Lecture 14 - Muscles (2) (Part 2) Flashcards
1
Q
What is Duchene’s muscular dystrophy?
What are the symptoms?
A
- X-linked recessive disorder that leads to a mutation in the dystrophin gene.
- Absence of dystrophin leads to excess Ca2+ entering muscle cell, which enters mitochondria and takes water with it, leading to rhabdomyolysis.
- Muscle cells are replaced by fat cells, which leads to
- Poor muscle tone, arched back, shoulders and arms fold back, poor balance, belly sticking out etc.
2
Q
What is the role of creatine kinase?
What can it be used to diagnose?
When is it released into the blood?
A
- To PP creatine facilitating storage of energy in the form of phosphocreatine.
- Can be used to diagnose myocardial infarction although largely superseded by troponin I assay.
- Released into blood by damaged skeletal muscle and brain.
3
Q
What are the 2 main markers of myocardial cell damage used clinically?
A
Troponin I & T assays, need to be measured within 20 hours.
4
Q
What is botulin toxin?
What does it cause and how?
A
- Toxin produced by botulinum clostridium
- Cleaves snare proteins and blocks NT release at motor end plate leading to flaccid paralysis (non-contractile state)
- Used to treat muscle spasms or cosmetically for wrinkles.
5
Q
How does organophosphate poisoning occur?
What are the effects of it?
A
- Inhibits ACh esterase, therefore ACh activity at NM junction is potentiated.
- Has effects on somatic and autonomic signalling.
- Acronym is SLUDGE for muscarinic effects and MTWTF for nicotinic.
6
Q
What is malignant hyperthermia?
A
- Severe reaction to anaesthetic succinylcholine due to RyR1 gene mutation, leads to increase Ca2+ release. Outcome is excessive heat, muscle contraction, acidosis etc. See muscle breakdown and hyperkalaemia.
- 75% mortality untreated, 5% if treated.