Clinical Conditions Flashcards
To cover most clinical conditions you are required to know for ESA 1 I take no responsibility for any of the flashcards featured here...mistakes/shit happens.
What are the three main causes of atrophy?
-Disuse -Age -Denervation
What occurs to muscle fibres if they aren’t exposed against resistance frequently?
They shrink and weaken (smaller diameter due to loss of protein)…they don’t die
How can disuse atrophy occur?
-Bed rest -Limb immobilisation -Sedentary behaviour
How does denervation atrophy occur?
The muscle no longer receives contractile signals that are required to maintain normal size and muscle fibres are replaced with fibrous and fatty tissue
What is the consequence of muscle fibre being replaced by fibrous tissue?
It can lead to contractures and as the muscle shortens it may lead to debilitating and disfiguring contractures
What metabolic changes often occur during hypertrophy?
-Increased glycolysis enzyme activity -Increased mitochondria -Increased muscle glycogen stores -Increased blood flow
What is Myasthenia gravis?
-An autoimmune destruction of the end plate Ach receptors -Widening of the synaptic cleft -Loss of junctional folds at the end plate
What are the main presenting symptoms of myasthenia gravis?
-Ptosis (drooping eyelid) -Fatigue and sudden falling -Double vision
What is the crisis point of Myasthenia Gravis?
When it affects respiratory muscles
What is the main drug treatment for Myasthenia Gravis?
Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors
How is neuromuscular transmission disrupted in Botulism?
Toxins block the release of acetylcholine
How is neuromuscular transmission disrupted in organophosphate poisoning? What is the main consequence?
Irreversibly inhibits the actions of acetylcholinesterase meaning the receptors are constantly activated - permanent muscle contraction
How does muscular dystrophy occur?
Genetic faults cause the absence or reduced synthesis of specific proteins which anchor actin filaments to the sarcolemma (cell wall) to such a degree that muscle fibres may tear themselves apart during contraction
What are the main symptoms of Duchenne’s Muscular Dystrophy (DMD)?
-Gower’s sign (use of hands/knees for strength) -Contractures (shortened muscles, don’t stretch) -Pseudohypertrophy (enlarged calf/deltoid muscles before fat/CT show up) -Difficulty standing/weakness
What are the two main treatments for Duchenne’s Muscular Dystrophy (DMD)?
-Ataluren - makes dystrophin -Steroids - prednisolone
What is the difference between Becker’s and Duchenne’s muscular dystrophy?
Duchenne’s is the complete inability to produce dystophin whereas Becker’s is just an insufficient dystrophin production
What is malignant hyperthermia?
Malignant hyperthermia is a rare, autosomal dominant disorder that causes a life threatening reaction to certain drugs used for general anaesthesia due to a faulty protein channel for calcium
What are the main symptoms of malignant hyperthermia?
- Uncontrolled increase in skeletal muscle oxidative metabolism -Sharp CO2 increase, O2 decrease -Circulatory collapse
How do the symptoms of malignant hyperthermia occur?
-Exposure to the volatile anesthetic agents and the neuromuscular blocking agent, succinylcholine -Excessive calcium release -High amounts of ATP needed to put calcium back
What is the main treatment for malignant hyperthermia?
-Treat hyperthermia + complications -Discontinuation of triggering agent -Dantrolene which works by preventing calcium release
How do you treat Kwashiorkor?
Make alterations to the diet to ensure correct amount of protein intake. However, be aware of refeeding syndrome!
How do you treat Marasmus?
Changes to the diet - avoid REFEEDING SYNDROME!
What are the symptoms of Galactosaemia?
-Cataracts -Glaucoma -Damage to the kidney, liver and brain possible by galactose-1-phosphate
What are the symptoms of hypercholesterolaemia (hyperlipoproteinaemias Type IIa)?
-Corneal Arcus -Tendonal Xanthoma (fatty deposits on tendons) -Xanthelasma - fatty deposits under skin (around eyes) -Absence or deficiency of LDL receptors