Myopathy (Lozowska) Flashcards
When evaluating a patient with generalized weakness, what should you ask?
- _____ is the lesion?
- if the lesion is in the muscle, what is the _____?
- What is the _____?
- What is the ____?
- Is it ____ or _____
- Any associated __, __, __
- Where
- Pattern
- Age of onset
- tempo (time course)
- hereditary or acquired
- Sx, complications, medications
What are some potential locations for the lesion?
- corticospinal
- anterior horn cell (spinal cord)
- peripheral nerve (motor, sensory, sensorimotor, autonomic)
- NMJ
- MUSCLE
Describe the potential patterns of involvement:
- Symmetric, asymmetric
- Cranial (bulbar weakness) vs axial vs limb
- proximal, distal, generalized
- ocular vs fascioscapulohumeral vs scapulohumeral vs forearm flexor and knee extensor
What is the time course? Can include?
- Acute: hrs to wks
- Subacute: 4 wks to 2 mos
- Insidious (>2 mos)
- Relapsing - fluctuating
These help to distinguish?
- Examining affected and asymptomatic relatives
- Drawing a pedigree
If hereditary vs acquired
What are some associated symptoms that go along with myopathies?
- cardiomyopathy
- pulmonary
- rheumatologic
- renal
- liver
- infectious
- malignancy
If myopathy is toxin related, what could it be from?
- Medications
- Alcohol
- Illicit drugs
- Environmental
What are some differential diagnoses for myopathy in infancy?
- congenital myopathy
- muscular dystrophy (anticipation)
- Mitochondrial
- Metabolic (glycogen and lipid storage defects)
What are some differential diagnoses for myopathy in childhood?
- Congenital myopathy
- Muscular dystrophy
- Mitochondrial
- Metabolic (glycogen and lipid storage defects)
- Periodic paralysis
- Toxic
What are some differential diagnoses for myopathy presenting in adulthood?
- Inflammatory myopathy [dermatomyositis, polymyositis, IBM]
- Toxic
- Sarcopenia [diffuse atrophy related to age, systemic illness, steroids]
- Mitochondrial
- Metabolic (glycogen and lipid storage defects)
- Muscular dystrophy
See photo for patterns of distal weakness - but these include?
- FSH
- Scapuloperoneal
- EDMD - emery dreifuss
- IBM
These following disorders present with ___ or ___?
- Mitochondrial myopathy
- OPMD
- Myotonic dystrophy
- Congenital myopathy
ptosis or ophthalmoparesis
With suspected myopathy - how should you evaluate?
- Look, listen, feel myotonia and rippling muscle
- Detailed history
- EMG/NCS for myopathic vs neuropathic
- Lab work up (CPK)
Ask about... - grip strength, turning door knobs - opening jars - standing on tip-toes - tripping - fatiguing easily - getting up from the floor - losing complex motor function, up from kneeling, jump on one foot, squat .... to assess?
assess LEVEL OF FUNCTION
What are the neuromuscular symptoms to ask about?
- Myalgias, cramps
- muscle stiffness
- fasciculations
- myoglobinuria, pigmenturia
- hypertrophy, atrophy
- **typically lack of bowel, bladder, sensory complaints
FYI:
- clinical examination
- CN involvement - jaw movement, dysarthria, ophthalmoparesis, ptosis
- Shoulder girdle weakness
- LE weakness
- Motor: tone, bulk, myokymia, paramyotonia/myotonia, myoedema
Labs: - CK - AST, ALT, LDH, Aldolase [10% of myotonic dystrophy has normal CK, but high aldolase] - DNA analysis - Dried blood spot for pope disease
What test?
- confirms a clinical impression
- provides insight into underlying pathophysiology
- helps localize the lesion when its not apparent by HPI
- Can tell if its acute, chronic, both
- Can “hear” myotonia, myokymia
*** What muscles to do?
EMG
*** 2 muscles in arm, leg, thoracic paraspinals, checking for insertional activity, spontaneous activity, MUAP morphology, recruitment