involvement of hip abductors and more lordotic because of weakness of hip extensors Calf pseudohypertrophy Increasing lordosis Course of disease • • • • • • Progressive weakness and wasting Worse after period of inactivity/bedrest Kyphoscoliosis (spinal surgery and bracing) Wheelchair bound Frequent respiratory infections Respiratory muscle weakness (non-invasive ventilation) • Contractures (may need releasing) Cardiac manifestations • Conduction defects • Congestive heart failure often in terminal stages when respiratory failure develops • Beta-blockers and ACEI • Important to monitor female carriers (even in absence of limb muscle involvement) Intellectual impairment • Not progressive • IQ at least one SD below normal • Minor cerebral atrophy Becker MD • Milder version of DMD • Phenotype more variable • Onset between 5 and 15 years but may present in their 30s or 40s • Similar distribution of muscle weakness • Contractures and spinal deformity almost never • Dilated cardiomyopathy even when weakness is mild • Intellectual impairment less common Diagnosis • Clinical features + High CK • Muscle biopsy – frequently not required/done • Genetic analysis (detects deletions/duplications in 70% of DMD and 80% of BMD) Treatment options and trials • Corticosteroids: improvement in muscle strength in 11% and improved functional activity (climb stairs faster) • Viral vector delivery of dystrophin cDNA (AAV safer) • Exon skipping Females • Females not generally affected, but some may have abnormalities on clinical exam, or nonprogressive myopathy • Can be manifesting carriers (skewed inactivation of X chromosome and higher proportion of defective gene producing mutant protein) • Large calves • May have proximal muscle weakness • May have cardiomyopathy Facioscapulohumeral MD • • • • • • Age of onset of symptoms: 7 to 30 years Can present much later Autosomal dominant inheritance Signs can be subtle and asymmetric Facial weakness often detected first Unable to close eyes tightly/bury eyelashes • Transverse smile • Unable to whistle Progression • • • • • Facial weakness first Foot dorsiflexors Abdominal muscles Shoulder girdle and humeral muscles Pelvic girdle and proximal lower limb muscles later • 20% are wheelchair dependent by age 40 Odd shoulder contour High-riding scapulae Scapular winging Weakness of shoulder girdle develops first. Weakness of triceps/biceps and supraspinatus develops later • Cardiac muscle not affected • But respiratory muscle involvement is common and respiratory muscle function needs to be regularly monitored • Sensorineural hearing loss (75%) • Patients need to be asked specifically about this • Commoner in those who present earlier in life • Retinal vasculopathy (50%) (Coat’s disease) Pain • Beyond the deformity from their periscapular and pelvic muscle weakness • Often difficult to control Limb-girdle MD • Marked genetic heterogeneity • Clinically diverse with wide range of phenotypes • Different ages of presentation, different muscle group involvement, different grades of severity with different rate of progression • LGMD 1 = autosomal dominant • LGMD 2 = autosomal recessive • Diagnosis mostly made by protein immunoblotting from muscle biopsies LGMD • Autosomal dominant • • • • • LGMD1A: Myotilin LGMD1B: Lamin A/C (+cardiac involvement) LGMD1C: Caveolin 3 LGMD1D: ? Gene product (+cardiac involvement) LGMD1E: ? Gene product • Autosomal recessive • • • • • • • • • • • • LGMD 2A:Calpain 3 LGMD 2B: Dysferlin LGMD 2C: Gamma-sarcoglycan LGMD 2D: Alpha-sarcoglycan LGMD 2E: Beta-sarcoglycan LGMD 2F: Delta-sarcoglycan LGMD 2G: Telethonin LGMD 2H: TRIM32 LGMD 2I: FKRP LGMD 2J: Titin LGMD 2K: POMT1 LGMD 2L: ANO5 LGMD 1B • • • • Contractures Rigid spine Some patients have lipodystrophy Cardiac involvement requiring pacemakers/ICDs • Proximal and distal muscle weakness Emery-dreifuss: typical contractures at the elbows Rigid spine LGMD 2A • • • • • • Contractures esp around calf, elbows, fingers Waddling gait Toe-walking as a child Leg>arms Periscapular and quadriceps Respiratory failure LGMD 2L FKRP • Proximal>distal • Legs and arms • Legs affecting thigh adductors, psoas and quads • Arms – periscapular, deltoid, biceps and triceps • Type 2 respiratory failure even when ambulant • Can have calf, thigh and tongue hypertrophy LGMD 2L ANO5 • Progressive proximal muscle weakness • Previously can be very strong individuals including marathon runners etc • Can have focal atrophy of biceps and focal hypertrophy of lateral gastrocnemius • Can have mild distal lower limb weakness Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy • • • • Men>women Autosomal dominant Ptosis Bulbar problems – may require gastrostomy for feeding • Progressive myopathy • May develop respiratory muscle involvement Metabolic myopathies • Lipid storage myopathies – CPT2 deficiency • Glycogen storage disorders – McArdle’s • Mitochondrial myopathies – Syndromes – Defects in fatty acid oxidation pathways – Complex • • • • Cramps Exercise intolerance Rhabdomyolysis Progressive myopathy Mitochondrial disorders • • • • • • • • • Multi-system disorders Myopathy Complex eye problems Endocrinological problems Hearing loss Gastrointestinal problems CNS problems including migraine and seizures Learning disabilities Short stature etc Pompe’s disease • Infantile onset – severe and fatal • In infants with cardiac involvement and hepatosplenomegaly • Adult-onset • Progressive myopathy • Respiratory involvement • Enzyme replacement therapy Inclusion body myopathy • • • • An acquired degenerative muscle condition Slow, insiduous and progressive Usually affects >4th decade Fine motor tasks (eg opening bottle jars, buttons) • Early falls in IBM due to involvement of quadriceps (with wasting often by time of presentation) • Also wasting of flexor muscle compartment of forearm with finger flexion weakness in IBM • Patients with IBM do not respond to immunomodulatory treatments eg steroids Quadriceps wasting in IBM Wasting of forearm flexor compartment in IBM Prognosis • Poor • Develop facial weakness and problems swallowing • Can have neck weakness • Often end up in wheelchair • No cardiac complications but may require NIV and PEG feeding