Polymyositis Flashcards

1
Q

pathogenesis

A

proposed - T cell mediated cytotoxic process directed against unidentified muscle antigens - CD8 T cells, macrophages surround healthy nonnecrotic muscle fibres

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2
Q

what is it?

A

idiopathic inflammatory myopathy symmetrical, proximal muscle weakness

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3
Q

how does it present?

A

symmetrical, proximal muscle weakness in the upper and lower limbs insidious onset difficulty with particular activities - e.g. climbing stairs some patients have myalgia dysphagia in 1/3 patients - secondary to oropharyngeal and oesophageal involvement - poor prognostic signILD in 5-30% of patients (especially Anti-Jo positive)raised inflammatory markers

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4
Q

Investigations

A

raised inflammatory markers CK raised, often 10x normal immunology - ANA, anti-RNP: shared with other AI diseases - Anti-Jo-I, anti-SRP: unique to myositisMRI - localise extent of the muscle involvement - show signal intensity abnormalities of the muscle due to inflammation, oedema, scarring EMG - abnormal in 90% (staging)Muscle biopsy - crucial - excluding other rare muscle diseases - muscle fibres in varying stages of inflammation, necrosis and regeneration

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5
Q

how is it managed?

A

prednisolone - 40mg initially combined with immunosuppressive drugs - methotrexate, azathioprine

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6
Q

what is the prognosis?

A

usually responsive to treatment, albeit slowly 30% left with some residual weakness older patients and late presentation - do less well

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