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Neuromuscular Disorders

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Neuromuscular Disorders Prepared by Dr.Hani Daoud Discussed by Dr.Afaf Al-aryni Neuromuscular Disorders The term neuromuscular disease defines disorders of the motor ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Neuromuscular Disorders


1
Neuromuscular Disorders
  • Prepared by Dr.Hani Daoud
  • Discussed by Dr.Afaf Al-aryni

2
Neuromuscular Disorders
  • The term neuromuscular disease defines disorders
    of the motor unit and excludes influences on
    muscle function from the brain, such as
    spasticity.
  • The motor unit has four components
  • Motor neuron in the brainstem.
  • Axon that together with other axons forms
    peripheral nerve.
  • Neuromuscular junction.
  • All muscle fibers innervated by a single motor
    neuron.

3
Neuromuscular Disorders
  • Diseases of the motor unit are common in
    children.
  • Neuromuscular diseases may or may not be
    genetically determined, congenital or acquired,
    acute or chronic, and progressive or static.
  • Laboratory confirmation is required for most
    diseases because of overlapping clinical
    manifestation.

4
Evaluation Management
  • Examination of the neuromsucular system includes
    an assessment of muscle bulk, tone, and strength.
  • Tone and strength shouldnt be confused passive
    tone is range of motion around a joint, active
    tone is physiologic resistance to movement.
  • Head lag is a sign of weakness not of low tone.

5
Evaluation Management
  • The distribution of weak muscles is of diagnostic
    importance.
  • Tendon stretch reflexes are generally lost in
    neuropathies and on motor neuron disease and are
    diminished and preserved in myopathies.
  • Sensory abnormalities indicate neuropathy.

6
Evaluation Management
  • Muscle pain or myalgia are associated with acute
    disease of either myopathic or neurogenic origin.
  • Myalgia occur in several metabolic diseases of
    muscle, myositis, polyneuropathy and ischemic
    myopathy.
  • The thorax of infant with congenital
    neuromuscular disease often has a funnel shape
    and the ribs are thin and radiolucent, and
    because of small muscle mass birth weight may be
    low for gestational age.

7
Evaluation Management
  • Generalized hypotonia and motor developmental
    delay are the most common manifestation related
    of neuromuscular disease in infant and young
    children.

8
Laprotary Finding
  • Serum enzymes
  • several lysosomal enzymes are released by
    damaged or degenerating muscle fibers and may be
    measured in serum, the most useful one is
    creatine kinase, the CK level is
    characteristically elevated in certain diseases,
    such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy.

9
Laprotary Finding
  • Molecular Genetic Markers
  • Many DNA markers of hereditary myopathies and
    neuropathies are now available from blood
    samples.
  • Nerve Conduction Velocity
  • Motor and sensory nerve conduction may be
    measured electrophysiologically by using surface
    electrodes .

10
Laprotary Finding
  • Electromyography (EMG)
  • Requires insertion of a needle into the
    belly of a muscle and recording the electric
    potentials in various states of contraction,
    characteristic EMG patterns distinguish
    denervation from myopathic involvement.

11
Laprotary Finding
  • Muscle Biopsy
  • The most important and specific diagnostic
    study of most neuromuscular disorders.
  • Not only are neurogenic and myopathic
    processes distinguished, but also the type of
    myopathy and specific enzymatic deficiencies may
    be determined.

12
Laprotary Finding
  • Nerve Biopsy
  • The most commonly sampled nerve is the sural
    nerve, which is a pure sensory nerve that
    supplies a small area of skin on the lateral
    surface of the foot.
  • Electron microscopy is performed on most
    nerve biopsy specimens because many morphologic
    alterations cannot be appreciated at the
    resolution of a light microscope.

13
Laprotary Finding
  • Electrocardiography (ECG)
  • Cardiac evaluation is important if myopathy
    is suspected because of involvement of the heart
    in muscular dystrophies and in inflammatory and
    metabolic myopathies .
  • ECG often detect early cardiomyopathy or
    conduction defects that are clinically a
    symptomatic.

14
Muscular Dystrophies
  • Dystrophy means abnormal growth.
  • A muscular dystrophy is distinguished from all
    other neuromuscular diseases by four obligatory
    criteria
  • It is a primary myopathy.
  • It has a genetic basis.
  • The course is progressive.
  • Degeneration and death of muscle fibers occur at
    some stage in the disease.

15
Muscular Dystrophies
  • Muscular dystrophies are a group of unrelated
    diseases each transmitted by a different genetic
    trade, and each differing in its clinical course
    and expression. Some are severe diseases at birth
    or lead to early death others follow very slow
    progressive courses over many decades may be
    compatible with normal longevity or may not even
    become symptomatic until late adult life.

16
Duchenne and Becker Muscular Dtstrophies
  • Duchenne muscular dystrophy is the most common
    hereditary neuromuscular disease affecting all
    races.
  • Its incidence is 13,600 liveborn infant boys.
  • Inherited as an X-linked recessive trait.
  • Becker muscular dystrophy is the same fundamental
    disease as Duchenne.

17
Clinical Manifestation
  • Infant boys are only rarely symptomatic at birth
    or in early infancy, although some are already
    mildly hypotonic.
  • Poor head control may be the first sign of
    weakness.
  • Toddlers may assume a lordotic posture when
    standing to compensate for gluteal weakness.
  • Early Gowers sign is often evident by age 3 yrs
    is fully expressed by age 5 or 6.

18
Clinical manifestations
  • Some patients are confined to a wheel chair by 7
    years of age, most patients continue to walk with
    increasing difficulty until age 10 yrs without
    orthopedic intervention.
  • The relentless progression of weakness continues
    into the 2nd decade , the function of distal
    muscles is usually relatively well preserved.

19
Clinical manifestations
  • Respiratory muscle involvement is expressed as a
    weak ineffective cough, recurrent chest
    infections .
  • Pharyngeal weakness may lead to aspiration ,
    nasal regurgitation of liquids nasal voice
    quality.
  • Contractures often involve the ankles ,knees,
    hips elbows.
  • Scoliosis is common.

20
Clinical manifestations
  • After the calf muscles the 2nd most common site
    is the tongue, then muscles of forearm (
    fasciculations of the tongue do not occur).
  • Cardiomyopathy is a constant feature of this
    disease , some patients die early of severe
    cardiomyopathy.
  • Intellectual impairment occurs in all patients
    20-30 have IQ lt 70.
  • Epilepsy is slightly more common than general
    population.

21
Clinical manifestations
  • Myalgia muscle spasm do not occur.
  • Death occurs usually at 18 yrs of age, the causes
    of death are respiratory failure in sleep ,
    intractable heart failure , pneumonia or
    aspiration airway obstruction.
  • In Beckers the learning disabilities are less
    frequent, the onset of weakness is later fewer
    than half of patients are still alive by age 40
    yrs.

22
Lab findings
  • Serum CK level is greatly elevated in Duchenne
    (15000-35000) normal range lt 160IU/L.
  • Lysosomal enzymes present in muscle such as
    aldolase and aminotransferase are also
    increased.
  • Echocardiography, ECG, chest X-rays essential and
    should be repeated periodically.
  • EMG shows characteristic myopathic features
  • Motor sensory nerve conduction velocities are
    normal.

23
Diagnosis
  • A specific molecular genetic diagnosis is
    possible by demonstrating deficient dystrophin by
    immunohistochemical staining of sections of
    muscle biopsy or by DNA analysis from blood.
  • The muscle biopsy is diagnostic shows
    characteristic changes.

24
Diagnosis
  • Myopathic changes include
  • Endomesial connective tissue proliferation.
  • Scattered degenerating regenerating myofibers.
  • Mononuclear inflammatory cell infiltrates as a
    reacting to muscle fiber necrosis.
  • Many dense fibers.

25
  • What are the indications for muscle biopsy??

26
Pathogenesis etiology
  • 30 of patients are new mutations the mother is
    not a carrier .
  • Symptomatic girls are explained by the Lion
    hypothesis .
  • The asymptomatic carrier of Duchenne is
    associated with elevated serum CK in 80 of
    cases.
  • Muscle biopsy of suspected female carriers may
    detect an additional 10 in those with normal CK
    levels.

27
Pathogenesis etiology
  • Dystrophin is first detected in developing human
    fetal muscle at 11th weak of gestation.
  • Dystrophin mRNA is detected in cardiac smooth
    skeletal muscle in brain.
  • DNA analysis from blood samples may be applied
    for carrier detection in female relatives at risk
    to determine whether the mother is a carrier or
    a new mutation occurred.
  • Prenatal diagnosis is possible as early as 12
    weaks of gestation by sampling chorionic villi
    for DNA analysis.

28
Treatment
  • There is neither a medical cure for this disease
    nor a method of slowing its progression.
  • Much can be done to treat complications and to
    improve the quality of life of affected children.
  • Cardiac decompensation often responds well to
    digoxin.
  • Immunization for influenza virus is indicated.

29
Treatment
  • Preservation of a good nutritional state is
    important.
  • Adequate calcium intake is important to minimize
    osteoporosis.
  • Physiotherapy delays but doesnt always prevent
    contractures.
  • Physiotherapy contributes little to muscle
    strengthening because patients usually are
    already using their entire reserve for daily
    function, and exercise cannot further strengthen
    involved muscles.

30
Treatment
  • One experimental approach is myoblast transfer
    therapy.
  • Use of steroid decrease the rate of apoptosis or
    programmed cell death of myotubes during
    ontogenesis and theoretically may decelerate the
    myofiber necrosis in muscular dystrophy.

31
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