Myasthenia Gravis Flashcards

1
Q

What is MG?

A

Autoimmune condition causing disorder of neuromuscular junctions–> muscle weakness

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2
Q

Classic feature?

A

Muscle weakness that gets progressively worse with movement and better with rest

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3
Q

Typical patient?

A

Man over 60 or woman under 40

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4
Q

Strong link with?

A

Thymoma (tumour of thymus gland)10-20% of patients with myasthenia gravis have a thymoma
20-40% of patients with a thymoma develop myasthenia gravis

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5
Q

Pathophysiology?

A

Presynaptic neuron releases ACh, ACh travels accross synapse and attaches to ACh receptors on postsynaptic neurone–> induces muscle contraction. In MG, the IS produces ACh receptor antibodies that attach to ACh receptors and block ACh binding.

ACh receptor antibodies also activate the compliment system in the NMJ so causes cell damage at postsynaptic membrane.

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6
Q

Why are symptoms worse during activity?

A

During activity, more receptors are used so more become blocked up. On rest, the receptors are freed up for use again.

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7
Q

Presentation?
Which muscles are most affected?

A

severity varies drastically
weakness on repetitive movements
Mostly affects the head, neck, eyes

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8
Q

Main symptoms?

A

Extraocular muscle weakness-double vision (diplopia)
Eyelid weakness- drooping of the eyelids (ptosis)
Weakness in facial movements
Difficulty with swallowing
Fatigue in the jaw when chewing
Slurred speech
Progressive weakness with repetitive movements

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9
Q

Is there sensory loss?

A

No

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10
Q

Examinations?

A

Excessive blinking
Move arm up and down

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11
Q

How is it diagnosed?

A

Antibody test
Endrophonium test

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12
Q

What is the endrophonium test?

A

cholinesterase enzymes break down ACh. Endrophonium blocks cholinesterase so means more ACh in the NMJ–> therefore a temporary improvement in symptoms. So diagnoses MG

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13
Q

Treatment?

A

Reversible acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (usually pyridostigmine or neostigmine)

Immunosuppressants: azathioprine or prednisolone

Monoclonal ABs: Rituximab (B cells) and Eculizumab (complement system)

Thymectomy- can improve sx even in patients without a thymoma

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14
Q

What is a myasthenic crisis?

A

acute worsening of sx
often triggered by a resp infection
can cause resp failure
treated with IV IG and plasma exchange

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